Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site. 0108263 License for publishing multimedia online Registration Number: 130349 Registration Number: 130349 The World Health Organization (WHO) warns heavy rains and flooding in the Democratic Republic of Congo may exacerbate the countrys ongoing cholera epidemic. Rains last week triggered flooding and landslides in the capital, Kinshasa, causing 45 deaths and widespread damage. The WHO warns the flooding also is likely to worsen the cholera epidemic and other waterborne diseases. The current outbreak, which began in last July, is one of the most severe in years. The WHO reports people in 24 out of 26 provinces have been infected with the disease. Latest reports find 55,000 cases, including nearly 1,200 deaths. WHO spokesman Christian Lindmeier says this is almost twice the number of cases reported in 2016. The case fatality rate in general is just slightly over 2 percent. But, in some provinces, it is much higher. In four provinces, the case fatality rate is more than 5 percent and actually much larger sometimes, he said. Lindmeier added that in Kinshasa, the case fatality rate is 13 percent, in Kasai, 14.5 percent and in Tanganyika, just over 11 percent. Rare aid recipient The DRC rarely gets relief from humanitarian crises. Lindmeier told VOA that perpetual conflicts complicate efforts to respond adequately to the cholera epidemic. Given the circumstances, with the conflict, with lack of access, with displaced people, including now flooding - this is not unusual, unfortunately. This is a situation, which facilitates the spread of cholera and other waterborne diseases very badly and the conflict, of course, makes any sort of attempt to treat or to help the people worse, Lindmeier said. The Central African country has 4.5 million internally displaced people - the largest IDP population in Africa. The WHO warns poor access to safe water and sanitation and poor hygiene practices are the main factors driving the latest cholera outbreak. Controversial former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio, who was pardoned by U.S. President Donald Trump last year, announced Tuesday that he would be running for the U.S. Senate. "I am running for the U.S. Senate from the Great State of Arizona, for one unwavering reason: to support the agenda and policies of President Donald Trump in his mission to Make America Great Again," Arpaio wrote on Twitter. Arizona Republican Sen. Jeff Flake's decision not to seek reelection this year sets up a primary fight between Arpaio and two other contenders. The 85-year-old Arpaio, an early Trump supporter, had been convicted of criminal contempt after defying a judge's order to stop racially profiling Latinos. In August, Trump issued the first clemency of his presidency, pardoning the controversial former sheriff. In Arpaio's defense, a White House statement cited his age and "life's work of protecting the public from the scourges of crime and illegal immigration." Critics slammed the move, saying Trump acted to protect a political crony and didn't follow Department of Justice guidelines in issuing the pardon. The death toll from an outbreak of listeria in South Africa has jumped beyond 60 in the past month, health authorities said Monday, adding they had closed a poultry abattoir where the bug that causes the disease had been detected. Since monitoring of the outbreak began last January, 720 laboratory-confirmed cases of food poisoning due to the disease, also known as listeriosis, have been reported, the National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD) said. That was up from 557 in December, since when recorded deaths had risen to 61 from 36. A food microbiologist said the "alarming" outbreak appeared to be the biggest ever recorded and could spread further if it was not tackled urgently. "Of the documented outbreaks globally that we know of ... our numbers are way above any of those other cases," said Dr. Lucia Anelich, who runs her own food safety consultancy. The Department of Health said it had closed a poultry abattoir operated by Sovereign Foods in the capital Pretoria after detecting listeria there, and had banned the facility from preparing food in December. The department said it did not yet know whether this abattoir was the source of the outbreak, which the NICD said was still unknown. Sovereign Foods, which delisted from the Johannesburg stock exchange in November, said the prohibition on the abattoir was lifted Monday after the listeria bacterium was not found in the latest samples from the plant. "Despite being declared clean and free of the listeria bacterium, we are further strengthening steps to render products safer than they already are," said Sovereign Foods head of production Blaine van Rensburg. Listeria food poisoning is a bacterial infection that can be treated with antibiotics if diagnosed in time. The bacteria can be found in animal products including cold cut meats, poultry and unpasteurized milk, as well as fresh fruits and vegetables. The disease can cause flu-like symptoms and diarrhea, and in more severe cases spread from the intestine to the blood, causing bloodstream infections, or to the central nervous system, causing meningitis. Anelich said a listeriosis strain known as ST6 had been identified in nine out of 10 of the South African cases. That should make tracing the source easier, "because now we know that it probably originates from one processing facility." A health department official said the strain was not drug-resistant and that the deaths were due to delays in diagnosis, meaning cases were not treated in time. Democrat Tom Steyer, who has spent millions on national ads calling for the impeachment of President Donald Trump, will spend $30 million this year trying to get members of his party elected to the U.S. House of Representatives to win control of the chamber from Republicans, he announced on Monday. Steyer, who also said he will not personally run for office, added that he will also continue his national campaign calling for impeachment. My fight is in removing Donald Trump from office and removing Donald Trump from power, Steyer said. The House impeaches, or brings formal charges against an official, in what would be the first step in removing Trump from office. The U.S. Senate tries the case. Steyer said his organization is working to have constituents deliver to members of Congress copies of the controversial book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House by Michael Wolff, which challenges Trumps fitness for office. Steyer will not, however, require House candidates whom he supports to pass a litmus test supporting impeaching Trump, he said. The $30 million will be used to mobilize young voters in 10 key states: Florida, Virginia, Wisconsin, Michigan, Nevada, California, Pennsylvania, Iowa, New Hampshire and Arizona, Steyer said. Americans will head to the polls in November when 34 seats in the Senate and all 435 House seats will be up for grabs. Democrats are hoping to ride wins last year in Alabama and Virginia to victory in those elections, potentially taking control of Congress. The task which I feel called to do is organizing and mobilizing Americas voters they have got to be the most powerful forces in American politics, Steyer said at a Washington, D.C. press conference. Steyer said he knows that some Democrats think talking about impeachment is a distraction but that he feels it remains important to focus on ousting Trump. We know this makes some of our friends and allies in this city uncomfortable, Steyer said. We believe this is a false choice the fact is the two are fundamentally intertwined. Egypts president and his Eritrean counterpart met in Cairo on Monday amid heightened tensions with Sudan and Ethiopia over border disputes and the construction of a massive upstream Nile dam. Egypt fears the soon-to-be completed dam in Ethiopia could cut into its share of the river, which provides nearly all its freshwater. Eritrea and Ethiopia have long been bitter rivals and went to war in the late 1990s. Ethiopia denies it is cutting into Egypts share of the Nile, and has accused Eritrea of training rebels to carry out sabotage attacks on the dam. Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi hosted Isaias Afwerki at the presidential palace. The two sides have agreed on continuing intensive cooperation in all issues related to the current situation to support the security and stability in the region, Egyptian presidency spokesman Bassam Radi said, referring to the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea strait of Bab al-Mandab as two major areas for ensuring stability. The Qatar-based Al-Jazeera network recently reported that Egypt is deploying troops in Eritrea. The Red Sea Afar Democratic Organization, an Eritrean opposition group, last year claimed that Egypt is building a military base on Eritrea's Dahlak island and will deploy up to 30,000 Egyptian naval forces. Eritrean Information Minister Yemane G. Meske denied the Al-Jazeera report in a tweet this week, saying: Al-Jazeera News Channel seems to relish propagating false and preposterous news on Eritrea: latest is phantom deployment of Egyptian troops/weapons! Egypts relations with Sudan, which has lent support to Ethiopia in the Nile dispute, have meanwhile deteriorated. Sudan recalled its ambassador for consultation last week, and has said a 2016 maritime demarcation agreement between Egypt and Saudi Arabia infringes on its territorial waters. The waters in question are off the coast of an Egyptian-held border region claimed by Sudan. Egypts pro-government media have accused Sudan of conspiring against Cairo with Turkey and Qatar. Ethiopia says the $5 billion dam is essential for its economic development, noting that the vast majority of its 95 million people lack electricity. The dams hydroelectric plant will generate over 6,400 megawatts, a massive boost to the countrys current production of 4,000 Megawatts. Egypt, with a population roughly equal to Ethiopias, receives the lions share of the Niles waters under agreements from 1929 and 1959 that other Nile nations say are unfair and ignore the needs of their own large and growing populations. Egypt says security forces have killed eight suspected militants in a shootout in the northern Sinai Peninsula. The Interior Ministry said Tuesday the firefight broke out when the forces raided a suspected hideout in el-Arish city. It said the militants were planning attacks targeting security forces, and were in possession of explosives, rifles and ammunition. Egypt has been battling militants in the northern part of Sinai Peninsula for years, but the insurgency became far more deadly after the 2013 military ouster of Mohamed Morsi, the country's first freely elected civilian president. An affiliate of so-called Islamic State based in the Sinai has carried out a number of high-profile attacks in recent years, mainly targeting security forces and Egypt's Christian minority. Journalists are not allowed in Sinai. An independent energy agency on Monday rejected a Trump administration plan to bolster coal-fired and nuclear power plants, dealing a blow to President Donald Trumps efforts to boost the struggling coal industry. The decision by the Republican-controlled Federal Energy Regulatory Commission was unexpected and comes amid repeated promises by Trump to revive coal as the nations top power source. The industry has been besieged by multiple bankruptcies and a steady loss of market share as natural gas and renewable energy flourish. The energy commission said in its decision that despite claims by the administration to the contrary, there's no evidence that any past or planned retirements of coal-fired power plants pose a threat to reliability of the nation's electric grid. Even so, the five-member commission said it will review the resilience of the nations electric grid and requested information within 60 days from regional transmission organizations and independent system operators that oversee the grid. The panel said it expects to promptly decide whether additional action is needed. The Trump administration's plan, outlined last fall by Energy Secretary Rick Perry, was opposed by an unusual coalition of business and environmental groups that frequently disagree with each other. Dow Chemical, Koch Industries and U.S. Steel Corp. stood with environmentalists in opposing the plan to reward nuclear and coal-fired power plants for adding reliability to the nation's power grid. Eight former federal energy regulators including five former energy commission chairs criticized the plan, saying it would disrupt electricity markets and raise prices, especially in the Northeast and Midwest. Perry thanked the energy panel Monday for addressing his proposal, which he said had initiated a national debate on the resiliency of the nations electric system. What is not debatable is that a diverse fuel supply, especially with onsite fuel capability, plays an essential role in providing Americans with reliable, resilient and affordable electricity, particularly in times of weather-related stress like we are seeing now, Perry said. Perry was referring to his proposal to compensate power plant owners that maintain a 90-day fuel supply protected against severe weather and other disruptions, a feature shared by coal and nuclear power. Renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power have far less storage capacity. Critics said the weakness of Perrys plan was shown by a recent cold snap that gripped the East Coast. Instead of plunging the eastern seaboard into cold darkness, the storm caused relatively few outages, including one that shut down a nuclear power plant in Massachusetts. Rick Perrys scheme to prop up aging nuclear and dirty coal plants was never about making sure the lights and heat stayed on, said John Moore, an energy policy expert for the Natural Resources Defense Council. It was about protecting the bank accounts of plant owners at the expense of everyday Americans. The exact cost of Perrys plan is unknown, but critics say it could have resulted in subsidies to coal and nuclear plants worth billions of dollars. Environmental groups said the administration's plan would boost dirty and dangerous fuels, while non-coal and nuclear energy providers warned about interference in the free market and manufacturers that use huge amounts of electricity complained about higher energy prices. Tech giant Apple weighed in Monday against the proposal, saying it would inhibit innovation and competition and interfere with plans to increase use of clean energy such as wind and solar power. In its decision, the five-member energy panel essentially agreed with critics who said there was no evidence of a threat to the grids day-to-day reliability that would justify the action Perry was seeking. Perrys request to FERC came after he denied a coal industry request to issue an emergency order protecting coal-fired power plants that complained they were overburdened by environmental rules and market stresses. Trump committed to the measure in private conversations last summer with top coal executives. But the White House eventually agreed with Perry's decision to reject the proposed two-year moratorium on closures of coal-fired power plants an action that would have been an unprecedented federal intervention in the nation's energy markets. Ohio-based Murray Energy Corp., the nations largest privately owned coal company, had sought the order. CEO Robert Murray warned Trump that failing to act would cause thousands of coal miners to be laid off and threatened the viability of his largest customer, Ohio-based FirstEnergy Solutions. Murray Energy could not immediately be reached for comment Monday. Deputy Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette said in an interview that the department was encouraged by FERC's decision, noting that the panel has pledged to conduct its own review of grid resiliency. They voted 5-0 to address resiliency. I think it's a very important first step, he said. Former Catalan president Artur Mas said Tuesday he would step down as head of his separatist political party to pave the way for new leaders of Catalonia's independence movement after reports of internal divisions. Following an illegal referendum last October and the imposition of direct rule on the region by Madrid, the pro-independence movement has become fractured over whether to continue with its push for an independent state or to engage in talks with the Spanish government to gain more regional autonomy in the short term. A December 21 election gave separatists a slim majority in the regional parliament in a blow to Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who had hoped it would quash the independence movement and resolve Spain's worst political crisis in decades. "This new stage requires new leaders, it is necessary to leave open spaces so that certain people can lead this project for the future," Mas told a news conference. A Catalan court barred Mas from public office in March 2017 for two years for staging an informal referendum on independence in 2014 at a time when secessionist leaders were trying to drum up support for a new ballot. However, Mas remained leader of the conservative PDeCat party, which he has led for about 15 years. PDeCat's political platform in the election, the Junts per Catalunya (Together for Catalonia) led by Carles Puigdemont, emerged as the largest separatist group ahead of Esquerra Republicana (Republican Left). But Puigdemont remains in self-imposed exile in Brussels after he fled to Belgium with four of his cabinet members when Madrid imposed direct rule on Catalonia and sacked his government following an October 27 declaration of independence. He is likely to be detained if he returns to Spain, pending an investigation on charges of sedition, rebellion, misuse of public funds, disobedience and breach of trust. Mas previously supported Puigdemont in his push for independence but he may now favor a different candidate within the PdeCat in order to pave the way for a new separatist-led government, according to Barcelona-based newspaper La Vanguardia. "This should not be seen as me walking away from this project," he said. Rajoy has called for the Catalan parliament to be formed January 17. Market-friendly Ciudadanos, which wants Catalonia to remain part of Spain and is led by Ines Arrimadas, gained the largest share of the popular vote but unionist parties did not win enough seats to govern by majority. U.S. Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein on Tuesday released testimony from the founder of the Fusion GPS firm that researched President Donald Trump's ties to Russia and produced a dossier denounced by the White House. The Washington research firm has been under attack by the White House and Republican lawmakers over the dossier, which is central to investigations in Congress and by a federal special counsel into allegations that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election to help Trump win. "The innuendo and misinformation circulating about the transcript are part of a deeply troubling effort to undermine the investigation into potential collusion and obstruction of justice," Feinstein said in a statement. "The only way to set the record straight is to make the transcript public." Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson had asked that a transcript of his 10 hours of testimony before Senate Judiciary Committee staff be made public, Feinstein said. The congressional panel is one of three investigating Russia's activities in the election and possible collusion with the Trump campaign. Feinstein released the testimony after the panel's Republican chairman, Charles Grassley, on Friday called for a criminal investigation into former British spy Christopher Steele, who was working for Fusion GPS when he compiled a "dossier" of allegations of financial and personal links between Trump, his advisers and Russia. Simpson and Fusion co-founder Peter Fritsch had urged the committee's Republican leaders to release transcripts of their testimony in a New York Times opinion piece last Tuesday entitled "The Republicans' Fake Investigations." Russia has repeatedly denied allegations of meddling in the U.S. election and Trump denies any collusion between his campaign and Moscow officials. Only five months ago, world leaders reacted with public disapproval of U.S. President Donald Trumps promise to respond to any North Korean aggression with fire and fury. Now a new fire and fury is occupying their thoughts Michael Wolffs controversial tell-all book, in which the author claims White House insiders think Trump is mentally unfit to be president. White House officials have dismissed the book as complete fantasy and tabloid gossip, while several errors in Wolffs account were quickly identified. Nevertheless, the book rocketed to the top of the Amazon best-seller list and Wolffs accusations became fodder for endless discussion on U.S. and world news programs. When it came to North Korea, leaders warned that Trumps rhetoric would likely escalate confrontation rather than resolve it. With Wolffs Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, which was published Friday, they have preferred to keep mouths shut partly from fear of damaging relations between their countries and the Trump administration. Theres no benefit for us to comment on the claims made in Wolffs book, a senior German official told VOA, speaking on the condition of anonymity. But for us, the book with its apparent leaks from inside the White House and more importantly the political fallout in Washington portrays an alarming picture of an America in dangerous upheaval. That adds to our worries about Americas reliability as an ally something that Trump has given us cause to question already, he added. Surprising frankness In March, the normally reticent German Chancellor Angela Merkel underlined her doubts about the dependability of the United States with surprising frankness in a speech in Berlin, after Trump lambasted major NATO allies over their military contributions and refused to endorse a global climate change accord during awkward back-to-back summits with the Europeans. Recent days have shown me that the times when we could rely completely on others are over to a certain extent, Merkel, an Atlanticist, said. Shockwaves have gone back and forth across the Atlantic ever since. There is as yet no evidence that the furor over the Wolff book is damaging Americas relations with its allies or emboldening its enemies, but it comes in the wake of disagreements over immigration, climate change, trade, and recognizing Jerusalem as Israels capital that have made Trump and his America First agenda highly unpopular with the European public. Some of Trumps mercurial tweets have caused deep offense, notably in November when British lawmakers reacted furiously to President Trump's retweeting of anti-Muslim videos initially posted by a far-right British activist who had been convicted of hate speech. That earned a public rebuke from Prime Minister Theresa May the third time she has done so. 'Difficult to judge' Australias former prime minister, Julia Gillard, has been one of the few senior politicians in a U.S.-allied country to broach the subject of Trumps mental fitness publicly, although she waited to do so until after leaving office. While cautioning in July against insulting Trump with charges of mental illness, she said that some individuals were genuinely concerned. From the outside I think it is very difficult to judge someone elses mental health so I think theres some need for caution here, Gillard told an Australian television outlet. But I do think if President Trump continues with some of the tweeting, et cetera that weve seen, that this will be in the dialogue. The media in Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have been less wary than officials and quickly focused on the claims in Wolffs book about Trumps mental fitness. Is Trump still sane? was the main headline last week in Germanys conservative newspaper, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Voices of caution Britains The Times splashed across its front page in large type: Trumps mental health questioned by top aide. And in the story below it noted that Steve Bannon, a major source for Wolffs book and onetime key Trump adviser, openly questioned his fitness to serve and predicted that he would resign to avoid being removed by his own cabinet. While the European media has feasted on Wolffs book, there have been other voices cautioning against accepting Wolffs portrayal of Trump at face value. Some commentators have pointed out that Wolff has a history of sensationalizing and they note the sourcing for the book is often vague. Others have argued there is a failure on the part of foreign commentators to appreciate that a lot of what Trump says and does is geared to appeal to his supporters and his voting base. Writing in Le Figaro, a French conservative newspaper, Maxime Tandonnet, an essayist and former top French bureaucrat who served as a counselor in the cabinet of Nicolas Sarkozy, cast the book as a compilation of stories, gossip and testimonies against Trumps person, personal life and family intimacy. And the press reception of the book he characterized as a sort of apotheosis of media lynching, very fashionable for the times. Two former employees of Google have accused the tech giant of discriminating against conservative white men, in a class action lawsuit filed Monday. One of the accusers, James Damore, was fired from the company last year after writing a memo defending the gender gap in Silicon Valley tech jobs as possibly a matter of biological differences between men and women. Damore and David Gudeman, another former engineer at the Google, filed the suit at the Santa Clara Superior Court in California, alleging discrimination and retaliation. The two argue in their suit that Google uses illegal hiring quotas to fill jobs with women and minority applicants. "Google's management goes to extreme and illegal lengths to encourage hiring managers to take protected categories such as race and/or gender into consideration as determinative hiring factors, to the detriment of Caucasian and male employees," the complaint stated. The suit also accuses the company of not protecting employees with conservative viewpoints, including employees who support U.S. President Donald Trump. "Damore, Gudeman and other class members were ostracized, belittled, and punished for their heterodox political views, and for the added sin of their birth circumstances of being Caucasians and/or males," the lawsuit said. Google said it looks forward to defending itself against the allegations in court. Google fired Damore in August after he wrote an internal memo that was later made public in which he said that genetic differences may explain why we dont see equal representation of women in tech and leadership. Google chief Sundar Pichai said "portions of the memo violate our code of conduct and cross the line by advancing harmful gender stereotypes in our workplace." In Fridays lawsuit, Damore said his memo was intended to remain internal and said he wrote it as a response to a request for feedback about a recent diversity and inclusion summit he attended. A federal judge last week stripped an Indian national of his U.S. citizenship in what officials described as the first case to grow out of an Obama-era federal investigation that exposed rampant fraud among citizenship applicants. Federal prosecutors had sought the denaturalization of Baljinder Singh in September, arguing that the 43-year-old native of India had fraudulently obtained his citizenship. According to prosecutors, Singh first entered the U.S. under a false name in 1991 and subsequently faced deportation, but he failed to disclose that information in his 2004 citizenship application. Under U.S. law, naturalization can be revoked if it was obtained through fraud. On January 5, Federal Judge Stanley Chesler of the District of New Jersey, where Singh lives, granted the government's request to revoke Singh's citizenship, reverting his status to a green card holder and potentially subjecting him to deportation, the Justice Department announced Tuesday. The judge's order came after Singh failed to respond to the Justice Department's denaturalization complaint and subsequent request for a summary judgment, according to court documents. Singh could not be immediately reached. Operation Janus The Justice Department said the case was the first to result from Operation Janus, a Department of Homeland Security probe that identified 315,000 immigrants whose fingerprints were missing from government databases. The immigrants faced deportation or were criminal fugitives and "some may have sought to circumvent criminal record and other background checks in the naturalization process," the Department said. A 2016 audit by the Homeland Security Department's inspector general first disclosed the missing fingerprint data and found that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services had mistakenly granted citizenship to at least 858 immigrants facing deportation. The immigrants used different names and birth dates to apply for citizenship, according to the audit. The inspector general criticized Immigration and Customs Enforcement for failing to investigate the apparently fraudulently naturalized citizens but said the agency was "now taking steps to increase the number of cases to be investigated, particularly those who hold positions of public trust and who have security clearances." The pace of the investigations appears to have picked up over the past year, with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services reporting a "growing body of cases" to the Justice Department. Last year, the Justice Department filed 25 civil denaturalization cases and 57 criminal cases, according to a department spokesman. The U.S. immigration agency said it plans to refer about 1,600 additional cases uncovered by Operation Janus for possible denaturalization. "I hope this case, and those to follow, send a loud message that attempting to fraudulently obtain U.S. citizenship will not be tolerated," USCIS Director Francis Cissna said in a statement. "Our nation's citizens deserve nothing less." Denaturalization Singh faces certain deportation, according to Amanda Frost, a professor at the American University Washington School of Law. "Now that they've denaturalized him, their next move is to take away his green card and deport him," Frost said. "If they don't do that, I'm not sure what the purpose of this entire proceeding was." Chad Readler, the acting head of the Justice Department's Civil Division, said Singh had "exploited our immigration system and unlawfully secured the ultimate immigration benefit of naturalization." "The Justice Department will continue to use every tool to protect the integrity of our nation's immigration system, including the use of civil denaturalization," Readler added. The government is also seeking the denaturalization of two Pakistani nationals who are accused of concealing deportation orders from immigration officials. In recent years, the number of denaturalization cases has been in the dozens, according to Frost. But Operation Janus suggests that the government is "putting more resources into this than it did before," Frost said. The U.S. government used denaturalization throughout the first half of the 20th century to take away the citizenship of people suspected of Communist sympathies or fighting in foreign wars. But a landmark Supreme Court decision in 1967, Afroyim v. Rusk, put an end to the practice, said Frost, who researches denaturalization. "The court made it clear that denaturalization was limited," Frost said. Last year, the Supreme Court handed down a decision in another denaturalization case, barring the government from denaturalizing citizens for making "non-material" false statements on their citizenship applications. "It served to remind the government that there are many constitutional protections in this area and that denaturalization must be done carefully," she said. An Iranian lawmaker says about 3,700 people have been arrested in anti-government protests across Iran, a much higher number than previously estimated. Tehran lawmaker Mahmoud Sadeghi announced the figure Tuesday in the state-run ICANA news agency. He said the fact that protesters were arrested by a number of different security services made it difficult to get an accurate tally of the detained. Rights group Amnesty International is calling on Iranian authorities to immediately investigate reports that at least five people have died in custody after a crackdown on anti-establishment protests over the past two weeks. Amnesty said in a statement Tuesday that prison conditions in Iran are "nightmarish" and include the use of torture. Magdalena Mughrabi, Amnesty's deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa, called on authorities in Iran to "immediately launch an independent, impartial, and transparent investigation, including independent autopsies" of those who died. She said those suspected of having any responsibility for these deaths should be suspended from their positions and prosecuted in proceedings that respect international fair trial standards and do not include the death penalty. Amnesty said since the report emerged Monday that protester Sina Ghanbari died while being held in Tehran's Evin prison, four more reports of deaths have emerged. Two of those deaths were reported to be in the same place Ghanbari died, in the prison's "quarantine" section, where detainees are held for processing immediately after arrest. The names of those victims are unknown, according to human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh. Two others, Vahid Heydari and Mohsen Adeli, also died in custody, according to Amnesty. It says the families of the victims dispute the official report that they committed suicide. Amnesty called on Tehran to inform family members about detainees' whereabouts, allow them to visit their loved ones, and ensure legal representation for those arrested. "Nobody should face reprisals for inquiring about the whereabouts of a loved one or seeking truth about their fate," Mughrabi said. Sadeghi, the Iranian lawmaker, said he was told Iranian protester Ghanbari, 22, committed suicide while in custody. Another lawmaker, Tayyebe Siavashi, said the detainee had been arrested in Tehran. Details of the incident were not immediately clear, but it was thought to be the first death of a protester in custody as a result of the current demonstrations sweeping the country. The United States and United Nations on Tuesday welcomed steps to ease tensions between North and South Korea after the two rival states held their first face-to-face talks in two years. Pyongyang and Seoul agreed to hold further military talks and North Korea announced it had reconnected a severed military hotline with the South and would send a delegation of athletes, high-level government officials and a cheering squad to the Winter Olympics next month in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The announcements, made at Panmunjom, which straddles the Koreas, represent a possible reduction in severely escalating tensions surrounding North Korea's nuclear and ballistic missile programs. "North Korean participation is an opportunity for the regime to see the value of ending its international isolation by denuclearizing," according to a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council. WATCH: Korea talks Later in the day, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said "the next steps would be denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," calling that "our number one priority and certainly what we would like to see." "We are encouraged that North Korea has agreed to send athletes and other supporters to the South Korean games," Steve Goldstein, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs, told reporters. "We would like nuclear talks to occur. We want denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.This is a good first step in that process." The United States will also send a "high-level delegation" to the Olympic Games, the NSC spokesperson said. When asked to comment about the possibility of direct contacts at the sporting event between officials and delegations from Washington and Pyongyang, Goldstein said: "That's not planned currently, but we'll see how this progresses." "Officials from our administration have been in touch with the South Korean side" following Tuesday's discussion between Seoul and Pyongyang, Sanders said in response to a question at Tuesday's daily briefing on whether South Korean President Moon Jae-in had briefed U.S. President Donald Trump on the talks. Those U.S. and South Korean officials will "ensure North Korean participation in the Winter Olympics does not violate the sanctions imposed by the U.N. Security Council over North Korea's unlawful nuclear and ballistic missile programs," according to the NSC. Diplomats at the State Department are taking some of the credit for getting Pyongyang and Seoul to sit together for the first time in 25 months. "We believe that our pressure campaign could be what brought North Korea to start talking with the South," Brian Hook, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson's senior policy adviser, told reporters. Tillerson is to head to Vancouver next Monday for a Sending States Ministerial meeting, co-hosted Canada and the United States, to assess the pressure campaign "and to see how we can further boost its effectiveness," Hook said. The re-establishment of the military hotline between the two sides is "critical to lowering the risk of miscalculation or misunderstanding and to reduce tensions in the region," according to a statement from Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. The U.N. spokesman said he hoped "such engagement and efforts will contribute to the resumption of sincere dialogue leading to sustainable peace and denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula." It was not clear, however, whether the talks would lead to meaningful change. Trump has, at various times, called talks with Pyongyang useless and threatened to "totally destroy" North Korea if it does not heed U.S. warnings. "North Korea has a foul intent here. What they're trying to do is essentially buy time," said Harry Kazianis, director of defense studies at the Center for the National Interest, a public policy think tank in Washington. "They're very, very close to actually developing a nuclear weapon that could hit the United States homeland," Kazianis told VOA. A hawkish former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, said the talks could be a "propaganda stunt" by the North. Many Trump administration officials have said they are determined to resolve the standoff via diplomacy or economic sanctions, but recent media reports suggest U.S. officials are also discussing limited strikes on the North. Abraham Denmark, a former U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for East Asia, warned against such a so-called "bloody nose" strike, arguing that it risked igniting a full-blown war on the Korean Peninsula. Denmark, now the Asia program director at the Wilson Center, a global policy research forum in Washington, told VOA that "while I certainly can't speak for them, I think the chances that the United States will attack North Korea sometime in 2018 are 50/50." "A lot will depend on North Korea's behavior," he added. The North Koreans last year carried out their sixth and most powerful nuclear test, and they have regularly tested ballistic missiles. But they are thought to still be perfecting the critical technology needed to protect an intercontinental ballistic missile upon re-entry into Earth's atmosphere. VOA's Peter Heinlein, Bill Gallo and Nike Ching contributed to this report. From gritty neighborhoods in New York and Los Angeles to clinics in Kenya and Brazil, health workers are trying to popularize a pill that has proven highly effective in preventing HIV but which - in their view - remains woefully underused. Marketed in the United States as Truvada, and sometimes available abroad in generic versions, the pill has been shown to reduce the risk of getting HIV from sex by more than 90 percent if taken daily. Yet worldwide, only about a dozen countries have aggressive, government-backed programs to promote the pill. In the U.S., there are problems related to Truvada's high cost, lingering skepticism among some doctors and low usage rates among black gays and bisexuals who have the highest rates of HIV infection. "Truvada works,'' said James Krellenstein, a New York-based activist. "We have to start thinking of it not as a luxury but as an essential public health component of this nation's response to HIV.'' A few large U.S. cities are promoting Truvada, often with sexually charged ads. In New York, "Bare It All'' was among the slogans urging gay men to consult their doctors. The Los Angeles LGBT Center - using what it called "raw, real language'' - launched a campaign to increase use among young Latino and black gay men and transgender women. "We've got the tools to not only end the fear of HIV, but to end it as an epidemic,'' said the center's chief of staff, Darrel Cummings. "Those at risk have to know about the tools, though, and they need honest information about them.'' Truvada in the U.S. In New York, roughly 30 percent of gay and bisexual men are using Truvada now, up dramatically from a few years ago, according to Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, a deputy commissioner of the city's health department. However, Daskalakis said use among young black and Hispanic men - who account for a majority of new HIV diagnoses - lags behind. To address that, the city is making Truvada readily available in some clinics in or near heavily black and Hispanic neighborhoods. "We like to go to the root of the problem,'' said Daskalakis, who personally posed for the "Bare It All'' campaign. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Truvada would be appropriate for about 1.2 million people in the U.S. - including sex workers and roughly 25 percent of gay men. Gilead Scientific, Truvada's California-based manufacturer, says there are only about 145,000 active prescriptions for HIV prevention use. Under federal guidelines, prime candidates for preventive use of Truvada include some gay and bisexual men with multiple sexual partners, and anyone who does not have HIV but has an ongoing sexual relationship with someone who has the virus. An international approach Abroad, a few government health agencies - including those in France, Norway, Belgium, Kenya, South Africa, Brazil and some Canadian provinces - have launched major efforts to promote preventive use of Truvada or generic alternatives, providing it for free or a nominal charge. In Britain, health officials in Scotland and England recently took steps to provide the medication directly through government-funded programs, though in England it's in the form of a trial limited to 10,000 people. Truvada was launched in 2004, initially used in combination with other drugs as the basic treatment for people who have HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. It is primarily spread through sex. Controversy arose in 2012 when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Truvada to reduce the risk of getting HIV in the first place, for what's called pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP. It blocks the virus from making copies and taking hold. Critics warned that many gay men wouldn't heed Truvada's once-a-day schedule and complained of its high cost - roughly $1,500 a month. Gilead offers a payment assistance plan to people without insurance that covers the full cost. Some cities and a few states - including Illinois, Massachusetts and Washington - also help cover costs. Activists have pressed Gilead to make its copay program more generous in light of its profits from Truvada. "There's no reason it has to cost so much,'' said Krellenstein. Gilead spokesman Ryan McKeel, in an email, said the company is reviewing the copay program. "Like those in the advocacy community, we are committed to expanding access to Truvada for PrEP to as many people as possible,'' he wrote. In June, the FDA approved a generic version of Truvada, which is likely to push the price down, but it won't be available in the U.S. for a few years. The Truvada debate has taken many twists, as exemplified by the varying stances of the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation - a leading HIV/AIDS service provider. In 2012, the group unsuccessfully petitioned the FDA to delay or deny approval of Truvada for preventive use. The foundation's president, Michael Weinstein, belittled Truvada as "a party drug'' and warned it would increase the spread of sexually transmitted infections by encouraging men to engage in sex without condoms. But last year, the foundation, while still skeptical about some Truvada-related policies, urged Gilead to cut its price to make it more available. "We have no dispute about its ability to prevent HIV transmission,'' said spokesman Ged Kenslea. He noted that the organization's 40 pharmacies across the U.S. handle many Truvada prescriptions. The governor of the northern Mexico state of Chihuahua claimed Monday that federal authorities have refused to disperse millions of dollars in funding because of a state investigation into possible embezzlement involving the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which is led by President Enrique Pena Nieto. Mexican states rely heavily on federal revenue sharing. Gov. Javier Corral, of the opposition National Action Party, said the federal government agreed to bridge funding of about 700 million pesos in December, but then refused to pay after Chihuahua state prosecutors arrested a former official of Pena Nieto's party. The former official, Alejandro Gutierrez, is accused of diverting about 240 million pesos ($12 million) in public funds for political campaigning under former Chihuahua Gov. Cesar Duarte, also a member of the PRI. Corral said the federal government has refused to ask the U.S. to extradite Duarte. They dont want to detain Cesar Duarte, but they have detained our money, Corral said. The federal Treasury Department denied any political motive, saying it has paid out more money than originally budgeted for Chihuahua. Three people in South Sudan have died of a suspected viral hemorrhagic fever and 60 of their contacts are being monitored for any infection, the World Health Organization said Monday. Ebola, Marburg and yellow fever are among viral hemorrhagic fevers that have caused deadly outbreaks in Africa. More than 11,300 people died during the worst outbreak of Ebola, a highly contagious disease, which mainly affected Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone from 2013 to 2016. The three people in South Sudan a pregnant woman, a teenage girl and a boy all died in December and were from the same village in Yirol East county in the eastern Lakes State. But there had been no known contact among them. No tissue or blood samples were collected from their bodies for analysis, and South Sudan health authorities reported the cases on Dec. 28, the WHO said in a statement. "The outbreak of suspected viral hemorrhagic fever in South Sudan could rapidly evolve, and critical information including laboratory confirmation of the etiology of disease is needed to direct response efforts," it said. National health authorities and WHO are investigating and have found evidence of zoonotic hemorrhagic illness in goats and sheep in the area, including some deaths, as well as deaths among wild birds at the time, it added. Poland's new prime minister is looking to improve strained relations with partners in the European Union when he arrives in Brussels on Tuesday. Mateusz Morawiecki, who replaced Beata Szydlo last month, is expected to stand his ground over several thorny issues that have raised concerns across the EU. The Polish government's stance on justice reform and immigration has prompted so much unease within the EU that a procedure to strip the country of voting rights in the 28-nation bloc has been started. We are expecting Brussels to understand our position, deputy Foreign Minister Konrad Szymanski said ahead of the introductory bilateral dinner between the new prime minister and EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker. Blurring separation of powers EU leaders have questioned whether Poland, a member of the bloc since 2004, respects fundamental democratic rules over recent reforms to the judiciary. Junckers office sees the reform as blurring the separation of powers and gives the governing Law and Justice too much control over the judges. Defending the changes, Morawiecki said in a New Years address that as a sovereign state we have the right to mend our justice system. Polands refusal to take in its share of an EU quota of refugees is another source of tension. Ahead of the meeting, Morawiecki is set to shuffle his government. The changes will be carefully monitored by top EU officials to see if they signal a more emollient approach to EU standards. EU seeks a show of unity Already resigned to the departure of Britain next year, the EU wants to maintain unity as much as possible this year. There is a kind of accumulated tension that is not convenient to either side and none of the sides wants to further escalate this tension, said Malgorzata Bonikowska, head of the Center for International Relations think tank. Both sides are in a bind. The EU already faces a serious rebel in Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, with his staunch opposition to the EUs migration policies. Orban could veto any attempt to strip Poland of its voting rights. However, Poland has no interest in escalating the crisis either as any road to EU departure could threaten the billions the country receives from EU coffers. In the 2014-2020 budget, Poland has been allocated 86 billion euros ($103 billion) in EU structural and investment funds. A vast majority of Poles support EU membership. An estimated 80 people have been killed in communal violence in Nigeria since Dec. 31, police and officials said Tuesday. The clashes are mostly between Muslim cattle herders and Christian farmers over the use of land in parts of the Middle Belt the country's most diverse region. On Tuesday, President Muhammadu Buhari ordered an increased police presence in the Benue state, Agence France-Presse reported. Similar clashes have taken place across central states in the country, polarizing Nigerians along ethnic and religious lines, and challenging Buhari's promise to bring security and stability to the country a central pledge of his 2015 campaign. In November, at least 30 members of the cattle herding community, including children, were killed in a clash in the northeastern state of Adamawa. Senior North and South Korean officials are holding their first face-to-face talks in two years after a series of North Korean missile tests and belligerent warlike rhetoric from Pyongyang. "I think we should be engaged in these talks with an earnest, sincere manner to give a New Year's gift precious results to the Korean nation," North Korean delegate Ri Son Gwon said, taking a much different tone. The talks are being held in Panmunjom the so-called peace village straddling the border where the 1953 armistice that ended the fighting in the Korean War was signed. The two counties are still officially at war. President Donald Trump is calling Tuesday's talks "a big start" and says he hopes they go beyond a conversation about whether the North will be a part of next month's Winter Olympics. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said in his New Year's Day message that he is willing to send a delegation to the Winter Games in South Korea, moments after boasting of a nuclear button on his desk that could fire a missile at the United States. South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who has sought better ties with the belligerent North, responded by offering talks with Kim's government. Tuesday's talks are widely expected to focus on the Olympics and whether athletes from the North and South can march jointly at the opening ceremonies. The U.S. has no part in the talks but is looking toward its close ally South Korea to possibly open the door to some kind of dialogue between Washington and the North Korean regime. "The sooner the Trump administration follows Moon's lead in opening a direct channel to Pyongyang, the better," professor John Delury of Yonsei University in Seoul writes in Foreign Affairs magazine. "Peacemaking efforts between the two Koreas alone are only part of the solution. But they could be an important catalyst and generate positive side effects, paving the way for the United States and North Korea to resume their own dialogue." As of this week, the chances of a North Korean-U.S. dialogue appear remote. Trump responded to Kim's remark of a nuclear button on his desk with a tweet that he has a "bigger and more powerful" button on his desk and that his works. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has not completely ruled out diplomacy with the North. He says Pyongyang would benefit as much as anyone in the Asia-Pacific region. But he says there cannot be any talks with North Korea until its denuclearization is "complete, verifiable, irreversible." The North is extremely unlikely to agree to this, no matter how heavy the sanctions get, just as the U.S. is not likely to agree to the North's demands to end annual large-scale joint war games with the South. Some analysts say the U.S. should simply accept North Korea into the family of nuclear-armed nations and work with China and Russia in keeping the North contained. But the U.S. views North Korea as an unstable, dirt-poor nation run by a dangerous dictator, with no clear way of knowing how he would lash out if he feels his regime is threatened, from within or without. Norway is perhaps best known in the world as the host country of the Nobel Peace Prize, a distinction fully in keeping with its record of maintaining peace and prosperity within its borders. Yet, beneath the tranquil surface, geopolitical currents are increasingly beating the shores of the Nordic kingdom of 5.3 million people, which lays proud claim to its Viking heritage. Those currents are bringing Norway's prime minister, Erna Solberg, to Washington this week to meet with President Donald Trump. According to the White House, Trump and Solberg will discuss shared defense and security goals within NATO, the global coalition to defeat Islamic State extremists, and trade and investment. Kare R. Aas, Norway's ambassador to the United States, described the United States as "Norway's closest ally" in an interview with VOA. "Our basic and main foreign policy priority is, first of all, maintain our security through NATO; it's very important for my country to continue to build on the strong cooperation we have with the United States in areas of security and defense," he said, adding that the idea of solidarity at home and abroad is important to Norway. In one of the latest developments, the Norwegian government has agreed to host 300 U.S. Marines on a six-month rotational basis for training, a trial that started in January 2017, despite Russia's openly stated opposition to the arrangement. The rotating U.S. soldiers will "learn to ski, fight and survive in Arctic cold," according to the Marine Corps Times. Increasing importance Although the United States and Norway are both Arctic countries, the U.S.'s claim to Arctic affinity is limited to Alaska, while close to half of Norway's land mass and one-tenth of its population lie above the Arctic Circle a region of increasing commercial and political importance as climate change facilitates navigation and resource exploration. In a major policy speech in November, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson described the Arctic region as "important today increasingly important in the future, particularly as those waterways have opened up." Tillerson concedes that the United States is "behind all the other Arctic nations" in paying attention to the region's growing importance. "The Russians made it a strategic priority. Even the Chinese are building icebreaking tankers. Now, why are they building icebreakers?They're not an Arctic nation. Because they see the value of these passages," Tillerson said. Aker Arctic Technology, a Helsinki firm specializing in the design, development, engineering and testing services for icebreakers, was awarded a contract, valued at about $6 million, to perform the conceptual and basic design of China's new Polar Research Vessel, according to the company. China has also ordered a helicopter to accompany its icebreaker from the Italian company Leonardo. Both are scheduled to be delivered in 2019. Meanwhile, Russia has identified several key national interests in the Arctic, beginning with its use "as a strategic resource base" providing potential solutions to the task of socioeconomic development of the country. It also looks forward to using the Arctic Ocean as a national unified transportation line. 'In treasure as well' Aas once told U.S. audiences about a saying in Norway: There is no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothes. This notion appears equally applicable as Norway outfits its armed forces in response to changing demands. In November, Norway's King Harald V, accompanied by government ministers, stood on the tarmac at rland Air Base outside the capital, Oslo, to welcome the arrival of the first batch of the latest combat-ready fighter jets built by the American aerospace company Lockheed Martin. Norway's decision to dress up its armed forces with 50-plus F-35As at a cost of close to $100 million each signals at once commitment toward its sovereignty and other NATO members, including the United States. "The new combat aircraft will be a key factor in deterring any attack on Norway, as well as ensuring that we meet our obligations to the NATO alliance," Defense Minister Frank Bakke-Jensen said at the welcome ceremony. Norwegians have cause to not take peace, freedom and security for granted. During World War II, Norway was invaded and occupied by Nazi Germany, forcing the royal family to live in exile in Britain and the United States. Norway donates a Christmas tree to Washington each year in part to express the country's gratitude for the United States' having hosted members of the royal family during the war. While visiting Brussels last month, Tillerson met with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, a former Norwegian prime minister, and praised the latter's leadership of NATO as well as alliance member states that have stepped up to "reaffirm their commitment to the alliance, not only in words but in treasure as well." With their alpine grasslands shrinking due to erratic rainfall and glacier retreat, herders in Peru's central Andes have decided that the future lies in reviving the past. To improve access to water and save their livestock, indigenous communities in the villages of Canchayllo and Miraflores have restored abandoned dams, reservoirs and canals that date back over 3,000 years. Two years on from completion of the project supported by The Mountain Institute (TMI), a U.S.-based non-profit there are more and better quality pastures for sheep, cattle and alpaca to graze, and milk, meat, and crop yields have risen. The project's success, benefiting 9,600 people in the Nor Yauyos Cochas Landscape Reserve, has raised hopes for thousands of highland communities in Peru and elsewhere who are facing similar climate pressures, said Florencia Zapata of TMI, which works with mountain communities. It could also have far-reaching impacts along the desert coast, home to almost 70 percent of the population, which receives less than 2 percent of Peru's available water. "Water that most of the population depends on comes mainly from the mountains. So, we need to take care of (that water)," Zapata, who oversaw the project, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview. The western ranges of the "brown" Andes with a marked dry season are dotted with remains of ancient infrastructures dedicated to managing water, said Jorge Recharte, director of TMI's Andes program. The ranges extend to Bolivia, Chile and Argentina and while some water structures are still in use, knowledge and understanding of them had started to vanish as populations dwindled due to migration to the cities, Recharte said. Peru's glaciers are a source of fresh water for millions of people but they have diminished by 40 percent since the 1970s, government figures showed. The South American country is home to 70 percent of the world's tropical glaciers, which are "especially sensitive to warming temperatures", the United Nations warned. Fears over the melting of an Andean glacier has even led to an intercontinental lawsuit that environmentalists are watching closely. "As glacier retreat progresses and climate change kicks in ... new lands are becoming available for agriculture in the Andes," said Alexander Herrera, an archaeologist and associate professor at Colombia's Universidad de los Andes. "Learning from the past is absolutely crucial for sustainable, low-risk, productive agriculture (of the kind) the Andes have had for thousands of years," said Herrera, who was involved in the Canchayllo and Miraflores projects. Grey and green Peru has a long history of embarking on engineering feats to manage the flow of water for agriculture. The Incas and the civilisations before them built terraces, cisterns and canals while modern government projects include the $500-million Olmos and the stalled Chavimochic III irrigation projects. It was at one of the first meetings TMI organised in 2013 that locals raised the possibility of rehabilitating the neglected pre-Inca hydraulic structures. Designed to slow the movement of water through grasses and soils, they replenished aquifers and springs and helped the grasslands retain more water, allowing biodiversity to flourish. This way, the ecosystem acted as a buffer against flooding and drought and provided fodder for their animals, who in turn produce cheese and importantly manure, used to cultivate "thousands of native potato, corn, tuber and grain varieties," Zapata said. The restoration and adaptation of ancient terraces and canals for modern use has been pioneered by British archaeologist Ann Kendall since the late 1970s. But other attempts by Andean governments and aid groups in the 1980s to revive these technologies for development failed because the focus was more on techniques and less on the needs of the locals, said archaeologist Herrera. In Canchayllo and Miraflores, the restoration has combined ancient and modern technologies to meet the demands of herders, after months of consultation. The restored systems incorporate "grey" infrastructure such as PVC pipes, water valves and fences and "green" elements such as restoration of grasslands and wetlands. The restoration minimised the need for regular maintenance work since labor is in short supply, with the young and able moving to cities for better jobs. "It is not enough to just improve their infrastructure or water availability. If people are not organised to manage the infrastructure, it will collapse sooner or later," Zapata said. Not another burden Julio Postigo, a Peruvian expert on pastoralism in high altitudes, said poor, marginalised communities needed support from government to revive the ancient structures just as families were supported centuries ago. "We tend to forget, when we romanticise these Inca or pre-Inca or ancient responses, that they were never taken by individual families," said Postigo, a senior research scientist at the University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Center. "You're talking about an empire that decided that that infrastructure was going to be built." TMI said it was looking to train and work with the Peruvian government and other organisations to replicate the success of projects in central Peru. But reviving ancient water systems must be part of a wider plan to help communities cope with climate change, said Postigo. "The people most vulnerable to climate change effects are those who are poorer, less educated, more marginal, indigenous," he said in a phone interview. "We should fight poverty and improve living conditions. In doing so, those populations will be on a better foot to respond to climate change." The human rights group Amnesty International called Tuesday on Myanmar to immediately release two Reuters journalists it has detained, contending the government was trying to thwart their investigation of its military actions against the minority Rohingyas. Amnesty International said the journalists, Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, "have done absolutely nothing but carry out their legitimate work." James Gomez, Amnesty International's director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, said, "This is clearly an attempt by the authorities to silence investigations into military violations and crimes against Rohingya in Rakhine state, and to scare other journalists away from doing the same." Gomez contended that the arrests of the two journalists "have not happened in a vacuum, but come as authorities are increasingly restricting independent media. Journalists and media outlets, in particular those who report on 'sensitive topics,' are living with the constant fear of harassment, intimidation or arrest. This clampdown on freedom of speech must end." Amnesty International said the journalists were arrested December 12 in Yangon and held incommunicado for two weeks. Myanmar says the two reporters are being investigated for possible violations of the country's Official Secrets Act, which, if they are convicted, could result in up to 14 years in prison. They are to appear in court Wednesday. The journalists had worked on stories about Myanmar's military crackdown in Rakhine state, leading to the flight of more than 600,000 ethnic Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh since last August. The Foreign Correspondents Club of Hong Kong says Myanmar has blocked journalists from traveling independently to northern Rakhine to look firsthand at the crackdown, and to verify refugees' claims of murder, mass rape and burning of villages by security forces. The United Nations, the United States, Britain, Sweden and Bangladesh are among those who have called for the release of the two journalists. Days after the journalists' detention, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said, "A free press is vital to Myanmar's transition and becoming a vital democracy, and we want Myanmar's democracy to succeed." Reuters President and Editor-in-Chief Stephen Adler said the global news organization is "outraged by this blatant attack on press freedom." An Iranian oil tanker continues to burn in the East China Sea Tuesday, three days after it collided with a Chinese cargo ship off the China's east coast. China's Ministry of Transport said Tuesday that efforts by emergency vessels to extinguish the fire on the Panamanian-registered tanker Sanchi and search for its missing crewmen were hampered by poor conditions at sea, including strong winds and choppy waves, along with toxic fumes from the wrecked tanker. China, South Korea and the U.S. Navy have deployed ships and aircraft to assist with the search for the missing crewmen amid an area of 900-square nautical miles. The ministry says rescue workers recovered one unidentified body near the wreckage Monday believed to be one of the tanker's missing 32 crew members, including 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis. Chinese officials had said earlier Monday that the oil tanker was at risk of exploding and sinking amid warnings of a potential environmental disaster. The Panama-registered tanker Sanchi was sailing from Iran to South Korea carrying 136,000 metric tons of condensate, an ultra-light type of crude oil, when it slammed into the Hong Kong-registered CF Crystal about 257 kilometers off the coast of Shanghai. The Crystals 21 crew members - all Chinese nationals were rescued after the collision. The ship was carrying grain from the United States to China. It was not immediately clear what caused the collision. Saturday's is the second collision for a ship owned by the National Iranian Tanker Co. in less than a year-and-a-half. In August 2016, one of its tankers collided with a Swiss container ship in the Singapore Strait, damaging both ships but causing no injuries or oil spill. South African President Jacob Zuma Tuesday announced a corruption probe into the highest levels of the state, after parliament indicated it would move to impeach him. On December 13, a South African court ruled that a commission be set up within 30 days to carry out such an inquiry. "The allegations that the state has been wrestled out of the hands of its real owner, the people of South Africa, is of paramount importance and are therefore deserving of finality and certainty," Zuma said in a statement, the French news agency reported, adding, "I have decided to appoint a commission of inquiry." Last month, the ruling ANC elected Cyril Ramaphosa as party leader to replace Zuma, who stepped down amid corruption allegations, but will remain South Africa's president until nationwide elections in 2019. South Korea says it will not renegotiate a 2015 agreement with Japan aimed at reaching a final settlement over the so-called "comfort women" who were forced into sexual slavery by Japanese colonial forces. Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha told reporters in Seoul Tuesday it was "undeniable" the deal, approved during the administration of ousted conservative President Park Geun-hye, is a formal agreement between Seoul and Tokyo. Under the deal, Tokyo agreed to pay $8 million into a fund to support the victims, and offered an apology from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe for the actions of its troops during Japan's brutal rule of the Korean peninsula between 1910 and 1945. But President Moon Jae-in said last week the deal was seriously flawed and failed to seek the opinions of the women who worked in Japanese military brothels, siding with the conclusion of a special task force he created to study the agreement. Although it will not seek to renegotiate the deal, Kang said the South Korean government will replace the $8 million Japan paid into the victims' fund with money from its own budget. She also urged Japan to "accept the truth in accordance with universally accepted standards" and continue efforts to help the survivors regain their dignity and heal their wounds. In Tokyo, Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono repeated his government's call for Seoul to uphold the pact, which he called "final and irreversible. Kono has previously warned that bilateral ties would be damaged if South Korea tries to amend the pact. Historians believe that up to 200,000 women, mostly from Korea as well as other parts of Asia, were forced into sexual slavery during World War II. Both the South Sudan government and rebels loyal to former Vice President Riek Machar say they are not holding political detainees or prisoners of war. The declarations to VOA's South Sudan in Focus came two days after a January 7 deadline for both sides to hand over political detainees and POWs to the International Committee of the Red Cross. The deadline was set in the cessation of hostilities agreement signed December 22 in Addis Ababa. South Sudan's information minister, Michael Makuei, said the government only detains criminals. "The government of the Republic of South Sudan has no political detainees, and so far we have no knowledge of any prisoners of war. People in our custody are mere criminals who committed offenses and they are charged according to the law," Makuei told VOA. Colonel Lam Paul, deputy military spokesman of the faction led by Machar, said the group is not holding POWs or political detainees, but some men that were in their custody have since decided to join their side. "These soldiers, whenever they are arrested, many of them in fact pledge loyalty to us," Paul told VOA. "So we don't have political detainees and we don't have prisoners of war with us. We always hand them to ICRC and whoever decides to stay with us, we give them the freedom." Paul asserted the same cannot be said of the government, and accused the government of holding more than 500 political detainees and POWs under harsh conditions. Makuei insisted the government released all those detained for political reasons last year, after President Salva Kiir offered unconditional amnesty to all rebels who laid down their weapons and agreed to uphold a unilateral cease-fire. "All these people were released, so with the current signing of the cessation of hostilities, we have nobody in custody. Those ones were released a long time ago when Kiir declared amnesty," Makuei said. He challenged those speaking on social media "who claim we have them, let them produce the list of people whom they call political detainees." The December 22 agreement called for a cease-fire, but both sides have reported violations. Makuei contends violations are normal, but said that does not mean the agreement has collapsed. "Whatever violations that are committed, there is a body established already to verify and to come up with a clear statement," Makuei said. "Unfortunately, some institutions and organizations have moved ahead of time condemning the two parties for violations, which is unfair." Makuei said government is committed to restoring peace across South Sudan through the High Level Revitalization Forum, led by the Intergovernmental Authority on Development. The opposing parties are expected to meet in Addis Ababa next month to hammer out more unresolved issues in an effort to revitalize a 2015 peace deal. Honeybees are attracted to a fungicide used in agriculture with "unsettling implications" for global food production, a scientist said Tuesday. Tests carried out by a team from the University of Illinois showed bees preferred to collect sugar syrup laced with the fungicide chlorothalonil over sugar syrup alone. The finding follows other studies linking fungicides to a worldwide plunge in honeybee and wild bee populations that are crucial for pollinating crops. "Bees are kind of like humans in that they sometimes like things that aren't necessarily good for them," said University of Illinois entomology professor May Berenbaum, who led the research. She said fungicides were bad news for bees because they could exacerbate the toxicity of pesticides and kill off beneficial fungi in hives. Her team set up two feeding stations in an enclosure allowing the bees to choose sugar syrup laced with a test chemical or without. The chemicals included three fungicides and two herbicides at various concentrations. The researchers were taken aback to find the bees choosing one of the fungicides. Expanation for contamination "It was a surprise when they actually liked them," Berenbaum told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone, adding that it could explain why fungicide contamination in hives was so common. "This is not anything that anyone had even thought about before, so we need to readjust our focus because there certainly could be implications for agriculture," she said. However, she said the bees actively avoided a second tested fungicide and were neutral about a third. The scientists said the findings were "worrisome" in light of research showing fungicides interfere with honeybees' ability to metabolize pesticides used by beekeepers to kill parasitic mites that infest their hives. The scientists were also surprised to find the bees showed a taste for the widely used herbicide glyphosate. A study by the Center for Biological Diversity last year said hundreds of native bee species in North America and Hawaii were sliding toward extinction. It said bees provided more than $3 billion in fruit-pollination services each year in the United States. Experts have blamed habitat loss, heavy pesticide use, climate change and increasing urbanization for declining numbers. The United Nations recently announced an annual World Bee Day on May 20 to raise awareness of their importance and declining numbers. A suicide bomber has killed at least six people and wounded more than 25 others in southwestern Pakistan. The attack Tuesday targeted a police vehicle in a high-security area in Quetta, the capital of violence-hit Baluchistan province. Doctors and rescue workers said the victims were mostly police personnel and several of those injured were in critical condition. The anti-state Pakistani Taliban has claimed responsibility for the bombing. Initial police findings suggest the bomber was riding a motorbike and his body parts have been retrieved from the scene. The blast occurred just hours after Baluchistan's chief minister resigned, saying he had lost confidence of members of the provincial legislative assembly. U.S. President Donald Trump told key lawmakers Tuesday that he would sign whatever legislation they agreed upon to protect hundreds of thousands of young immigrants from being deported and to improve security along the country's border with Mexico. In an extraordinary televised meeting at the White House, Trump said that comprehensive immigration reforms could be dealt with later. He said he still believed a wall needed to be built along at least part of the 3,200-kilometer (1,990-mile) U.S.-Mexico border, but he seemed to back off earlier demands that it be funded immediately. WATCH: US Congress Racing Against Time to Fund Government, Save DACA Recipients "When this group comes back with an agreement, I'm signing it," Trump said. A statement from the White House press secretary said, "President Donald J. Trump just concluded a successful bipartisan and bicameral meeting on immigration reform. During the closed-door portion of the meeting, they reached an agreement to negotiate legislation that accomplishes critically needed reforms in four high-priority areas: border security, chain migration, the visa lottery, and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy." The U.S. leader said lawmakers need first to protect as many 800,000 young immigrants brought illegally to the United States years ago by their parents, mostly from Mexico and Central American countries from being deported. Trump last year rescinded DACA, an administrative program implemented by former President Barack Obama that protected the youths from deportation, but he gave Congress until March 5 to come up with legislation that provided similar protections. Trump normally dismisses reporters and photojournalists from his meetings after perfunctory remarks, but on Tuesday he allowed them to watch the immigration discussions with lawmakers for 45 minutes. Some Republican lawmakers pushed back on Trump's agreement to prioritize dealing with young immigrants sometimes called Dreamers after the DREAM Act, earlier federal legislation that would have provided protections similar to those in DACA but was never approved. But as the discussion continued, Trump also said border "security" needed to be dealt with, even as he left it up to the lawmakers to work out details. Trump's new homeland security chief, Kirstjen Nielsen, told him, "Border security has to be part of this or we'll be back here three, four or five years from now," still dealing with illegal immigration across the border with Mexico. U.S. officials say Trump's hard line on immigration policies last year sharply cut the number of migrants entering the country illegally from Mexico. The contentious immigration issue took center stage as Trump and Congress face a January 19 deadline to agree on a federal spending plan that will run through September. They already have been forced three times to agree on temporary plans. But rather than wait another two months to vote on legislation protecting the immigrants in the country under DACA, Democratic lawmakers are pushing to resolve the issue as part of the budget talks. Trump, even as he rescinded the DACA program, has occasionally voiced sympathy for the plight of the young immigrants, many of whom know the U.S. as their only home. But in exchange, Trump wants passage of a number of other immigration-related measures, including the effort to increase border security by constructing a wall that he vowed during his 2016 presidential campaign would be built and paid for by Mexico. Now Trump has called for an initial $18 billion in U.S. taxpayer funding for the wall, a proposal that Democrats and some Republican lawmakers oppose. A compromise with protection for the young immigrants and some enhanced border security, without construction of the wall could eventually be reached. But lawmakers said that was not likely at Tuesday's meeting as they considered options for resolving the standoff with Trump. The top Democrat in the House of Representatives, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California, told reporters Monday, "I think we will" reach an agreement on the young immigrants, mainly because neither Democrats nor Republicans want the lack of a spending bill to force a partial government shutdown at the end of next week. She said negotiations would center on what immigration compromises Trump might be willing to make with Democrats, because "Republicans will by and large vote for anything the president supports. So that's where the negotiations are taking place." A key Senate Republican, Texas Senator John Cornyn, said, "I do want us to get to a solution." President Donald Trump says he doesn't believe self-made billionaire media proprietor and philanthropist Oprah Winfrey will run for president in 2020 but he expressed confidence that he would defeat her. "Oprah will be lots of fun," Trump said at the White House Tuesday. "I don't think she's going to run." WATCH: Trump on Oprah presidential run Winfrey, 63, is not running at least, officially. But her Sunday night speech at the Golden Globe awards show unleashed immediate and intense media speculation about a candidacy in 2020, presumably as a Democrat. I dont know if he saw it," deputy White House spokesman Hogan Gidley said on Monday responding to a reporters question about whether Trump saw Winfreys impassioned speech in which she made no mention of him or the presidency. However, her remarks about being raised in poverty, empowerment of women and support for the press (under constant criticism by Trump), quickly prompted even some conservative political figures to speak positively of her as a potential candidate. Winfrey, when asked backstage if she planned to run for president, replied, "I don't. I don't." But some close to her were quoted Monday saying she is thinking about it. Her long-time partner, Stedman Graham, was quoted Sunday evening telling The Los Angeles Times, It's up to the people. She would absolutely do it. In a television interview early last year, Winfrey indicated that Trumps election had changed her mind about whether she lacked experience for Americas highest office. But in another TV interview in October, she dampened speculation, stating, There will be no running for office of any kind for me. Winfrey, as was the case for Trump before being elected president, has never held public office. In the past, Trump has spoken positively of Winfrey. In a 1999 television interview when he said he was thinking about running for president the following year (although he did not), Trump declared, Oprah would always be my first choice for a running mate," adding, shes brilliant and a very exceptional woman. Winfrey endorsed Democratic Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois when he first ran successfully for the U.S. presidency in 2008, and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in her losing 2016 campaign against Trump. No clear Democratic front-runner has emerged to challenge Trump in 2020, with the immediate political focus in the U.S. on November's congressional elections, when the 435-member House of Representatives will be up for election, along with a third of the 100-member Senate. In the months after the congressional elections, halfway through Trump's four-year term, Democratic presidential challengers are likely to begin announcing their candidacies to run against him. Ken Bredemeier contributed to this report. Special counsel Robert Mueller's team of investigators has expressed interest in speaking with President Donald Trump as part of a probe into potential coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign, a person familiar with the matter said Monday. The prospect of an interview with the president has come up in recent discussions between Mueller's team and Trump lawyers, but no details have been worked out, including the scope of questions that the president would agree to answer if an interview were to actually take place, according to the person. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss the ongoing investigation. When or even if an interview would occur was not immediately clear, nor were the terms for the interview or whether Trump's lawyers would seek to narrow the range of questions or topics that prosecutors would cover. Trump's lawyers have previously stated their determination to cooperate with Mueller's requests. It's not surprising that investigators would ultimately seek to interview the president given his role in several episodes under scrutiny by Mueller. Any interview of Trump would be a likely indication that the investigation was in its final stages - investigators typically look to interview main subjects in their inquiries near the end of a probe. Mueller for months has led a team of prosecutors and agents investigating whether Russia and Trump's Republican campaign coordinated to sway the 2016 election, and whether Trump has worked to obstruct an FBI investigation into his aides, including by firing the FBI director, James Comey. Comey has said that several months before he was dismissed, Trump told him he hoped he would end an investigation into his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn. Mueller's team recently concluded a series of interviews with many current and former White House aides, including former chief of staff Reince Priebus and the president's son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Four people have been charged so far, including Flynn, who pleaded guilty in December to lying to the FBI about his conversations with the Russian ambassador. Former campaign chairman Paul Manafort was indicted on charges tied to foreign lobbying work. Peter Carr, a spokesman for Mueller, declined to comment, as did Trump lawyers John Dowd and Jay Sekulow. Trump did not rule out the possibility of being questioned by Mueller when asked about it at a news conference Saturday. He said there had been "no collusion'' and "no crime.'' "But we have been very open,'' Trump said. "We could have done it two ways. We could have been very closed and it would have taken years. But you know, it's sort of like, when you've done nothing wrong, let's be open and get it over with.'' A White House spokesman pointed to a statement from White House lawyer Ty Cobb saying the White House doesn't publicly discuss its conversations with Mueller but was continuing to cooperate "in order to facilitate the earliest possible resolution.'' Turkey's nationalist opposition said on Monday it would back President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the 2019 election, signaling continued right-wing support crucial to his narrow victory in a constitutional referendum last year. The Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), the smallest of parliament's four factions, backed the vote to grant Erdogan sweeping executive powers, helping it squeak by with a margin of 51.4 percent. "The MHP will not submit a presidential candidate," MHP leader Devlet Bahceli told a news conference. "The MHP will take a decision to support Erdogan in the presidential elections." Turks will vote for both president and parliament next year. Bahceli has said he wants a reduction in the minimum 10 percent vote required for a party to enter parliament. Over the past two decades he has brought the MHP more toward the mainstream and away from its early reputation for ties to rightist street gangs. The party is now looking to fend off a challenge from Meral Aksener, an ex-interior minister and prominent nationalist who last year founded her own party after breaking with the MHP. One recent poll suggested that Aksener's party could eclipse the MHP and deprive it of the 10 percent threshold. Bahceli said the MHP would consider an alliance with Erdogan's AK Party if such a request came from the AKP. The MHP won as much as 18 percent in the 1999 parliamentary election, but slipped below the threshold with 9.5 percent in 2002. It has exceeded 10 percent in elections since and took 11.9 percent in the November 2015 vote. Founded by an ex-colonel involved in a 1960 military coup, the MHP espouses a mix of Turkish nationalism and skepticism toward the West. It is virulently opposed to autonomy for Turkey's Kurdish minority. The MHP support base once included sympathizers of the "Grey Wolves," a nationalist youth group that fought street battles with leftists in the 1970s. Mehmet Ali Agca, who tried to assassinate Pope John Paul II in 1981, was a group member. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Tuesday said a sanctions-busting court case in New York involving Turkish nationals is a "political coup attempt" against him and his government. With Erdogan also threatening military action against a key U.S. ally in Syria, relations between the NATO allies could deteriorate further. Erdogan alleged the conviction of a Turkish state banker in the federal case is the latest attempt by the FBI and CIA to unseat him. He made the comment while addressing members of his AK Party in parliament. "Those who could not succeed in the military coup attempt in Turkey on July 15 [2016], are now searching for a different attempt in our country, he said. He cited the case in the U.S. as "the address of this political coup attempt." Ankara also accuses Washington of collaborating with U.S.-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen in the 2016 failed coup that left an estimated 150 people dead. The U.S. denies the accusation.Turkey has asked the U.S. to extradite Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania and has denied all involvement in the coup attempt. Bilateral relations between the NATO allies, already deeply strained since the coup attempt, have been further exacerbated by the conviction in New York of Mehmet Hakan Atilla, a senior executive of Halkbank, on charges of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran. The repercussions of that conviction could lead to a further ratcheting up of tensions, warned analyst Atilla Yesilada of Global Source Partners. "I see an escalation of the crisis," he said. "The United States could threaten a wide range of sanctions; even the threat would cast a long shadow on the Turkish banking system. There would be immense difficulties for Turkish entities to borrow abroad." Turkey needs to borrow around $16 billion a month to cover its financial obligations. Erdogan also threatened Tuesday to attack the Syrian Kurdish militia, the YPG, a key U.S. ally in the war against Islamic State. Ankara considers the militia a terrorist organization linked to an ongoing insurgency in Turkey. Diplomatic columnist Semih Idiz of the al-Monitor website said the threat could be an effort to pressure Washington "There is definite brinkmanship on the part of Turkey," he said. "There is no doubt about that and there is no guarantee it will get what it wants. But Ankara is banking on the fact that Turkey is vitally strategic for Washington and somewhere it can't be avoided, not that Turkey is courting Russia and all this. So I think Erdogan is trying to apply pressure to reduce whatever penalty is coming." To U.S. unease, Turkey is increasingly deepening relations with Russia. Erdogan is also looking to France after a visit last week to Paris, with pro-government media touting France as a more reliable ally than the United States. But with both Paris and Moscow also supporting the Syrian Kurdish militia, analysts suggest Ankara is unlikely to carry out its threats against the group. They say if the current deterioration in relations with Washington continues, Ankara's search for other allies is likely to intensify. The U.N. refugee agency is appealing to the government of Israel not to forcibly send thousands of Eritrean and Sudanese refugees or asylum seekers to other countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The U.N. refugee agency says Israel's policy has been in place since 2016, but Israel generally has not applied it; however, UNHCR spokesman William Spindler says Israels plans, announced January 1, to forcibly relocate Eritreans and Sudanese to countries in Africa or have them face indefinite detention, are of great concern. Official statements that the plans may eventually target families and those with pending asylum claims, or that asylum seekers might be taken to the airport in handcuffs, are particularly alarmingForced relocation to countries that do not offer effective protection and the onward movement of these people to Libya and Europe is particularly worrisome, Spindler said. An estimated 27,000 Eritreans and 7,700 Sudanese are currently in Israel. Since the government took over the screening process from the UNHCR in 2009, only 10 Eritreans and one Sudanese have been recognized as refugees. Between November 2015 and December 2017, UNHCR staff in Rome interviewed 80 Eritrean refugees or asylum seekers -- all had been forcibly relocated by Israel. Spindler says their cases demonstrate the dangers of this policy. Most said they had been transferred from Israel to a country in Africa and provided with a lump sum of U.S. $3,500; however, the situation on arrival was different to what most had expected and with little further support provided beyond accommodation on the first night. They reported feeling unsafe, as they were known to have money, Spindler said. Spindler says all the Eritreans report they had entered Israel via the Sinai and suffered torture, mistreatment and extortion on their way. He says the UNHCR is ready to help Israel find alternate solutions, such as legal resettlement to another country to ensure the protection of the asylum seekers. The Africans who have crossed into Israel describe themselves as refugees seeking political asylum, but Israel sees the majority as illegal economic migrants and even infiltrators. The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad is denying Pakistans claims it has suspended military or intelligence cooperation with the United States. Embassy spokesman Richard Snelsire said, We have not received any formal communication regarding a suspension. Earlier Tuesday, in a speech to the Islamabad-based, government sponsored Institute for Strategic Studies, Pakistans Defense Minister, Khurram Dastgir Khan, said there is "... a wide field of intelligence cooperation and defense cooperation, which we have suspended." But he added, the supply lines for NATO troops in Afghanistan, formally known as the Ground Lines of Communication or the Air Lines of Communication were still open. Pakistans claim came after Washingtons decision to suspend security assistance to Islamabad. In Washington, State Departments Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Steve Goldstein told VOA Tuesday the United States is hopeful that Pakistan will come back to the table and assist in U.S. efforts to combat terrorism. The U.S. announced last Thursday that it would not deliver military equipment or transfer security-related funds to Pakistan, suspending the so-called Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and Coalition Support Funds (CSF) but not civilian assistance to that country. Monday, a Pentagon spokesman said the United States had conveyed to Pakistan concrete steps to take before the United States would resume hundreds of millions of dollars in aid, which was suspended after U.S. President Donald Trump indicated Pakistan had lied and deceived the United States while providing safe havens to terrorists fighting in Afghanistan. Pakistan says the United States is scapegoating it for U.S. failures in Afghanistan. A senior State Department official said earlier the success in Afghanistan relies on better relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan, and it relies on Pakistan being an active, constructive player in South Asia. Pakistan says the United States is scapegoating it for U.S. failures in Afghanistan. In his address, Khan also reminded the United States it needs Pakistan in its fight against terrorism in Afghanistan. A reminder is in order. Logistics trump strategy, he said. Pakistan blocked the Lines of Communication for months after a 2011 attack by the NATO air force accidentally hit two Pakistani check posts, killing more than two dozen Pakistani soldiers. Pakistan is considered the safest and cheapest route to resupply NATO troops. Other possible routes that go through Central Asian countries are more expensive and pass through a region Russia considers its backyard. Tensions between the United States and Russia have been high since Russia was accused of meddling in the latest U.S. presidential elections. We always look at that, said Goldstein when asked if Washington is assessing alternative routes should Pakistan blocks supply routes to Afghanistan, while adding the U.S. is suspending but not cutting off permanently security aid to Pakistan. But statements from senior U.S. officials indicate that despite these limitations, the administration is serious in its stance that Pakistan needs to change its behavior. In a Sunday interview with CBSs Face the Nation, CIA Director Mike Pompeo said, The president has made very clear that he needs Pakistan to cease being a safe haven for terrorists that threaten the United States of America. End. Period. Full stop. Khan said his country wants to keep engagement with the United States open and would use its leverage after the utmost care and deliberation. Under pressure from U.S. lawmakers, the U.S. State Department said Tuesday Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will convene an accountability review board to probe the health attacks on 24 American diplomatic personnel in Cuba. Todd Brown, diplomatic security assistant director for international programs in the State Department, told a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing that officials are investigating various potential causes for the attacks. I think theres viral. Theres ultrasound. Theres a range of things the technical experts are looking at," Brown said. He acknowledged the State Department has not been able to find out who is responsible for the attacks or what methods were used, and said the FBI took up the investigation in May. An FBI team has since visited Havana several times and met with Cuban officials. The FBIs investigation has interviewed victims and conducted surveys of the residences and hotel rooms. However the investigation remains ongoing and we would refer all specific questions concerning the investigation to the FBI," Brown said. Dr. Charles Rosenfarb, medical director in the State Department's Bureau of Medical Services said the symptoms most closely match those associated with a mild traumatic brain injury. "Although the assembled group identified that some of the symptoms at finding could be caused by other things such as viral illnesses, previous head trauma, aging, and even stress, the consensus was that the patterns of injuries that had so far been noted were most likely related to trauma from a non-natural source," Rosenfarb told lawmakers. Targeted attacks During Tuesday's hearing, senators from both parties slammed State Department officials for what they called a "sluggish" and inadequate response to what Tillerson says are "targeted attacks." "This was not something conducted by a fly-by-night operation," Senator Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American Republican, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "Whatever happened to these people happened as a result of some sophisticated technology that quite frankly is so sophisticated that we don't understand it." Rubio listed the medically confirmed symptoms all 24 Americans have experienced: "sharp ear pain, dull headaches, ringing in one ear, vertigo, visual focusing issues, disorientation, nausea and extreme fatigue." He said the incidents began as early as November 2016, with additional incidents last year. Fellow Cuban-American senator and ranking Democrat Bob Menendez also said he was outraged by the attacks and dissatisfied with the State Departments response. It is unfortunate that since the news of these bizarre and vicious attacks broke late last summer, we have not seen more public outcry against the Cuban government," Menendez said. Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Francisco Palmieri defended his departments response during Tuesday's hearing, saying the health and well-being of the 24 confirmed victims continues to be Secretary Tillersons and the departments top priority. Under questioning from Senator Rubio about the law requiring the State Department to convene an accountability review board whenever U.S. diplomatic personnel suffer serious injury at their posts abroad, he said that Tillerson will convene a review board and will officially inform Congress of his intentions soon. Perplexing Cuba has denied any involvement, conducted its own investigation, and allowed State Department and FBI officials to travel to Cuba to conduct their own probe into what U.S. officials still describe as perplexing attacks. Following the incidents, the United States recalled a number of non-essential diplomats and their families from Cuba and expelled 15 Cubans from the Cuban embassy in Washington. Senator Menendez said expelling a handful of diplomats was hardly a bold move, and that the State Departments response has been bureaucratic and troubling, noting the department had not even warned U.S. diplomats heading to Cuba about risks to their health and safety. He said the Castro regime has proved time and time again it is not a responsible actor in the community of nations and that is has no regard for individual human rights. The Cuban government may or may not, at the end of the day, be responsible for attacking our diplomats. But as someone who has personally witnessed the modus operandi of the Cuban government, it is unfathomable that the Castro regime and the intelligence services specifically were not aware of these attacks," Menendez said. In an interview with the Associated Press released Monday, Secretary of State Tillerson said he has no intention of restoring the normal U.S. diplomatic presence in Cuba, saying he would be putting people intentionally in harms way if he sent diplomats back to Cuba. Venezuela has extended its ban on air and maritime ties with three nearby Dutch Caribbean islands, citing out of control smuggling, officials said Tuesday. Venezuela is pressing for high-level talks with leaders of Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire before trading can resume, officials said. Vice President Tareck El Aissami said that leaders of the three islands must step up to control criminal groups that he says are smuggling Venezuelan goods, harming citizens of his country. "We are not going to allow anymore aggression from these criminal organizations," El Aissami said on Twitter, urging leaders of the islands to take action. President Nicolas Maduro on Friday first ordered the 72-hour ban, accusing island leaders of being complicit in illegal trafficking. It follows threats he made in mid-December to close the routes. Venezuelan authorities allege that the smuggling of products to neighboring countries is one of the causes of the severe shortage of food and other basic products that the South American country has been facing for several years. The islands popular with tourists lie a short distance from Venezuela's coast and host oil refineries run by Venezuela's state oil giant and U.S. subsidiary Citgo. In recent years, Venezuelans fleeing the nation's economic collapse have sometimes fled to the islands by boat. In 2015 and 2016, Maduro took a similar measure to combat smuggling, temporarily closing the border crossings with Colombia. Vietnam announced on Monday the creation of a cyberspace operations command to protect its sovereignty on the Internet, with prime minister citing risks related to the disputed South China Sea and complex regional and global situations. The new unit would "research and predict online wars," the defense ministry said in report on the government website, which also reported Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc's comments. Vietnam is locked in a long-running territorial dispute with China in the South China Sea, which it refers to as the East Sea. While Phuc singled out the South China Sea, he made no mention of China. "To protect the country in the new situation, the Communist Party has set a high priority on protection of the State in cyberspace," the website quoted Phuc as saying at the foundation ceremony for the new unit. In December, Vietnam revealed it had a cyber warfare unit of 10,000 staff, named Force 47, to counter what it said were 'wrong' views on the Internet, local media reported. The government has also called for closer watch over social media networks and sought the removal of content that it deemed offensive, but there has been little sign of it silencing criticism aired on global platforms. In August, Vietnam's president said the country needed to pay greater attention to controlling "news sites and blogs with bad and dangerous content," amid a crackdown on critics of the one-party state. Voter registration is underway in Cameroon ahead of nationwide elections later this year, however the electoral body is encountering both voter apathy and challenges due to insecurity in some parts of the country. The staff of Cameroon elections management body ELECAM move from shop to shop at the busy Mfoundi market in Yaounde convincing potential voters to have their names registered on electoral lists. Business lady Winifred Bwei, 34, decides not to sign up. "Last election year [2013], I went to vote," she explained. "I saw that somebody had already voted. I saw my name that somebody had already voted [as me] and I was not the one and political parties are complaining that elections are always rigged by the ruling government so I dont think my voting would change anything." Cameroon plans to hold local council, parliamentary and presidential elections starting in September. If held separately, the polls could continue into October. Few see much suspense as President Paul Biya seeks re-election. He is one of Africas longest ruling heads of state. The ruling party has controlled parliament and most local councils for decades. ELECAM officials, who are appointed by the president, have dismissed allegations of rigging as unfounded. Besides the voter apathy, election workers are struggling with insecurity in several parts of the country. Cameroon is currently experiencing tensions in its two English-speaking regions where separatists have declared independence for a new state they call Ambazonia. The yearlong crisis has led to bouts of violent unrest. Voter registration has been suspended in some places like Manyu Division in southwestern Cameroon where there have been regular clashes between the military and armed separatists. Meanwhile, the central African state also continues to battle Boko Haram in its Far North region. The suicide bombings that re-intensified in mid-2017 have abated, but many people are yet to return home. As of November 30, the U.N. Refugee Agency reports a total of 240,000 internally displaced people in Cameroon, nearly all of them in the Far North. Paulin Djorwe, official of the opposition political party the Movement for the Defense of the Republic, says the Boko Haram conflict has left people unable to register to vote. He says many potential voters are unable to acquire national identity cards because police identification stations in some border zones were closed due to Boko Haram terrorism. He says if the elections management body ELECAM and the government want many more people of voting age to register, they should reopen the identification offices. ELECAM says it can only move into conflict zones in the north and some villages and towns in the anglophone regions to begin voter registration once the military declares those areas safe. The electoral body aims to register 10 million from the estimated 12 million people in the country aged 20 and above and eligible to vote. So far, 6.5 million voters have registered. Abdoulaye Babale, head of ELECAM, says they will intensity their efforts. "We are developing a new strategy," he said. "In rural areas, generally people take their time. We are going to have caravans informing them long in advance and then we implicate the traditional rulers and the civil society to help us because time is against us. In major cities, we also have our caravans and [we will] multiply our stations in order to catch as many voters as possible." No date, or dates, for the polls have been set. Voter registration is scheduled to end the day President Paul Biya makes that announcement. The president can postpone the elections if calm does not return to hotspots. Czechs will vote for a new president on Friday and Saturday with the strongly anti-immigration incumbent Milos Zeman leading opinion polls but possibly facing a tough challenger in the run-off round two weeks later. Czech presidents have limited powers, but they appoint a range of senior officials and their role is pivotal when governments are formed, a process the EU and NATO member country is going through at the moment. The head of state is also an influential opinion maker and represents the country abroad - a role that Zeman, 73, has used to beef up relations with China and Russia while devoting less time to the country's western allies. Zeman has sharply criticized immigration from Muslim countries and linked it to security threats. His reelection would reflect a eurosceptic stance by most Czechs and the public's rejection of accepting migrants and refugees. All polls project Zeman, a former prime minister and Social Democrat party chairman, as a winner in the first round. However, with little chance to surpass 50 percent, he is expected to face a runoff against a potentially strong opponent. One factor hurting Zeman, a heavy smoker with self-professed affinity for alcohol, has been his health. He has difficulties walking connected with diabetes and has at times looked frail. His doctors said on Tuesday he was fit for another term. Zeman had a 47.6 percent chance for victory as of Jan 7, according to kdovyhrajevolby.cz website which combines polls with bookmakers' odds. The most serious challenger Jiri Drahos, former head of the Czech Academy of Sciences, scored 44.9 percent. "I want to bring a completely different style of presidency, bring people together, not label them, a clear embedding of the Czech Republic in Europe, with NATO and the EU as allies, not China," Drahos, 68, said in an interview at www.dvtv.cz news website earlier in January. Michal Horacek, 65, a writer and former successful businessman, is another candidate who could threaten Zeman while a late bid from former center-right Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek has made him a potential surprise. Changing Views Zeman has shifted from an enthusiastic European federalist to chiming with parties opposing the country's western integration, such as the Communists and the far-right SPD. He has also retained wide appeal by meeting with voters and sniping at what he sees as elitist intellectual circles and the press. "He has a chance to win in the second round if his opponent fails to convince a substantial part of the anti-Zeman camp, which is very diverse," said political analyst Petr Just. Zeman has called for the removal of EU sanctions imposed over Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region and involvement in the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine. Zeman is in the center of domestic politics at the moment, as Prime Minister Andrej Babis, whose ANO party won an October election, seeks support for his minority government. A confidence vote is scheduled for Wednesday that Babis may lose, but Zeman has said he would give him another chance. The prospect of the two leaders cooperating attracts some but puts off others who are looking for a politically experienced counterweight to Babis. "It is a factor for me, so I would prefer a candidate who is well oriented in politics," said Tomas Gurtler, a retail entrepreneur, adding he would most probably vote for Topolanek. Rome's only public toilet to remain open is in Piazza Vittorio. Rome has 57 public toilets, located underground and at street level, however all but one of these is now closed according to a report in Italian daily newspaper La Repubblica. Despite the millions of tourists, residents and homeless people in Rome, the city's only public toilet currently operational is in Piazza Vittorio not far from the capital's main railway station. Rome's last public toilet to remain open is maintained thanks to a collaboration between the local municipal council, the capital's refuse and sanitary authority AMA Roma, and a residents' committee. The findings are the result of a report by Carteinregola, a non-political association whose volunteers deal with various issues affecting the public in Rome including mobility, heritage, public services and the environment. Carteinregola says that the capital has witnessed the "progressive closure" of public toilets over the last decade. La Repubblica reports that in 2011 the annual cost to maintain Rome's 57 public toilets - entrusted to AMA Roma - amounted to almost 1.5 million. The city paid for the renovation of a number of these toilets in 2013 and again in 2015, when eight public toilets in the centre were upgraded in preparation for the Vatican's Holy Jubilee Year of Mercy. However the newly-restored toilets were shut on 21 November 2016 by the city's then commissioner Francesco Paolo Tronca, the day after the Vatican's jubilee year ended. In contrast to Rome's poor public sanitary facilities, the Vatican has excellent public toilets under the colonnade in St Peter's Square, which even includes showers for the homeless. The millions of tourists who come to Rome each year must rely on the goodwill of the city's bar owners who are required by law to have a functioning bathroom. Gift Article Share H&M apologizes Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight for children's hoodie H&M has apologized for an online advertisement that featured a young black boy modeling a sweatshirt reading, "Coolest monkey in the jungle." The image, which was recently advertised on the Swedish clothing company's website in Britain, ignited an uproar on social media, with critics saying it was tone deaf and filled with racist undertones. "We understand that many people are upset about the image. We, who work at H&M, can only agree," H&M said Monday in a statement to The Washington Post. "We are deeply sorry that the picture was taken, and we also regret the actual print. Therefore, we have not only removed the image from our channels, but also the garment from our product offering globally." On Twitter on Monday, critics noted that other sweatshirts from the same line, including one reading "Survival expert," were modeled by white children. Advertisement Lindsey Bever GoPro cutting 20% of its workforce GoPro is cutting staff and expects a sharp decline in fourth-quarter revenue after facing weak demand for cameras during the holiday season. GoPro shares plummeted nearly 30 percent in early trading Monday, regaining some losses in the afternoon. GoPro went public at $24 a share in June 2014. The camera-maker expects $340 million in revenue, a 37 percent drop from a year ago. It is also cutting its workforce by more than 20 percent, to fewer than 1,000 employees. "Despite significant marketing support, we found consumers were reluctant to purchase HERO5 Black at the same price it launched at one year earlier," chief executive Nicholas Woodman said Monday. As part of the restructuring plan, Woodman will cut his 2018 cash compensation to $1. It was $800,000 in 2016. Advertisement The company said it will also stop making aerial drones. Associated Press SEC suspends trading of UBI Blockchain A Hong Kong-based company whose stock benefited from cryptocurrency fever to jump more than 900 percent last year was suspended from trading by U.S. regulators over concerns that investors were being misled about the company's business. The Securities and Exchange Commission halted buying and selling of UBI Blockchain Internet because of "unusual and unexplained market activity" for its shares, the SEC said Monday. It also said there were questions about the accuracy of assertions the company had made in its financial statements. An attorney for UBI Blockchain had no immediate comment on the SEC's decision. UBI Blockchain has a market value of $800 million, despite posting no revenue and listing a disconnected phone number in its filings with regulators. Its shares traded as high as $115 in 2017, after selling for 55 cents last February. The SEC said the suspension lapses Jan. 22. Advertisement Bloomberg News Sony Music has signed a deal with Facebook, seeking a share of the social media industry's burgeoning revenue by letting users post songs from artists such as Ed Sheeran and Taylor Swift. The companies said in a statement Monday that the multiyear deal would give songwriters the opportunity to earn royalties when their music is used on Facebook and Instagram. Google parent Alphabet is consolidating its various payment brands under one name: Google Pay. The Internet company previously offered services such as mobile payments, in-store checkout and money transfers through several apps, including Android Pay and Google Wallet. Consumers can now use payment information saved in their Google accounts for all the company's pay offerings under one product, Google Vice President Pali Bhat said in a blog post Monday. Advertisement New York City took a hit in an annual survey of real estate investors, which saw London overtake it in first place globally and Los Angeles tie it for top U.S. city. The annual survey of the Association of Foreign Investors in Real Estate asks its members estimated to have more than $2 trillion in real estate assets under management to rank markets by measures such as stability and opportunity for capital appreciation. In this year's poll, San Francisco, which had been one of the top five global cities since 2011, fell to 11th place; Washington fell to 25th from 15th place last year. From wire reports 10 a.m.: Labor Department releases job openings and labor turnover survey for November. GiftOutline Gift Article President Trump praised his electoral college victory during a speech at the American Farm Bureau Federations Annual Convention in Nashville on Jan. 8. (Video: The Washington Post) Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Farmers have grown increasingly anxious with President Trump, who wooed them with promises of deregulation and then threatened to upend programs on which many depend. In the year since rural America voted him into office, the president has proposed deep cuts to crop insurance subsidies, reductions in the number of immigrants entering the United States and withdrawal from the North American Free Trade Agreement all of which have rattled farmers. But in a speech Monday at the annual convention of the American Farm Bureau Federation in Nashville, Trump sought to put those worries to rest. Speaking to a largely sympathetic crowd in Nashville, Tenn., The president assured the largely sympathetic crowd that he would end the "regulatory assault on [their] way of life" and put more money back in farmers' pockets. Advertisement "From [day one], we've been working to deliver for America's farmers, just as they work every single day to deliver for us," the president said. "You embody the values of hard work, grit, self-reliance and sheer determination that we need to have you heard this expression? make America great again." The speech comes at a time of growing strain between Trump and rural America, which the president won by large margins. Even as his administration has delivered on several of its campaign promises to farmers, including a tax overhaul and the suspension of some environmental rules, farmers, especially those in the dairy, livestock and grain industries, have grown wary of the president's positions on trade, immigration and crop insurance. After delivering a speech in Nashville on Jan. 8, President Trump signed two orders aimed at promoting broadband Internet access in rural areas. (Video: The Washington Post) Since taking office, Trump has withdrawn from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade deal that was expected to raise net farm income by $4.4 billion per year, and threatened to pull out of NAFTA, which has been a boon for U.S. farms. Advertisement He has repeatedly called for tighter controls on legal and illegal immigration, the largest sources of U.S. farmworkers, and his 2017 budget proposal included huge reductions in the insurance premium subsidies that the government pays out to farms. Those actions appear to have soured some rural voters. Trump's approval rating in that demographic dropped from 55 percent in the first weeks of his presidency to 47 percent in September, according to a Reuters-Ipsos poll. On Monday, however, Trump seemed determined to win naysayers back. "I would say most farmers and ranchers are feeling confident in the president, and more assured," said Dale Moore, the executive director of public policy at the American Farm Bureau Federation. "The fact that the president takes time to come to our convention and talk to our members . . . that signals that he prioritizes agriculture." Advertisement Trump spent most of his 36-minute speech touting the tax overhaul legislation legislation and his administration's dismantling of Environmental Protection Agency and Food and Drug Administration rules. Trump said that his tax cuts would lower costs "for our farmers and our middle class," largely through reductions in the individual and business tax rates. (A recent study by economists atthe Agriculture Department found that the largest farms will see the most benefits under the plan, though most farms will see a slight tax decrease.) He also trumpeted his January 2017 executive order that required all federal agencies to cut two regulations for each new one passed. Trump earned wild applause from the crowd when he mentioned the rollback of the Obama-era Waters of the United States rule, which was unpopular with farmers. Advertisement But most telling was the president's discussion of the three pain points between farmers and his administration, said policy analysts and farm group leaders who watched the speech. Trump said that he "supported" insurance for farmers who face bad harvests and that his administration recognized the current shortage of agricultural labor. On NAFTA, Trump said that U.S. negotiators were still at the table, "working very hard to get a better deal." Even that short statement was a relief to farmers, said Angela Marshall Hofmann, the deputy director of Farmers for Free Trade, a bipartisan organization that mobilized to promote open markets after the start of the Trump administration. "Entire supply chains and rural communities rely on trade with Mexico and Canada," Marshall Hoffmann said. "We were very pleased to hear NAFTA mentioned." Advertisement Whether the speech will placate farm interests for long remains to be seen. The Trump administration is due to take up a number of issues important to agriculture this year, including the 2018 Farm Bill the legislation that oversees most farm programs. Farmers will also be watching the next round of NAFTA negotiations due to get underway in Montreal later this month. "The proof will be in the next couple rounds," said Michael Dykes, the president and chief executive of the Inte ernational Dairy Food Association. But at this point, Dykes said, "we feel very positive." GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share It seems essential to reckon with Martin Luther King Jr.'s terrible death even as we celebrate his remarkable life. On Monday we will commemorate the 89th anniversary of his birth, and in April we will mark the 50th anniversary of his assassination. Two new books offer two very different but compelling portraits of King and his legacy. Envisioned for young readers but sure to be appreciated more widely, "Martin Rising: Requiem for a King" (Scholastic, ages 13 and up) depicts King as a source of warmth and brightness on its radiant front cover. Author Andrea Davis Pinkney and her husband, illustrator Brian Pinkney, sustain and develop this idea throughout their book, paying stirring tribute to King's personal warmth, spiritual strength and leadership. The book's vivid poetry bursts with information as well as feeling, and the watercolor images are grounded in reality but feel elevated, on a higher plane. The joyful opening pages of "Martin Rising" introduce King as a "sparkly-eyed" child and a loving father, but rather than surveying King's entire life, the Pinkneys focus on why he was in Memphis in March and April of 1968. He and his closest colleagues traveled there several times to support the city's sanitation workers, who had gone on strike in February. The workers made half of what white sanitation workers earned, and under unsafe conditions. The signs they held were "simple affirmations/of their humanity:/I AM A MAN." Advertisement The Pinkneys' text and paintings bring together images of nature, civil strife and religion. Nearly every poem in the book carries a date, and the emotional peak arrives on April 3, the night before King was killed. King is exhausted and feverish, but his words "roll ahead with a thunder/that only he can bring." The text quotes the most famous of these words, and young readers will surely be struck by the power and premonition of his final speech. On a dark-hued double-page spread, the poem "Compass" tells of King's death in a sort of call and response with the tragic facts, a voice of shocked disbelief and echoes of his speech from the night before. King persisted in his efforts despite outbreaks of violence and his own self-doubts. In their expansive telling, the Pinkneys even give a few pages to James Earl Ray, who pleaded guilty to the assassination. But his motive remains unclear here, the evil act "an unsolved history." For more solid ground, the book turns to King's widow and her brave decision to lead the next march in Memphis. "Martin Rising" ends with a call to action: "When we speak out, seek peace, teach the truth, we all rise to a better tomorrow. And the time is now." "More than Abraham Lincoln, more than John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr. had spent years under the continuous threat of violence," James L. Swanson points out in his deeply researched book "Chasing King's Killer: The Hunt for Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Assassin" (Scholastic, ages 12 and up). In addition to providing a succinct overview of King's career and the many perils he faced including a bombing of his home and a 1958 stabbing that nearly killed him Swanson follows Ray from a miserable childhood through adulthood. Advertisement Carefully tracking Ray from a prison escape in 1967 to his murder of King in April 1968 and his capture in England several months later, Swanson persuasively argues that Ray was the sole perpetrator. Readers may be interested to find out that Ray tried to promote conspiracy theories about the crime, but Swanson believes Ray's motives were much more simple: He probably committed the murder because he thought he would be paid handsomely by white supremacists. As one of his brothers once said, Ray never did anything if it wasn't for money. Abby McGanney Nolan regularly reviews nonfiction children's books for The Washington Post. GiftOutline Gift Article A note to our readers We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Jacqueline Marie Butler grows on you. The plucky young New Yorker was an adolescent in "Queens Girl in the World," finding her way amid the strong views of her gruff father (a friend to Malcolm X), some shockingly racy friends and the progressive white kids at the Greenwich Village school she attends. Jackie's back for the second installment of Caleen Sinnette Jennings's comic memoir, "Queens Girl in Africa," the first of 24 shows set to dominate Washington stages during the two-month Women's Voices Theater Festival. As she moves through high school, the 1960s are ablaze: Malcolm X has been assassinated, and Jennings's father was there. He angrily sweeps the family to Nigeria, where he works in a hospital as Jennings's mother teaches. Jennings Jackie, that is, for she's the playwright's close alter ego quickly sheds her infatuation with Paul McCartney as she absorbs the complexities of Nigeria and the United States, both grappling with freedom and internally at war. The wide-eyed lens of a black American youth is fascinating once again in Jennings's bouncy account, and it's another fine showcase for the solo performer who impersonates the family, friends and boyfriends who captivate and confound Jackie. Erika Rose picks up in this Mosaic Theater Company production where actress Dawn Ursula left off in the 2015 "Queens Girl in the World" at Theater J. She narrates with spunk, and she's a whiz at voicing males and female roles in her family's internationally populated slice of Nigeria. Advertisement There's the schoolgirl who wants to speak French, only that's not Jackie's forte. There's Jackie's Caribbean dad, and the Igbo tribesman hired to run the household; when Rose plays the two of them squaring off as the recently independent Nigeria's Igbo-Hausa-Yoruba civil war heats up, you hear both men's ferocity clearly. Rose's command doesn't fully emerge, though, until the second act. The "girl" in the title seems key, as does Jennings's inviting comic tone as she introduces things. In "Queens Girl," Ursula had a slow sense of wonder and perpetual surprise (or dismay) that keyed a lot of laughter. Rose can be too matter-of-fact with early information, which undersells the way changes like hole-in-the-ground toilets and handsome young men all hit Jackie as major headlines! But the second act tightens the drama as Nigeria sinks into civil war and as riots break out in the United States. The heavier the news gets, the more compelling Rose becomes, and there's a new tone teased out by director Paige Hernandez. Bashful Jackie is caught between cultures: she has a new miniskirt that seems all wrong during a community gathering. But then she dances, and Rose's rhythmic metamorphosis from the trendy "Jerk" to something earthier is breathtakingly beautiful. The complexity of a Queens girl in Africa finds poetic expression. Future productions may exploit such poetic opportunities more fully; this ongoing story, about a girl and a writer coming of age, could accommodate deeper visuals, soundscapes and movement, especially as it opens its arms to complicated political upheaval. The Mosaic premiere at the Atlas Performing Arts Center is handsome, with Rose's tan skirt and orange blouse matching the warm colors of Debra Kim Sivigny's uncluttered set and Sarah Tundermann's lights. (Sivigny also designed the costumes, while Tundermann adds a few newsy projections.) It's a storyteller's show. Advertisement This growing "Queens Girl" project provides continuity between the 2015 Women's Voices festival and the current slate, and it's heartening to leave wanting more. Jennings has suggested that a Bennington University chapter will round out the trilogy, and with or without another festival as context for a production, what the perceptive, vulnerable, activist-minded Jackie goes through as the 1960s become the 1970s ought to be rich. Queens Girl in Africa , by Caleen Sinnette Jennings. Directed by Paige Hernandez. Sound design, David Lamont Wilson. About 1 hour 50 minutes. Through Feb. 4 at the Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE. Tickets $20-$65. Call 202-399-7993 or visit mosaictheater.org. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Ask middle schoolers to show you their city through the lens of a camera and here's what you'll get: a colorful mosaic of images featuring their favorite people, places and things, from flowers to friends, street scenes to sneakers, and trees to trains. The photographs make up an exhibition that is the end result of a special citywide photography lesson called "Everyday DC." "I love that D.C. is a place where people can come all together and be free and be with everyone that they love," said Lauryn Tharpe, one of the four student curators who worked with their art teacher at Brookland Middle School to put the exhibition together. "There's more to D.C. than big buildings and important people." As part of the "Everyday DC" unit, students across the city learned basic photography and investigative reporting skills thanks to a program started last year by an organization called the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and a grant from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities. "Everyday DC" was inspired by a popular Instagram feed called Everyday Africa, started by two professional photographers who noticed that their personal photos of Africa showed a different story than their professional work. The goal of the online photo "exhibit" is to show viewers what it's like to live in Africa, as opposed to what people outside of Africa see in the news. Here in Washington, students took photos to reflect their lives in the nation's capital. Twelve middle schools each submitted about 10 student photographs, from beautiful portraits to abstract close-ups, action shots and delicious images of favorite foods. Lauryn and the other three student curators Alexis Thomas, Makayla Herrington and Bridney Takoh were selected to be curators by their art teacher, Maame Bawuah (pronounced MAH-may BEH-we-uh), who coordinated the project for D.C. Public Schools. "I have a lot of amazing students, although the four of them are quite exceptional," said Bawuah, who chose the students to be curators because of their interest in both photography and learning about museum curation when they go to high school. A curator is someone who collects, organizes, cares for and displays anything in a collection. To get ready for exhibition, the curators had many tasks, including taking their own photographs as well as helping their teacher gather and evaluate the images submitted by schools and grouping photos by theme, such as quiet afternoons, green, streets and blue sky. As Lauryn, Alexis, Makayla and Bridney worked their way through piles of photographs, they talked about what they liked and what stood out. They thought about how the 126 images would be organized on the walls of the gallery. "We pinned them on the wall and talked about what each photo meant," Makayla said. She was in charge of organizing the "green" wall, which includes pictures of grassy parks and trees, among other green things. The team of 13-year-olds also helped measure and hang the framed photos on the gallery walls. "The process was kind of fun," Lauryn said, "but hard at the same time." They ate a lot of cookies along the way and worked after school. During their final preparations at the downtown Pepco Edison Place Gallery last Friday, Alexis walked around the exhibit with the corner of a soft, blue cloth tucked into the pocket of her jeans. "I've been dusting," she explained. Alexis also pointed out her own contribution to the exhibit: a portrait of her younger sister Justine, standing on a bridge over a highway near their home. Bridney, who contributed photos including a Metro station and a cloudy street scene, hopes their images might help visitors to the gallery see the diversity of the city. "It's a little bit of everything," she said, "and a fun place." Where: Pepco Edison Place Gallery. Enter at 702 Eighth Street Northwest. When: Tuesday-Friday noon to 4 p.m. through January 26. Special tours may be arranged through contacting the Pulitzer Center education department: education@pulitzercenter.org. How much: Free. Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share When President Trump bizarrely declared himself a "very stable genius" on Twitter last weekend, he opened a door for journalists who cover him. Whether they should rush through it, arms waving and warning about the dangers of a mad ruler, remains a question. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight There's a fine line between taking up in reporting and commentary Trump's fitness for office and outright speculating that he is mentally ill. New Yorker Editor David Remnick walked that tightrope in a tough-minded commentary piece last week in which he compared Trump to the Roman emperor Nero, whom he described as "unhinged." He referred to Trump as "chaotic, corrupt, incurious, infantile, grandiose." Vox Editor at Large Ezra Klein was more blunt: "The president of the United States is not well." It's uncomfortable to say, he wrote, but even worse to ignore. MSNBC host Joe Scarborough made recent headlines when he said that he has tried to report about Trump's possible dementia in columns for The Washington Post but wasn't allowed to do so. Advertisement "I've written twice in my column a quote about one of the people closest to Donald Trump during the campaign saying he's got early-stage dementia," Scarborough said on the air. "He repeats the same stories over and over again. His father had it. And it's getting worse, and not a single person who works for him doesn't know he has early signs of dementia. "But twice The Washington Post would not let me put that in my column. Which again, I salute them for having a high bar, but we're at this moment." I asked Post Editorial Page Editor Fred Hiatt about this. He told me that he was uncomfortable with Scarborough's reporting that suggested a specific medical diagnosis, especially since it would have been attributed to an unnamed source who was not a medical professional. Hiatt said that the information was, in his view, not necessary to the larger concern about Trump's fitness for office that Scarborough was addressing. Advertisement This is, no doubt, an issue that newsrooms everywhere are grappling with. Over-the-top lines are being edited out. Story ideas are being discussed, greenlighted and, in some cases, discarded. Or at least put on hold. "It's perilous to go too far on this subject," Carrie Budoff Brown, editor of Politico, told me. "It's delicate, it's sensitive and we're not doctors." She acknowledged, though, that readers "want this answered: 'Is he this or that?' " And while it's fair to report aggressively on Trump's behavior and statements, and she believes Politico has done that, "we're not inside his brain." I heard similar reflections from both New York Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet and Washington Post Executive Editor Martin Baron. (Baron runs the news operation at the Post; Hiatt, mentioned above, is in charge of the opinion side; they are separate entities.) Advertisement "I've been very wary," Baron said, particularly of reporting that gives credence to those who offer diagnoses without examining or even having personal exposure to the president. He observed that Allen Frances, the psychiatrist who helped write the manual for diagnosing mental illness, has publicly stated that he doesn't think Trump meets the criteria, writing in September that "the three most frequent armchair diagnoses made for Trump narcissistic personality disorder, delusional disorder and dementia are all badly misinformed." "It's certainly fair to report on the overall subject," Baron said, including what people who have observed the president directly are saying. And he agreed that the calculus has changed somewhat now: "Trump himself has put it out there for discussion." (Trump did so after Michael Wolff's book "Fire and Fury" reported that the 25th Amendment which allows the removal of a president for unfitness is a regular topic in the White House because so many of those around Trump believe he is mentally unstable.) Advertisement Baquet told me that his guiding principle at the Times has been to stick with "reporting, not speculation." Trump's tweets last weekend "now have made it fair game but I don't think that makes it fair game to speculate." He noted that the American Psychiatric Association's "Goldwater Rule" prohibits its members from diagnosing the mental state of public officials whom they have not examined personally. The guideline itself, though, is under attack from those in the profession who say that Trump's instability poses a huge threat, making such diagnoses necessary for the good of the world. "Of course, the Goldwater Rule is not our rule," Baquet observed, meaning that it isn't meant to apply to journalists, but its existence suggests caution nonetheless. Not all in the field observe it: In 2015, clinical psychologist Ben Michaelis was quoted in Vanity Fair on Trump: "Textbook narcissistic personality disorder." Advertisement (Psychologists are not bound by the Goldwater Rule.) Is Trump a very stable genius or the modern-day Nero? The question is now fully out in the open, thanks to the president's own impetuosity. But news organizations still need to stick to show-don't-tell reporting focused on direct observation of what Trump says and does, and conversations with people who interact with him regularly. Shattering norms is what Trump and covering Trump has been all about. (One example: Many news organizations have come around to using the fraught word "lie" to describe what a president who constantly spouts falsehoods is doing.) As journalists cautiously approach the line of what's previously been unacceptable, it's often Trump himself who pushes them over. It's good to remember, though, that when norms are shattered, they stay that way, like so many Pandora's boxes with their lids wide open for all time. And that it's possible for a president to be unfit for office without being mentally ill. For more by Margaret Sullivan visit wapo.st/sullivan GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Federal health officials have authorized Maryland to continue its unique "all payer" health-care model for hospitals through 2019, while the state seeks approval to apply a similar plan to outpatient service providers such as doctors, skilled nurses and rehabilitation centers. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Officials say expanding the program, which regulates how much hospitals can charge in exchange for having the federal government cover a larger share of Medicare costs than it does in other states, is one of the strongest steps Maryland can take to fulfill a federal requirement to lower its annual Medicare costs by $330 million. Gov. Larry Hogan (R) and the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced the extension of the program Monday, ensuring that the state's health system will not be plunged into chaos after its existing contract with the federal government expires at the end of 2018. Advertisement President Trump said on Dec. 20 that by passing the GOP tax bill, Republicans essentially repealed Obamacare because we got rid of the individual mandate. (Video: Reuters) In an interview, Hogan said his administration was close to a deal on including outpatient services in the program until the resignation of then-U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price last fall. The governor said the state needed an extension of its existing contract while leadership at the Department of Health and Human Services is in flux. He said he sought help from Vice President Mike Pence, acting health and human services secretary Eric Hargan, CMS Administrator Seema Verma and Alex Azar, President Trump's pick for permanent HHS secretary. "I had lengthy discussions with all of them personally," Hogan said. "We were about to blow up the entire health system in Maryland if we didn't go in and rescue it." Gene Ransom, chief executive of the Maryland State Medical Society, questioned whether the extension was ever in doubt, but he called the continuation a "a nice win" for Maryland. Advertisement Ransom said failing to obtain approval would have led to "complete pandemonium" for the state's health system. Since the 1970s, the federal government has allowed Maryland to regulate how much hospitals are paid for services. The goal of this "all payer" system is to ensure that private insurance, Medicare and Medicaid pay roughly the same prices. In all other states, Medicare provides reimbursements below the actual cost of services, and hospitals end up passing on the uncovered costs to private insurers and the uninsured thus increasing costs for everyone except Medicare recipients. Maryland's arrangement is hugely beneficial for the state, providing about $1.7 billion more in Medicare funds than it would otherwise receive. Five years ago, the federal government reauthorized the deal through 2018 but required Maryland to lower Medicare costs by $330 million a year, mostly by incentivizing better outcomes and penalizing hospitals when patients are readmitted quickly. State officials say expanding its guidelines to outpatient service providers will allow it to realize those savings. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Maryland's environmental secretary is condemning the Trump administration's moves to repeal a regulation aimed at curbing greenhouse gas emissions from U.S. power plants, known as the Clean Power Plan. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight In a letter sent Monday to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, Environment Secretary Ben Grumbles said states need federal support to tackle regional and global climate challenges. He pointed to Maryland's strides in addressing climate change, including legislation requiring a 40 percent in-state reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and an investment of $44 million for clean-energy products, $3 million of which will go toward green-jobs training. In a state where Democratic lawmakers have pressed Gov. Larry Hogan (R) to more forcefully reject President Trump's climate policies, the letter marks the latest push among Maryland's Republican leadership in support of green-energy standards. Advertisement "The Clean Power Plan is not perfect, and it creates some winners and losers," the letter from Grumbles said. "Nonetheless . . . states have demonstrated that carefully designed carbon dioxide (CO2) emission limits on electricity generation can make states winners both environmentally and economically." The letter comes three months after Pruitt moved to repeal the Clean Power Plan, an Obama-era climate rule that Pruitt and others in the Trump administration have deemed an assault on the nation's coal industry. The plan aimed to reduce carbon emissions from existing U.S. power plants by 32 percent from 2005 output levels by 2030. Hogan has resisted calls from Maryland Democrats that he speak out against Trump, who remains deeply unpopular in Maryland. Hogan faced acute pressure to do so after Trump announced in June that he was withdrawing the United States from the Paris climate agreement. Advertisement But Hogan also has touted his own environmental record. He has supported measures promoting electric cars and upheld Maryland's part in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a collaboration among nine states to cap the amount of carbon pollution emitted from power plants. Grumbles's letter cited the regional initiative as "an economically beneficial way" to reduce emissions from power plants. Participating states have reduced their emissions faster than the rest of the country, Grumbles wrote, while growing faster economically. The secretary cautioned against a repeal of the Clean Power Plan without a strong replacement and said the EPA should hold a public hearing in Annapolis or the Baltimore region to hear from residents, businesses and communities that would be affected if the regulations were rolled back. Pruitt said in October that "any replacement rule will be done carefully, properly, and with humility, by listening to all those affected by the rule." GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Maryland Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert) said Tuesday that he will refer the federal charges facing a Baltimore City senator to the General Assembly's Ethics Committee and expects the panel to convene next week. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Hours earlier, the state Republican Party had called on Miller to oust Sen. Nathaniel T. Oaks (D) from office. "It should not be the decision of one person," Miller said during an interview before the Democratic Party's annual pre-session luncheon. "I want everybody to weigh in on this decision." The 90-day legislative session begins Wednesday. Oaks was indicted on fraud charges near the end of last year's session, accused of using his official position to help a phony real estate development in exchange for thousands of dollars in bribes. "This situation is an embarrassment to our state," state GOP chair Dirk Haire said early Tuesday. He demanded that Miller and Democratic Party Chair Kathleen Matthews "immediately take action to oust Senator Oaks, or explain why they think it is ok to protect public corruption by Democrats in the General Assembly." Advertisement The ethics panel could recommend that Oaks be reprimanded, censured or expelled, measures that would have to be approved by the full Senate. Miller said that Oaks, who is awaiting trial later this year, "wants to have a way to prove his innocence," adding that it would be "unfair to jurors in the case, it would be unfair to Senator Oaks and everyone else" to "try him now in the papers." After Oaks was indicted last year, Miller said he was "very disappointed" and "shocked" and had urged Oaks to turn himself in. On Tuesday, an aide to Miller said the Senate president believes that Oaks should resign. Federal public defender Rebecca S. Talbott, who is representing Oaks, did not immediately return a call seeking comment. Oaks was charged in federal court on April 7, a Friday. He shocked his colleagues the following Monday, April 10 the final day of the session when he walked into the Senate chamber and took his seat. Advertisement In November, Oaks was indicted on an additional count of obstruction of justice after being accused of trying to tip off someone under federal investigation while cooperating with the FBI. Oaks has served in the General Assembly for 30 years. He lost his seat in the House of Delegates in the late 1980s after being convicted of stealing thousands of dollars from his campaign account. He regained his seat in 1994 and was appointed to the state Senate last year to replace a legislator who stepped down because of ill health. He has shown no sign that he would consider resigning, despite a recent report in The Baltimore Sun that said Oaks had confessed to taking bribes and interfering with a federal investigation. Federal investigators say Oaks misused his State House letterhead and introduced legislation to benefit the fake real estate project of a businessman who gave the lawmaker more than $15,000 in cash in 2016. The businessman was actually working for the FBI. Advertisement Oaks faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, according to the office of the Maryland U.S. attorney. Gov. Larry Hogan (R) said Tuesday that Oaks should have resigned after his indictment. Hogan pushed last year for stronger ethics laws following a separate federal investigation that led to the arrests of Del. Michael Vaughn and former delegate William Campos, both Democrats from Prince George's County. They were charged with being involved in a wide-ranging bribery scheme. Vaughn gave up his seat in the House of Delegates on the first day of last year's legislative session and is awaiting trial. Campos has pleaded guilty. On Tuesday, Hogan proposed legislation to limit lawmakers to two four-year terms, calling it the next step in an effort to root out corruption and stem partisan bickering. The legislation would not affect current officeholders. Maryland governors already face term limits. Also last year, Hogan rescinded the appointment of Gary Brown Jr. to fill a vacancy in the House of Delegates after Brown was indicted on charges of making illegal donations to the political campaign of then-mayoral candidate Catherine Pugh (D) of Baltimore. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Maryland's legislative session opens Wednesday with Republican Gov. Larry Hogan and the Democrats who control the General Assembly aiming to address federal policies that affect the state and lay the groundwork for what they hope will be big victories in November. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Key themes include tempering Baltimore City's crime wave, battling over paid time off for sick workers, responding to changes in the U.S. tax code, creating a dedicated revenue source for Metro and possibly addressing what many women feel is a pervasive culture of sexual misconduct in Annapolis. Maryland lawmakers historically have tried to avoid major conflicts during election years. But experts say 2018 will be an exception, with a popular Republican governor seeking reelection and Democrats, who hold strong majorities in both chambers, eager to chip away at Hogan's approval ratings and resist the policies of President Trump. Advertisement "We have a divided state government and pretty unified opposition to Trump in the assembly," said Todd Eberly, a political-science professor at St. Mary's College of Maryland. "I suspect it'll be a pretty volatile session." The partisan bickering could start early, with the legislature's first major action expected to be a vote on whether to override Hogan's 2017 veto of a measure that would require employers with at least 15 workers to offer five paid sick days a year. During the Maryland Democratic Party's pre-session luncheon Tuesday, House Economic Matters Committee Chair Dereck E. Davis (D-Prince George's) said that lawmakers should override the veto and move on. "There is nothing else to say," he said. "We've had all the conversations, all the debates . . . it's time to get it done." Hogan and his fellow Republicans call the bill a job-killer and say that a verification provision requested by businesses could violate employee rights. The governor has proposed an alternate plan that would apply to businesses with at least 25 employees, be phased in over three years and drop the verification provision. Advertisement A second veto fight will involve the governor's rejection of a 2017 bill to prohibit the state's colleges and universities from asking about criminal history on applications. Overriding Hogan's veto of the measure is a top priority of Maryland's powerful Legislative Black Caucus; Republicans say the proposal is too restrictive and would jeopardize campus safety. Democrats and Republicans may also find themselves at odds over how to address crime in Baltimore, a top priority for both parties. Hogan has pushed stricter sentencing guidelines for repeat violent offenders and those who commit felonies using firearms, while Democrats in the Baltimore delegation have focused on closing loopholes that allow legally purchased guns to flow into the hands of criminals, as well as on providing additional services for high-risk youths and ex-offenders, and boosting police resources. "Using law enforcement alone will never solve the problem of violence," said Sen. Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City). "It's a necessary, but not sufficient, part of a plan. We're trying to take a comprehensive look." Advertisement Taxes will loom large over the legislature this year, with many Maryland residents expected to see higher state and federal bills because Congress recently scaled back personal exemptions and deductions including for state, local and property taxes. State fiscal analysts are still calculating how much additional revenue the changes will provide for Maryland's government. Hogan, estimating that the amount will be "hundreds of millions of dollars" a year, has promised legislation to return all of the money to taxpayers, but Democrats say the state may need the revenue if Congress and Trump trim support for health care and other programs. "Before you start returning money to taxpayers, you have to make sure your fiscal house is in order," said Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert). Advertisement Sen. Richard S. Madaleno Jr. (D-Montgomery), vice chairman of the Budget and Taxation Committee and the only lawmaker running for governor in a crowded Democratic primary, expressed similar concerns. He said Hogan is "trying to make it look as though he's doing something to help average Marylanders" but is actually taking part in "a Republican game to give more money to corporations and the wealthiest people." Democratic leaders are talking about setting aside an extra $100 million in the state budget in case Congress does not extend funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program, which covers low-income youth and is due to run out of money in April. "We're not going to leave here without funding for the CHIP program," said House Speaker Michael E. Busch (D-Anne Arundel). Madaleno and the six other Democrats seeking to run against Hogan will seek every opportunity during the 90-day session to tie him to Trump and paint his positions as extreme. Advertisement "Democrats look to Virginia and see what happens when their base is motivated, and they'll want to make sure their base is motivated in Maryland," Eberly said, referring to the party's sweeping victories in November. In Annapolis, both parties are looking for ways to stabilize the state's individual health insurance market, which has seen premiums increase by double-digit percentages in recent years and could be severely undermined by Congress's decision to halt enforcement of the federal penalty for not obtaining coverage. Advocates will push legislation to create a state mandate for purchasing insurance, but Hogan said that he would be reluctant to embrace such a plan unless the legislature agrees to shield Marylanders from higher taxes under the recent federal changes. "What it basically means is a tax increase it means penalizing hard-working people," he said. "We're going to have to take a look at the whole picture." Advertisement Health advocates and the Black Caucus also want to pass legislation to rein in the cost of brand-name drugs, which would build on a 2017 law that authorized the state to sue drug companies that dramatically increase the price of off-patent and generic drugs. "It's a huge economic issue," said Del. Cheryl D. Glenn (D-Baltimore City), who chairs the Black Caucus. "We have to move the ball down the field." Also on the legislative agenda is a bill to address a lack of racial diversity in Maryland's new medical-marijuana industry, another top priority of the Black Caucus. Lawmakers are anticipating the results of a study on racial disparities in the business and have scheduled a hearing on a bill next week. An effort to set aside new cultivation licenses for minority-owned businesses fell apart during the final moments of the 2017 session. Advertisement With every seat in the legislature on the ballot in November, lawmakers especially in swing districts will be wary of taking unpopular stances on bills. Miller said Tuesday that he and Busch plan to set up a commission to examine the issue of sexual harassment in the Maryland State House. The women's caucus has also created a panel with the goal of preventing sexual misconduct, encouraging victims to report alleged misbehavior and developing appropriate responses to allegations. A consensus may be emerging on funding the Washington area's Metro system, with Busch, Miller and Hogan signaling support for dedicated funding for Metro if Virginia and the District agree to do the same. Hogan says the federal government must contribute, too. The legislature will consider a plan from Democratic lawmakers to increase Maryland's contribution to Metro by $125 million a year, with the money coming from the state's transportation trust fund. Advertisement Democrats and Republicans may also find common ground on the issue of allowing women who have been raped to terminate the parental rights of their attackers. Similar bills failed nine times in recent years including during the final hours of the 2017 legislative session, when the measure stalled in part because of concerns about due process for the accused. Women's groups reacted with outrage, noting that the panel of senators who failed to resolve differences over the bill did not include any female lawmakers. This year, Miller and Busch are sponsoring bills to terminate rapists' parental rights, a clear sign that passage is a top priority. Hogan said Friday that he would sign that legislation as soon as it reaches his desk. Ovetta Wiggins and Fenit Nirappil contributed to this report. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Two of Maryland's Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday unveiled their answer to the federal rollback of Obamacare: a program that would charge a fee to residents who do not buy medical insurance and use the money as a "down payment" to enroll them in coverage from the state's health-care exchange. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Sen. Brian J. Feldman (Montgomery) and Del. Joseline A. Pena-Melnyk (Prince George's) said they will propose the legislation this year in response to congressional Republicans effectively eliminating the federal mandate to buy insurance or pay a penalty, a move many experts say could destabilize the individual marketplace and drive up premiums. The federal mandate requiring people to have insurance will end in 2019. "This is a hugely important proposal," Feldman said. "We're presenting folks with the opportunity to make a rational economic decision." Advertisement The measure, which is the first of its kind in the nation, is backed by at least five other Democratic lawmakers, the Maryland NAACP, Baltimore City Health Commissioner Leana Wen and the Maryland Health Care for All Coalition, which helped draft the plan. Senate Finance Committee Chair Thomas M. Middleton (D-Charles) said his panel will take up the legislation next week. "This is going to set a new high for Maryland," he said. "We have to make sure we make every attempt to make health care affordable." The other lawmakers who support the plan are Senate Budget and Taxation Vice Chair Richard S. Madaleno Jr. (D-Montgomery), who is running for governor; Senate Deputy Majority Whip James C. Rosapepe (D-Prince George's); House Deputy Majority Whip Bonnie Cullison (D-Montgomery) and Del. Robbyn Lewis (D-Baltimore City). Advertisement Proponents of the plan said they're hopeful that Gov. Larry Hogan (R) will support it, noting he was one of 10 Republican governors who signed a letter to Congress last year opposing GOP plans to eliminate the federal insurance mandate. "This is what working for the people of Maryland looks like, particularly when there are threats from the federal government to our health and welfare," Madaleno said. Hogan said during a news conference on Tuesday that he will keep an open mind. But he expressed reluctance to support any proposal that penalizes residents for not purchasing insurance. "I'm in favor of providing incentives rather than punishment or penalties," he said. "If the legislature has some good ideas about what the state can do to make up for problems where Washington has failed or made mistakes that are going to hurt people in Maryland, we're all ears." Advertisement Advocates said they considered proposing a state insurance mandate but decided to push for a down-payment system instead, hoping to avoid the type of conflict that surrounded the federal requirement enacted under the Obama-era Affordable Care Act. Under the plan they introduced Tuesday, the state would notify uninsured residents starting in 2020 that they will be charged a fee to help them obtain coverage through the state's health-care exchange. Residents would also have the option of paying the penalty and receiving nothing in return. If coverage is available for the cost of the fee plus any federal assistance for which the individual qualifies, the state would enroll that person in the plan at no additional cost. If the funds are not adequate for enrollment, the state would place the money in an escrow account to help the resident obtain coverage during the next available enrollment period. Advertisement A "use it or lose it" rule would apply to escrow funds that have not been used for insurance by the end of open enrollment. Uninsured residents who are eligible for Medicaid would be automatically signed up for the program without a fee. Advocates estimate that more than 200,000 Marylanders qualify for insurance on the state's exchange, and that many would qualify for federal assistance because their employers do not provide coverage. Feldman and Pena-Melnyk chaired a commission created last year by the Democratic-majority legislature to determine the possible impacts of changes to the Affordable Care Act after President Trump took office and pledged to repeal the law. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Maryland's top lawmakers will form a commission to strengthen the General Assembly's policy on sexual harassment, examining ways to prevent misconduct and how best to handle complaints, Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert) said Tuesday. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight "We're treating this matter very seriously," Miller said, referring to himself and House Speaker Michael E. Busch (D-Anne Arundel). "The speaker and I are going to work on a commission to come up with more stringent recommendations." Allegations of sexual harassment have surfaced in statehouses across the country in recent months, part of a national reckoning with the issue. Several accused lawmakers have lost their jobs. A recent Washington Post article detailed the experiences of several women in the Annapolis State House who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of fears of reprisal. They described enduring unwanted advances, groping and sexist comments, calling misconduct widespread. Advertisement Miller said the legislature will hear from corporate executives about what is in their anti-harassment policies and how some elements may be incorporated into the legislature's guidelines. It was not clear when the commission's hearings would begin. Over the past year, the General Assembly's Legislative Policy Committee has changed its anti-harassment policy, including requiring the legislature's human resources director to track the number and type of harassment complaints and how they are resolved. But many women say the changes did not go far enough. The Women Legislators of Maryland caucus created a panel over a year ago to look into how the legislature deals with harassment. The panel planned to provide a report to the General Assembly near the end of the 90-day session that begins Wednesday. Del. Ariana B. Kelly (D-Montgomery), the caucus's chair, said last week that the panel is considering ideas that would not require legislative action. Some of the possible changes include third-party reporting and having independent investigators and confidentiality in the reporting process. Advertisement Kelly said the panel may propose barring sexual relationships between supervisors and subordinates or interns, adding committee chairs to the list of officials who can receive complaints and creating protections for lobbyists. It was unclear whether the commission and the women's caucus will work together. Kelly said she welcomed the commission but did not have details on how it would work or when it would start. The women's caucus panel will continue putting together recommendations she hopes will be considered and acted upon. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Anna Mae Hays, an Army nurse who served in a mud-caked jungle hospital in World War II, guided the Army Nurse Corps through the bloodiest years of the Vietnam War and became the first female general in American military history, died Jan. 7 at a retirement home in Washington. She was 97. The cause was complications from a heart attack, said a niece, Doris Kressly. The daughter of Salvation Army officers, Gen. Hays had dreamed of becoming a nurse since she was a young girl, wrapping bandages around the legs of a kitchen table where her parents frequently invited the infirm to dinner. She went on, in Vietnam, to oversee a 4,500-person nursing corps whose robust use of antibiotics, whole-blood transfusions and speedy helicopter evacuations was unforeseen when she began assisting doctors at a dirt-floored hospital in Ledo, India, in January 1943. Advertisement Working in a malaria-infested stretch of the China-Burma-India theater, she treated gangrenous construction workers who were building a new roadway that supplied the Chinese military in its war against Japan, as well as lice-infested members of the special-operations Army unit known as Merrill's Marauders. Most of her staff was sick with malaria, dysentery, or dengue fever, she later said in an Army oral history, and at one time she found herself hospitalized and spotted a cobra under her bed. She calmly asked a guard to shoot it, later explaining, "When one lives in the jungle, one can expect that sort of thing." Gen. Hays treated some of the earliest casualties of the Korean War, helping establish the first military hospital in Inchon, and as chief of the Army Nurse Corps from 1967 until her retirement four years later, she helped bolster its ranks during the conflict in Vietnam. Advertisement Notable deaths in 2017 Share Share Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Reddit Share on LinkedIn MailSolid Email this link View Photos View Photos Next Image WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 24: Mamie "Peanut" Johnson, the first woman player in the Negro baseball league, who pitched for the Indianapolis Clowns, poses at the new ball field named for her Wednesday April 24, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Katherine Frey/The Washington Post) As part of an effort to expand scholarship opportunities and educational requirements for Army nurses, Gen. Hays "persuaded the Army that nursing was important enough to spend money on a hard sell at that time," said Sanders Marble, senior historian in the Army's Office of Medical History. She also helped push through Army policy changes that paved the way for women in the military, including the 1970 establishment of maternity leave for female officers. Through her efforts, married officers were no longer automatically discharged from the ranks for becoming pregnant, and a provision was removed that limited mothers' ability to join the Army Nurse Corps Reserve. Gen. Hays resisted a close association with feminism "Let's not talk about this," she told the New York Times in 1970, when asked about the burgeoning women's liberation movement. But she nonetheless became a symbol of unprecedented female advancement on June 11, 1970, when she was promoted to the one-star rank of brigadier general. Advertisement Until three years earlier, the rank had been barred to her by law. Legislation under President Lyndon B. Johnson opened up the possibility of a female general the first "in the Western world since Joan of Arc," Gen. William C. Westmoreland said and in 1970 President Richard M. Nixon made good on the new rules, selecting for promotion Gen. Hays and Elizabeth P. Hoisington, chief of the Women's Army Corps. Whether by virtue of alphabetic order, seniority or a simple twist of fate, Gen. Hays received her rank first, just a few minutes earlier than Hoisington. In a Pentagon ceremony attended by the wife of one of Gen. Hays's former patients, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Westmoreland gave her the rank's silver star insignia and what Time magazine described as "a brassy kiss" on the lips. It was, the Army chief of staff joked, all part of "a new protocol for congratulating lady generals." Advertisement The congratulatory peck has gone by the wayside, as dozens of women have since become general officers. Gen. Ann Dunwoody notably broke the "brass ceiling" in 2008 to become the military's first female four-star general. At the time, however, Gen. Hays's promotion was greeted with astonishment from some quarters and derision from others. With good humor, she recalled receiving a letter from Germany addressed to the "Chief of the Feminine Army Sanitary Corps," and seeing a political cartoon that showed two men at a bar. "Well, we've got everything, Sarge," the caption read, "the atomic bomb, guided missiles, the M16 rifle, and now two lady generals." Anna Mae Violet McCabe was born in Buffalo on Feb. 16, 1920, and graduated from high school in Allentown, Pa. She received a nursing diploma in 1941 from Allentown General Hospital's School of Nursing and soon joined the Army Nurse Corps, inspired to serve after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Advertisement Gen. Hays, who took her last name from her husband William Hays, who died in 1962, performed much of her peacetime service at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, where she rose to became chief nurse in the emergency room. It was there that she met Eisenhower, who was hospitalized for an intestinal disease for about one month in 1956 and whom she considered a lifelong friend. Gen. Hays received a bachelor's degree in nursing education from Columbia University's Teachers College in 1958, and graduated from the Catholic University of America in 1968 with a master's degree in nursing. Her military honors included the Distinguished Service Medal and the Legion of Merit. A former resident of Arlington, Va., she leaves no immediate survivors, although friends sometimes encouraged her to start a family. Advertisement One day after she was promoted to general, she found herself at the hairdresser's next to Westmoreland's wife, Kitsy, Westmoreland later said. "I wish you'd get married again," Kitsy said. When Gen. Hays asked why, she replied: "I just want some man to know what it's like to be married to a general." Read more Washington Post obituaries GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share The box from FedEx contained eight vacuum-sealed packages of marijuana, and it left D.C. police with a question they posed on Twitter: "Anyone misplace 9 lbs of weed over the weekend? Feel free to stop by #DCPolice headquarters . . . we'd be happy to chat." Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight It turned out police were just making a point. They already had a suspect in custody a 25-year-old named Jacob Greenbaum of Leesburg, Va., charged with possession of drugs with intent to distribute. It's legal to possess marijuana in the District, but only up to two ounces. Greenbaum was arrested Saturday after police said he tried to retrieve the box that had been sent to the Blind Whino, a nonprofit community arts program in the 700 block of Delaware Avenue SW, housed in a Baptist church built in 1886. The group's co-founder, who could not be reached, wasn't expecting the box, nor had anyone there ordered it. It was postmarked Backyard Farm, Colo. The co-founder told police he discovered the contents and dialed 911. Advertisement Drugs frequently get distributed in hidden compartments in cars, but they also crisscross the country in the way people used to communicate with Grandma by mail. And people utilizing this method to send illegal items often use an address that they have no connection to, with plans to come and claim it if it seems to have escaped the attention of law enforcement. "Sometimes drug packages are addressed to vacant properties with the expectation that the postal carrier will just leave it at the address," federal authorities said in an unrelated search warrant on a package recently intercepted through the mail. In this case, police said the intended recipient contacted the Blind Whino after being notified the package had been signed for. The co-founder, by then working with police, agreed to meet the intended recipient, identified in court documents as Greenbaum. He was arrested when he showed up on Saturday to claim the package. Greenbaum could not be reached for comment. He was freed pending a court hearing Jan. 31. His attorney did not return calls or an email seeking comment. GiftOutline Gift Article Gift Article Share A Bethesda teenager found dead of alcohol poisoning in a frigid stream after a party last month had been carrying two fake Pennsylvania driver's licenses that indicated he was old enough to buy alcohol, Montgomery County police said Monday. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight A bottle of vodka, found in the teenager's pocket after his death, probably was purchased outside of the county, police officials said. The officials continue to investigate the death of Navid Sepehri, 17, and on Monday in a statement called it "a tragedy not only for his family and friends but also for the greater community." Just before 5 p.m. on Dec. 10, Sepehri's father, Frank, after searching for more than 14 hours, found his son's body in a small ravine between a row of suburban houses and a swim club in the Bannockburn neighborhood of Bethesda. An autopsy later showed that Navid died of acute alcohol intoxication, complicated by hypothermia and drowning. Since his death, the Sepehri family and others have raised questions about where Navid got alcohol; what role, if any, the homeowners hosting a teen party played; and whether police could have done more when they talked with Navid the evening of the party. Advertisement The night before Navid's body was found, at least two county officers interacted with him outside a party on Elgin Lane in Bethesda about 10:30 p.m. He appeared to be drunk, police said in a previous statement, but he was not taken into custody. Police have indicated that Navid and his friends told officers they were waiting for rides home from parents. Police officials said Monday they were making arrangements for the family to view body-worn camera footage that captured officers speaking with Navid outside the Elgin Lane home. Five hours after that exchange outside the party, about 3:30 a.m. on Dec. 10, a different officer outside a police station spoke with Navid's father, who was out looking for his son when he hadn't come home and who had gone to the station's parking lot, according to Montgomery County police and Frank Sepehri. No missing person's report was taken. The exact conversations between the officers and the teens outside the party and the officer and Navid's father are not known, and the department said Monday it "is examining the actions of the police officers who encountered" Navid and his father. Advertisement How Navid got the alcohol, police said Monday, remains under review, but markings on the bottle indicate that it was purchased outside the county. Police officials also said it does not appear that the homeowners were the source. "There is no indication that the homeowners furnished alcohol to the underage attendees," police wrote in the Monday statement. "The homeowners stated to responding officers that when it became apparent to them that alcohol had been brought into the party by minors, they told the partygoers that no alcohol was allowed. The homeowners then contacted some of the attendees' parents." Police said the homeowners' account was supported by at least one of the people at the party. "There will be no charges placed against the homeowners as there were no violations of the law observed by officers," police said. Navid's family members were not immediately available for comment Monday. GiftOutline Gift Article A man armed with a handgun robbed a 7-Eleven convenience store early Tuesday on Connecticut Avenue in the Dupont Circle neighborhood, according to D.C. police. Police said the man walked into the store in the 1600 block of Connecticut Avenue NW, at R Street, about 1:10 a.m. Police said he approached a cashier with his shirt up, showing the butt of a gun. Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share He sat at the counter of a downtown Chipotle, ate $60 worth of barbecue beef and drank a $3 apple juice. The problem was it was after 3 a.m. and the restaurant at Capital One Arena was closed. Police said the man forced open the front doors on F Street Northwest. A police report says the man destroyed a burglar alarm and "consumed the food." He was still sitting on a stool when the general manager arrived at 6:10 a.m., police said. The incident occurred on New Year's Day. Authorities said the man fled into a nearby McDonald's restaurant and then disappeared. In a picture distributed by the police, the man is wearing a floppy hat, baggy pants and a backpack. Employees of the Chipotle, at Sixth and F streets NW, declined to comment on Tuesday. The police report lists the food as a "tray of barbacoa," a Mexican beef barbecue. Correction: In an earlier version of this article, the headline and first paragraph incorrectly said the man who broke into the restaurant ate pulled pork. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share A veteran police officer who used his gun to try to smash a window wound up shooting an unarmed driver in a Montgomery County parking lot when the weapon accidentally went off, police officials said Tuesday. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight The driver survived the Nov. 5 shooting. The officer, Todd Archer, will not be criminally charged, according to authorities, but he remains under administrative investigation by the Montgomery Police Department's Internal Affairs Division. "Questions remain as to why a firearm was used to try to break the glass, and why the firearm discharged," the Montgomery department said in a statement. Archer, who has been an officer for 10 years with the Montgomery force, remains on paid administrative leave. Officials have not identified the man who was shot. They are arranging to have him, his family and their representatives view a video recording of the shooting captured by Archer's body-worn camera. Advertisement Montgomery Police Chief J. Thomas Manger has reviewed the video. "I don't believe the officer intended to shoot this man," Manger said, but added that "a number of questions remain about what happened." Morgan Blackledge, an attorney for Archer, said her client rendered aid to the SUV driver immediately after the gunshot. But she declined Tuesday to speak in detail about the case until the administrative investigation is complete. "All I can say is that Officer Archer is a dedicated member of the Montgomery County Police Department and will continue to serve the citizens of Montgomery County," Blackledge said. Chuck Drago, a national expert on police use of force, said that, in general, officers should not use guns to smash windows. "A gun isn't a tool for hitting or banging or ramming. It's designed for one thing, to shoot a bullet," he said. Advertisement One particular concern, he said, is that when someone uses a gun to strike something, there is a reflexive reaction: "You tend to clench your fist, which includes your trigger finger," Drago said. The incident began with a 911 call to police at about 8:20 p.m. Nov. 5 from a motorist saying his car was being rammed in a parking lot by an SUV. Archer was the first officer to arrive at the lot at Veirs Mill and Randolph roads, an area of the county between Wheaton and Rockville, police said. He saw a Cadillac Escalade driving up against the back of a Camry, the car described by the 29-year-old caller to 911. It appeared that the SUV driver thought the other car was blocking his exit from the parking lot, police officials said, when in reality the car was pinned against a curb. Archer got out of his patrol car, approached the Escalade and drew his weapon, according to police accounts. It's not clear how well Archer could see into the SUV or why he thought he needed to break the window. Advertisement Police did not detail the exchange, including any conversation between Archer and the driver, or how much time passed between the officer's arrival and when he began hitting the driver's side window with his gun. The Escalade driver, who was 52 at the time, was hit by one round when Archer's gun discharged. More officers arrived, and they provided first aid to the driver, police officials said. He was taken to a hospital and treated for what police said were serious but not life-threatening injuries. Detectives from the Montgomery force investigated the shooting and turned over their findings to Howard County prosecutors in the neighboring jurisdiction. Under a recent agreement between the counties, prosecutors in one county review police-involved shootings in the other county. The agreement is meant to guard against perceived conflicts of interests because police and prosecutors work so closely within their own jurisdictions. Advertisement The Howard County State's Attorney's Office examined the case and concluded that "Officer Archer's actions do not rise to the level of recklessness needed to pursue any criminal charges," according to Montgomery police officials. Howard prosecutors concluded they would not take further action in the case. The driver of the Escalade will not be charged, Montgomery officials said. Manger said the department would release more information after it completes its internal investigation. Drago, the use-of-force expert, said police training academies cannot be expected to explicitly tell students everything they must not do. Or, as he said: "It may not be on the syllabus: 'Tell cop not to break window with gun.' " But the general instructions of not using a gun as a tool are widespread, he said. Drago said there could be a rare exception when officers would be justified in using a gun to try to break a window if they believed lives were in immediate peril and nothing else was at the ready. Advertisement A preferred instrument, Drago said, would be a baton. "Maybe he didn't have it. Maybe he couldn't get to it," Drago said. Read more: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share NEWPORT NEWS, Va. The instant Shelly Simonds walked into an Italian restaurant near her home the other day, a booth full of diners rose from their seats to hug and console her. "This is one hot mess," another diner volunteered when Simonds wandered by. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight For an excruciating moment last week, Simonds was America's most-talked-about political loser, a distinction she earned after her defeat in an electoral game of chance that was broadcast live across the country on CNN. Simonds, a Democrat who may still challenge the outcome, had thought she lost the race for the Virginia House of Delegates by 10 votes on election night, only to learn after a recount that she had won by a single vote. Republican David Yancey won a drawing on Jan. 4 in a contested race in the Virginia House of Delegates. (Video: Erin Patrick O'Connor, Claritza Jimenez/The Washington Post, Photo: Julia Rendleman/The Washington Post) The astonishing turn momentarily threatened the GOP's 18-year majority in the House of Delegates and transformed Simonds into an improbable, if fleeting, star of cable news shows. Advertisement But Democrats' euphoria was soon quashed when a judicial panel ruled the race a tie 11,608 votes each and left its outcome to the whims of a lottery. A state election official on Thursday picked the name of the winner Republican David E. Yancey from what may now be the country's most photographed ceramic bowl. "I'm probably stuck in the anger phase," Simonds said over lunch the next day, reflecting on a two-month saga in which she found herself evolving from a political unknown to the inspiration for the Twitter hashtag #StandwithShelly. With Virginia's General Assembly convening Wednesday, Simonds, 50, is contemplating whether to exercise her last remaining option: a second recount. She has until Jan. 16. Hers is not the only House race shrouded in uncertainty. Democrats are appealing a federal judge's denial of their request for a special election in District 28, in which 147 voters received ballots with the wrong candidates listed. Republican Bob Thomas won the race against Democrat Joshua Cole by 73 votes. Advertisement Whatever her choice, Simonds said she's preparing to begin fundraising to challenge Yancey in 2019. "This seat is mine; I am running again," Simonds said. She said her resolve has been fortified by her post-election journey, one that included a three- judge panel allowing a contested ballot to be counted for Yancey, upending what she had thought was her one-vote victory. "It was 'Every vote counts,' a beautiful story, and then it morphs into a darker story you can play tricks and a judge can decide an election," she said between forkfuls of pasta. "I am part of the Democratic blue wave. We're fed up with the old boys network, and the judges represent that. They can't do business as usual in Richmond from here on out." Democrats had flipped 15 House seats in November, decimating the iron grip that Republicans had held over the chamber and bringing the political parties to near parity. Republicans now hold 51 seats to Democrats' 49. Advertisement But the uncertainty surrounding the 28th District, as well as the 94th District, where Yancey and Simonds ran, could shift that balance. If the federal appeals court orders a new election in the 28th District, for example, and Thomas is not seated in the General Assembly on Wednesday, the GOP advantage shrinks to 50 to 49. If Simonds were also to seek a recount, blocking Yancey from being seated as the session begins, the body would be tied 49 to 49. Republicans would be forced to enter into a power-sharing arrangement with Democrats on the first day, when lawmakers elect a speaker, decide committee chairs and set rules. In a statement following the lottery won by Yancey, Del. M. Kirkland Cox (R-Colonial Heights), who would be House speaker if the GOP maintains a majority, described the post-election tribulations as "unprecedented to say the least, but the process laid out in state law worked. Now, it's time to get to work." Advertisement The annals of American politics are littered with politicians defined by soul-crushing defeats. Republican New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, for one, lost the 1948 presidential race despite many projections and at least one headline to the contrary ("Dewey Defeats Truman"). Al Gore's razor-thin loss to George W. Bush in 2000 still conjures teeth-gnashing angst among Democrats. Neither Dewey nor Gore ran for the White House again. Whether Simonds's electoral misfortune can eventually help her capture a General Assembly seat is an open question. At the very least, her roller coaster of a ride one that included enough stomach-churning turns to require a robust dose of Dramamine has made her better known than if she had won or lost by, say, 1,000 votes. "There is no better way to lose than the way she lost," said Quentin Kidd, director of the Wason Center of Public Policy at Christopher Newport University. "This is her moment. A lot of her supporters are angry. She has a lot of momentum behind her." Advertisement Yet, Simonds's path is not without risks, Kidd said. If she seeks a second recount, she may signal to voters that she's "a loser who didn't want to accept it," he said. Robert Holsworth, a retired Virginia Commonwealth University political science professor, said Simonds's challenge is to galvanize voters by latching on to an issue that has nothing to do with her electoral misadventure. "People don't vote because of sympathy they have for you," Holsworth said. "They want to know what you're going to do for them." By any measure, the drama that Simonds has endured since November is not what she is accustomed to as a yoga-practicing mother of two daughters. An Ohio native, she moved to Newport News in 2000 when her husband, Paul, an engineer, got a job at NASA. Simonds entered politics only six years ago, when a friend persuaded her to run for a school board seat that she won by what in retrospect seems like an ample 174 votes. Advertisement "Women need to be asked to run," Simonds said, explaining the roots of her first campaign. "Women are taught as girls to be part of the team, be part of the family, not necessarily to demand the attention of everyone." Simonds relished her new role enough that she campaigned for Yancey's House seat in 2015, a race she lost by 2,000 votes. If she was unsure about exposing her family to the rigors of another campaign, Simonds said President Trump's 2016 election motivated her to challenge Yancey again. "I felt this urgency," she said. "I was much more assertive and aggressive." The past couple of months have been rife with moments she's not eager to relive, such as when she learned that the judicial panel had nullified her one-vote victory and declared the race tied. "I had been so excited about getting up to the General Assembly and thinking about legislation I'd introduce," she said. "That was the hardest day." Advertisement The lottery drawing was also painful, even before she knew the outcome, because she knew the result could be challenged. "If I won, was I really going to win?" she said. "I almost felt like a lamb being led to slaughter." Her list of what-might-have-beens includes something that has nothing to do with ceramic bowls or recounts. It's the unopened cardboard box she found in her campaign headquarters days after the election. Inside were the names and addresses of hundreds of targeted voters her volunteers needed to reach on Election Day to get them to the polls. No one from her campaign had knocked on those doors. With the election so close, Simonds knows that a handful of those voters could have made the difference. "I was stunned when I found that box," Simonds said. Her foray in the political spotlight has also included pinch-me moments, such as when MSNBC sent a chauffeur-driven SUV to deliver her to an interview with Lawrence O'Donnell. Advertisement Or when she realized during another interview that she was being broadcast live in London. Then there was the delight she felt when, after she lost the drawing, humorist Samantha Bee tweeted to her 479,000 followers that she was "currently smashing bowls" in her kitchen "in solidarity with @shelly_simonds." "This made me laugh so hard, at a moment when I really needed a laugh," Simonds tweeted in reply. Reflecting on her newfound infamy, Simonds joked about the idea of getting herself a "L-O-S-E-R" tattoo. But she emphasized that the tattoo would be temporary. "Then I can replace it with 'W-I-N-N-E-R,' " she said. "I am not a loser." Read More: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Virginia Democrats on Monday seem to acknowledge the increasingly dim prospects of ending Republican control of the House of Delegates, even as they're waging a last-ditch legal effort. The General Assembly reconvenes on Wednesday, and whichever party holds more seats in the House that day will choose a speaker and set rules for running the chamber. Republicans have a 51-49 lead currently, but a series of events could erase that advantage on opening day. A group of Democratic voters is asking a federal appeals court to block Republican Bob Thomas, who narrowly beat Democrat Joshua Cole, from taking his seat in light of revelations that scores of voters received the wrong ballot. A lower court judge already declined to do so, and it's unclear if the appeals court would intervene before Wednesday. Advertisement Republican David Yancey won a drawing on Jan. 4 in a contested race in the Virginia House of Delegates. (Video: Erin Patrick O'Connor, Claritza Jimenez/The Washington Post, Photo: Julia Rendleman/The Washington Post) Meanwhile, Democrat Shelly Simonds, who lost a tied race in a different district when Republican David Yancey's name was drawn from a hat last week, could request a recount that would block him from taking his seat. But on Monday, House Democratic Leader David J. Toscano (Charlottesville) seemed to suggest he isn't putting great faith in either of those two scenarios and is instead focused on the unexpected electoral inroads his party made in November when it flipped 15 seats. "It appears that the partisan composition in the House will stand at 49 Democrats and 51 Republicans, numbers that many of us hoped for, but few would have predicted last summer," Toscano wrote in a letter to supporters on Monday. Simonds and Cole, who "came so close and fought for every vote until the end, are to be commended," he added. Advertisement In an interview, Toscano said he didn't intend to suggest that Cole and Simonds reached the end of their battles. But Republicans pounced on the letter as evidence that the Democrats have given up. "We've been moving forward with plans to seat Delegate-elect Bob Thomas and Delegate David Yancey, and we're glad Leader Toscano agrees with us that they should be seated and the work of governing should begin," said Parker Slaybaugh, a spokesman for Del. M. Kirkland Cox (Colonial Heights), the Republican choice for speaker. "This is a positive step toward setting the right kind of tone for what hopefully is a productive and bipartisan session." Not so fast, Toscano retorted. "We are not conceding anything yet," he said in an interview. "There is still a road to go before we get a clear majority, but we are fighting for every vote." Advertisement Toscano said his letter was meant to acknowledge the current reality that Republicans hold the advantage, but said that could still change with the ongoing litigation. He also acknowledged his focus on Wednesday is sharing, rather than seizing, power. That would include rules ensuring Democratic representation on committee is on par with Republicans and that Democrats can appoint their own members to committees. "We are working to try to come up with rules that will reflect that power dynamic that now exists in Richmond, which is close to parity," said Toscano. Republicans also have a narrow majority in the state Senate, holding 21 seats to Democrats' 19. Voters swept Democrats into the three statewide offices, electing Ralph Northam as governor and Justin Fairfax as lieutenant governor, while re-electing Attorney General Mark Herring. Advertisement Del. Kenneth Plum (D-Fairfax), the most senior member of the House who sought to be speaker if Democrats won a majority or forced a power sharing deal, said the chances of a Democratic speaker are essentially gone. "I hope what will come out of this is a recognition that Virginia is equally divided," Plum said in an interview. "Any person looking at circumstances says it calls for moderation and cooperation...." Several Republicans said one of the best ways for Toscano to engender good will ahead of crucial Wednesday votes is by acknowledging defeat in the contested races as they thought his letter to supporters did. "It certainly reads to the average person that they now recognize the reality that they picked up a bunch of seats but not quite enough," said Del. Gregory D. Habeeb (R-Salem). "It would be a signal that we're going to be able to orderly organize." Added Del. Timothy Hugo (R-Fairfax), who chairs the Republican caucus: "Each one of these lawsuits and actions they've taken have been incredible longshots." Rachel Weiner contributed to this report GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Rep. Scott Taylor (R-Va.) says he is opposed to drilling off the coast of his Virginia Beach district, breaking with President Trump who last week moved to erase a ban on oil drilling in the Atlantic Ocean and elsewhere. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight The freshman congressman, who represents all of Virginia's oceanfront land as well as the Navy base in Norfolk, said drilling could interfere with military training and faces stiff opposition from coastal communities and industries in his district. "The reality is, in my district every locality has opposed it," he said in an interview Monday. "Business and industry oppose it. The Navy has problems with it. I have to listen to my people." It is the first time since taking office in 2017 that Taylor has taken a position on the issue. Both political parties consider Taylor's district the most politically vulnerable in Virginia, after the northern Virginia district represented by Republican Barbara Comstock. Advertisement The Congressional Leadership Fund, a super PAC with ties to U.S. House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), last week announced it opened a field office in Taylor's district, signaling the importance of the House seat. It has been on the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's target list for a year. So far, five Democrats are vying to challenge Taylor, a former Navy SEAL, including retired Navy commander Elaine Luria of Norfolk. Luria announced her candidacy Monday and has the backing of Sen. Lynwood Lewis (D-Accomack) and Dave Belote, a democratic candidate for congress who dropped out of the primary for family reasons. Luria retired from the Navy last summer after 20 years, which included six deployments to the Middle East and the Western Pacific, and she commanded an assault craft unit. She owns a paint-your-own-plaster-mermaid business with locations in Norfolk and Virginia Beach. Advertisement "Washington is in chaos and we desperately need leaders who can be good and do good work, which is really the philosophy I had in the Navy and have in business," she said. The DCCC is targeting Taylor as well as Republican Reps. Dave Brat in the Richmond suburbs and Rep. Thomas Garrett in central Virginia and has highlighted their votes last year for a House bill that would have overhauled the nation's health-care system and the tax overhaul that Trump recently signed into law. "Scott Taylor is embracing the Washington Republican agenda at a time when Democratic energy in his district is surging," DCCC spokesperson Jacob Peters said. Democrats hope to take advantage of Trump's low approval ratings statewide to energize voters and flip the U.S. House in the same way they made sweeping gains in the Virginia House of Delegates in November. Advertisement Taylor's district voted for Virginia Gov.-elect Ralph Northam (D) and flipped two House of Delegates seats from red to blue. Although he lost the state, Trump won 48 percent of the vote in Taylor's district to Hillary Clinton's 45 percent. Seven percent voted for other candidates. Trump on Thursday unveiled a proposal to permit drilling in most U.S. continental shelf waters, including protected areas of the Arctic and the Atlantic, which is opposed by governors from New Jersey to Florida, including Gov.-elect Ralph Northam and Gov. Larry Hogan (R) of Maryland. Taylor, who last year was undecided about offshore drilling, said Trump's announcement had nothing to do with his decision. Rather, he cited opposition within his district, much of which he said has to do with the offshore drilling industry's "perception problem" as a result of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion off the coast of Louisiana. Advertisement Proponents of offshore drilling including the six other Republicans representing Virginia in Congress say it would create jobs and drive economic development. The state's four Democratic members of Congress oppose it. In 2010, Taylor said he supported offshore drilling. He said Monday that position predated the nation's extraction of natural gas from the Marcellus Shale in the Appalachian Basin, and other deposits. Taylor credited Trump's broader energy policy, including his support of pipelines and natural-gas fracking, for increasing domestic production and safeguarding the nation's energy independence. Quentin Kidd, director of the Wason Center for Public Policy at Christopher Newport University, said Taylor's announcement takes an issue off the table for Democrats and will appeal to the military-heavy district where offshore drilling is a real concern. "[Taylor] is reflecting his district," he said. "Military voters are mixed on Trump. They like that he wants to fund the military more, but they're really uncomfortable with his bombastic rhetoric, the sense that he might stumble us into a war. There's real concern about that." GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Milton Moses Ginsberg had no time for vampires. Frankenstein's monster left him cold. For him, it was all about another creature. As a boy growing up in the Bronx, Ginsberg had been deeply affected by a movie he had gone to see by himself: "The Wolf Man," starring Lon Chaney Jr. "I was so traumatized I never saw another horror film," Ginsberg said. "Werewolves haunted me." In a sense, they haunt him still. In 1973, Ginsberg wrote and directed "The Werewolf of Washington," a movie in which a White House press secretary played by Dean Stockwell is transformed under the full moon into the titular creature and kills the president's enemies. "The Werewolf of Washington" was the second film Ginsberg made. It was also the last. "I've had a love-hate relationship with this film," the octogenarian told me on the phone recently from his apartment in Manhattan. "It didn't do much for my career, to say the least." Advertisement The son of a garment worker, Ginsberg went to Columbia University. After he graduated, he was determined to write the Great American Novel. "I couldn't get past the Great American First Sentence," he joked. Ginsberg got a job with NBC News, shooting and editing documentaries. In 1969, inspired and influenced by Fellini and Antonioni, he made a movie called "Coming Apart." Shot in black and white, it chronicles the mental breakdown of a psychiatrist (a young Rip Torn) who has installed a hidden camera in his apartment. "Coming Apart" was raw and frank (there's an orgy scene) and divisive. "People either thought it was a masterpiece or awful," Ginsberg said. "There was no in between." A few years later, one of that film's producers asked Ginsberg whether he had anything else up his sleeve. As scandal was starting to engulf the Nixon White House but before Watergate had exploded Ginsberg went to New York's Fire Island and in 10 days wrote "The Werewolf of Washington." Advertisement Said Ginsberg: "I came back and the [producer] said, 'Are you out of your mind? This is an attack on the president. The script is yours. Don't ever show up here again.' " Another producer and some of Ginsberg's friends stepped in to fund the movie, shot on a shoestring budget of $100,000. Somehow, they were able to get veteran actor Stockwell to star. His career, Ginsberg said, "had fallen into eclipse at that time. He loved the script." The movie was shot in about four weeks, primarily around Glen Cove, on Long Island. The steps of the Brooklyn Borough Hall stood in for those of the U.S. Capitol, where (spoiler alert!) a Black Panther is killed by the werewolf. A tiny bowling alley in a church stood in for the beloved lanes Nixon built in the White House. Ginsberg traveled to Washington with Stockwell for a single day to shoot some exteriors, including outside the Sans Souci restaurant. Advertisement "It was the watering hole for the bigwigs," Ginsberg said. Stockwell is a real trouper in the movie, biting into the role with abandon. Still, when "The Werewolf of Washington" opened in October 1973, it was greeted with harsh reviews. "That was a little too rough," Ginsberg said. "It really broke my spirit for a while, to put that much effort into something and get the film you wanted to make with no response. At least with the first film, half were saying 'masterpiece' while the other half were saying, 'Forget this thing.' "To make two films like this really tires you out," he said. "It ruined my career. . . . I had made two films and made no money." Ginsberg continued to write screenplays. They would be optioned but not made. (One, called "Stuck," was about 10 film critics trapped in an elevator on the way from a screening.) He paid the bills as a film editor. He's worked on three Academy Award-winning documentaries. Advertisement Ginsberg said the only money he made from "Werewolf" was $2,000 he got for writing the script. He didn't own the film's copyright. Neither do the original producers anymore they let it lapse which is why you can find the entire movie on YouTube. As far as Ginsberg knows, only a single print exists of "The Werewolf of Washington," at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Ginsberg's personal DVD copy came from Germany, of all places. "When the film came out in 1973, German television bought it," he said. "In those days, if a TV station in Germany bought a film, they would show it once a week. Everybody growing up in Germany knows my film. Of course, here they don't." I'd love to see "The Werewolf of Washington" on a big screen. Whaddya say, AFI Silver? Before we hung up, I asked Ginsberg if he thought Donald Trump's presidency would make a good movie. "Absolutely," he said. "But it's almost less funny. It's much scarier now." For previous columns, visit washingtonpost.com/people/john-kelly. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share During three emotional days of divorce talks, Drake and Mandy Rooks managed to agree on how to divide up almost every aspect of their old lives down to the last piece of furniture. Only one thing remained: the frozen embryos. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight There were six of them, created from his sperm and her eggs, and they had been left over from when the couple had gone through in vitro fertilization some years earlier. The couple had had three children using the technology, and Drake was done. He didnt want any more children in general, and certainly not with Mandy. She felt differently. She had always imagined a large family and, given her trouble getting pregnant, she thought the embryos were her only hope for having more babies. She wanted them preserved. The dispute is one of a number of embryo-custody battles that have landed in the courts over the past quarter-century, resolved by different judges in different states with no consistent pattern. Rulings sometimes have awarded the frozen contents to the parent who wanted to use them, while other times determining that they could be discarded. Advertisement On Tuesday, the Colorado Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the Rookses case. Although several other cases have made their way to states high courts, legal experts say the issues here are different. Constitution questions are front and center in a way that they have not been in the other cases, said Harvard law professor I. Glenn Cohen. And if the judges decide the Rookses dispute on such grounds, that would allow it to be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court where a ruling would apply nationwide. Cohen said the central issue focuses on how to balance one persons constitutional right to procreate with anothers countervailing constitutional right to not procreate. The question parallels similar arguments used in other reproductive health cases, namely the Supreme Courts landmark 1973 abortion decision in Roe v. Wade. If women have the right to not be forced to be a gestational parent, do men or women have the right not to be forced to be a genetic parent? Advertisement Absolutely, says Drake Rooks, 50. It just seems like a guy should be able to decide whether he wants more children or not and with whom, he said in an interview last week. Mandy Rooks, who is 10 years his junior, flips the argument and comes to the opposite conclusion. No one, she said in an emailed statement, has the right to tell me that I have to kill my offspring. The rapidly expanding world of assisted reproduction has triggered ever-more-complex legal fights, with disputes over parental rights and custody front and center. Among the most high-profile is that of actress Sofia Vergara and her ex-fiance, Nick Loeb, who created two embryos when they were engaged in 2013. Loeb has said he wants to see them brought to term, while Vergara, who is married to someone else, wants them to remain frozen. The case of Silicon Valley investor Stephen Findley and his former wife, Mimi Lee, involved her wanting to use the embryos when she became infertile after breast cancer. A California judge sided with Findley that the embryos should be thawed and discarded. Advertisement When they met through mutual friends, Drake Rooks was a police officer and Mandy Rooks a nurse. They married in 2002 and settled in the small town of Glenwood Springs, just north of Aspen. Years later, with the help of in vitro fertilization, they had a baby boy and then boy-girl twins. But their relationship began to fall apart only a few months after the twins were born, leading to a very messy divorce. The court, recognizing both as loving parents, awarded them joint legal custody. Over Drakes objections, the judge said the children would live with Mandy despite her planned move to North Carolina. But over Mandys objections, the judge awarded Drake the frozen embryos per the contracts the couple had signed in the fertility clinic where the embryos were stored, which specified that a court of law would decide their fate in the event of a divorce. Advertisement Attorney Katayoun A. Donnelly, who represents Mandy Rooks, said that although the first child born from a cryopreserved embryo was in 1984, courts have not been addressing this issue head-on. Drake Rooks is saying he has a constitutional right not to be a parent, but he forgets it is past the point of conception, Donnelly said. A woman who wanted a man to donate his sperm would have no legal right to force that, she noted. By contrast, he has already agreed to use his sperm with the eggs. So we are in this unknown territory. Drake said the courts decision allowing his three children to be moved out of state strengthened his resolve that the embryos should be discarded. Why would someone want to have more kids when he cant take care of the kids he has? he asked. His attorney, James Giese, who handled the divorceand has been working pro bono since its resolution in 2016, argues that the current case rests on a persons constitutional right to privacy and to not have the state unduly influence whether someone should have children. Giese contends there should be mutual consent for stored embryos to be used. Advertisement It kind of runs against all decency, he said, forcing a parent to have a child they dont want. Mandy, who lost her earlier appeal before a lower court, declined to comment beyond her brief statement. As the case has continued through the judicial system, several other parties have weighed in. The Thomas More Society, writing in support of Mandy, has asserted the personhood of the embryos and their rights, saying that what is actually at stake is the termination of a human life or the continuation of that life. Other briefs have supported Drakes position. The state chapter of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers wrote that no one should force procreation over the objection of a progenitor. Likewise, the Academy of Adoption and Assisted Reproductive Attorneys said Colorados courts must take a balancing of interests approach in such disputes but give special weight to the partner who does not want to have genetic offspring. Advertisement In these cases, the parties do not have equal claims: the constitutional protection against compulsory parenthood is in most situations greater than any procreative interest in pre-embryos, attorneys Christopher M. Jackson and Seth Grob wrote. According to them, the 14th Amendment protects the rights of the individual to make his or her own decisions on whether to have a child. Plainly, this includes the right not to have a child. Cohen, the law professor, said that even with a strong contract or state statute with details of assisted reproduction, the outcome of a dispute hasnt been certain. In some cases, courts have made exceptions for individuals who had an unexpected loss of fertility because of a medical diagnosis. And some courts have considered how many other children the person has. In Mandy Rookss case, her attorneys argued in the initial trial that it was their understanding she couldnt have more children. But last April, they reported in a filing to the Colorado Supreme Court that she was again pregnant. They gave no details on the father or whether IVF or other reproductive technology was involved, and Donnelly refused last week to answer questions on that. Advertisement Its quite messy still, after even more than 25 years of litigation on this question, Cohen said. We still we have a patchwork of state approaches, a patchwork on how you think and how you reason about them, and a patchwork of results. Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly located Glenwood Springs, Colo. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Senate Democrats on Tuesday pressed President Donald Trump's nominee for the top health post to explain how he would fight skyrocketing drug prices demanding to know why they should trust him to lower costs since he did not do so while running a major pharmaceutical company. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Alex M. Azar II, the former president of the U.S. division of Eli Lilly and Trump's pick to run the Department of Health and Human Services, presented himself as a "problem solver" eager to fix a poorly structured health care system during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee. Azar said addressing drug costs would be among his top priorities. But armed with charts showing how some of Eli Lilly's drug prices had doubled on Azar's watch, Democrats argued Azar was part of the problem. Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the committee's top Democrat, said Azar had never authorized a decrease in a drug price as a pharmaceutical executive. Advertisement "The system is broken," Wyden said. "Mr. Azar was a part of that system." Azar countered that the nation's pharmaceutical drug system is structured to encourage companies to raise prices, a problem he said he would work to fix as head of HHS. "I don't know that there is any drug price of a brand-new product that has ever gone down from any company on any drug in the United States, because every incentive in this system is towards higher prices, and that is where we can do things together, working as the government to get at this," he said. "No one company is going to fix that system." Azar's confirmation hearing Tuesday was his second appearance before senators as the nominee to lead HHS. In November, he faced similar questions from the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee during a courtesy hearing. Advertisement If confirmed, Azar would succeed Tom Price, Trump's first health secretary, who resigned in September amid criticism over his frequent use of taxpayer-paid charter flights. A former Republican congressman who was a dedicated opponent of President Barack Obama's signature health care law, Price had a frosty relationship with Democrats in Congress as he worked with Republicans to try to undo the law. Price and the Trump administration often turned to regulations and executive orders to undermine the Affordable Care Act, since Republicans in Congress repeatedly failed to enact a repeal. "Repeal and replace" has been the president's mantra. But at the hearing, Azar was circumspect about his approach, noting that his job would be to work under existing law. "The Affordable Care Act is there," he said, adding that it would fall to him to make it work "as best as it possibly can." Advertisement Senate Republicans touted Azar's nearly six years working for the department under President George W. Bush, including two years as a deputy secretary. Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) praised Azar's "extraordinary resume," adding that, among HHS nominees, he was "probably the most qualified I've seen in my whole term in the United States Senate." Hatch, who is the longest-serving Republican senator in history, has been a senator for more than 40 years. In addition to drug costs, Azar vowed to focus on the nation's growing opioid crisis, calling for "aggressive prevention, education, regulatory and enforcement efforts to stop overprescribing and overuse," as well as "compassionate treatment" for those suffering from addiction. Pressed about Republican plans to cut entitlement spending to compensate for budget shortfalls, Azar said he was "not aware" of support within the Trump administration for such cuts. Advertisement "The president has stated his opposition to cuts to Medicaid, Medicare or Social Security," Azar said. "He said that in the campaign, and I believe he has remained steadfast in his views on that." But Democrats pushed back, pointing out that Trump had proposed Medicaid cuts in his budget request last year. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) said such cuts would hurt those receiving treatment for opioid addiction. "What happens to these people?" he said. Despite such Democratic criticism, Azar is likely to be confirmed when the full Senate votes on his nomination. An HHS spokesman Tuesday pointed reporters to an editorial in STAT supporting Azar, written by former Senate majority leaders Bill Frist and Tom Daschle a Republican and a Democrat. "We need a person of integrity and competence at the helm of the Department of Health and Human Services," they wrote. "The good news is that President Trump has nominated just such a person, Alex Azar." GiftOutline Gift Article Gift Article Share Prison time for fraternity members in hazing Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight A Pennsylvania court on Monday sentenced four members of a national college fraternity to a maximum of two years in prison and banned the group from operating in the state for 10 years because of the 2013 death of a student during a hazing incident. The court also fined Pi Delta Psi $112,500 for the death of Chun "Michael" Deng, a 19-year-old freshman from New York's Baruch College who was knocked unconscious by fraternity members who waited an hour before taking him to a hospital. A jury in November found Pi Delta Psi, an Asian-American cultural fraternity, guilty of aggravated assault and involuntary manslaughter, marking what prosecutors and defense lawyers called the first time a U.S. fraternity was criminally convicted in a pledge hazing death. Advertisement Deng, 19, died in December 2013 from head injuries suffered during a hazing initiation for prospective members, or pledges, called "the glass ceiling" at a rented home in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains. Sheldon Wong, 25, Charles Lai, 27, Raymond Lam, 24, and Kenny Kwan, 28, pleaded guilty in May to felony charges of voluntary manslaughter and hindering apprehension. During the incident, Deng was blindfolded, wore a 30-pound backpack and ran a gauntlet of fraternity members who tackled and knocked him unconscious on snow-covered ground, police said. Wong and Lam were both sentenced to 10 to 24 months in prison on Monday, while Kwan was sentenced to 12 to 24 months, which were less than the state sentencing guidelines of 22 to 36 months. Lai was released on time served of 342 days. The fraternity has two chapters in the state. Advertisement Reuters Electrical fire at Trump Tower Three people were injured in a small electrical fire at Trump Tower, where smoke billowed from the rooftop early Monday as emergency crews worked to extinguish the flames. The Secret Service first spotted the fire and alerted building managers, who called 911 shortly before sunrise, according to New York fire officials. Within about an hour, fire crews had extinguished what fire department spokesman called a "quick, easy and routine" blaze on the roof of the luxury building on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. There were no evacuations, the authorities said, but two civilians and a firefighter sustained minor injuries. President Trump, who has a penthouse condominium at Trump Tower, was in Washington on Monday, according to his public schedule. "There was a small electrical fire in a cooling tower on the roof of Trump Tower," the Trump Organization said in an emailed statement to The Washington Post. Advertisement Lindsey Bever Four killed in shooting at Texas resort: Four people were killed following a gunfire in an apparent murder-suicide at an upscale beachfront hotel in Southeast Texas. Galveston Police Capt. Josh Schirard said three people were found dead in a room about 4:30 a.m. Monday at the San Luis Resort. A fourth person, a woman, was discovered wounded and transported to a hospital, where she later died. Police said all four had been staying together in the room. Associated Press GiftOutline Gift Article Gift Article Share Government forces capture 14 villages Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Government forces captured 14 villages Monday as they advanced on the largest rebel-held enclave in northern Syria amid a wave of airstrikes. Syrian troops and their allies have been on the offensive since late October in Hama and Idlib provinces, capturing nearly 100 villages from insurgent groups. The main aim of the troops is to reach the rebel-held Abu Zuhour air base and secure the road linking the capital, Damascus, with the northern city of Aleppo. The government-controlled Syrian Central Military Media said the newly captured villages bring the troops closer to the air base. Russia's Defense Ministry, meanwhile, said its air base and naval station in western Syria have been targeted at least 13 times by armed drones since Saturday. The ministry said seven of the drones were shot down, three landed outside the base and others detonated when they crashed. The ministry said there was no damage to the bases. Advertisement The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights attributed the attempted attacks to an Islamist rebel faction that operates in Latakia province and had targeted the air base several times since Dec. 31. Clashes also erupted Monday near the Damascus suburb of Harasta, after government forces reached troops trapped for more than a week in a military base surrounded by insurgents. Associated Press U.S. helicopter makes emergency landing A U.S. attack helicopter made an emergency landing on the grounds of a hotel on Japan's Okinawa island Monday, the latest in a string of mishaps involving American military aircraft that has fueled opposition to the U.S. presence there. The helicopter crew landed the aircraft because a warning light had come on, according to the Japanese public broadcaster NHK. No injuries were reported. Advertisement Resentment has simmered among Okinawa residents over what they see as an unfair burden in supporting the U.S. military presence in Japan. Among recent incidents, a U.S. military transport helicopter made an emergency landing on an Okinawa beach on Saturday because of a faulty rotor. Earlier, a window fell from a military aircraft onto a school playground. Such accidents, as well as occasional incidents of crime committed by American service personnel, have fueled opposition to the U.S. presence on the island. Okinawa hosts about 30,000 U.S. military personnel. Reuters India's top court to review law criminalizing gay sex: India's top court said it will reexamine its 2013 decision not to strike down a colonial-era law that makes homosexual acts punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Three judges, including the chief justice, said a larger group of justices would reconsider the law in response to a petition filed by five people who say they are living in fear of being prosecuted. However, no date was fixed for hearings in the case. The Supreme Court had said in 2013 that amending or repealing the law should be left to Parliament. Parliament is yet to act in the matter. Advertisement Bail hearing delayed for former Canadian hostage: A Canadian court has adjourned until Monday a bail hearing for former Taliban hostage Joshua Boyle, who was arrested late last month on criminal charges that include assault, sexual assault and forcible confinement. Prosecutors said the crimes occurred in Canada after Boyle and his family returned to the country in October. Boyle and his wife were kidnapped in October 2012 while backpacking in Afghanistan. Their children were born in captivity. Turkey seeks to extend state of emergency: Turkey's government intends to extend by three months the state of emergency declared after a 2016 coup attempt. Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag said the national security council would discuss the matter before seeking approval in parliament. The declaration is set to expire Jan. 19. The emergency powers have allowed the government to crack down on suspected foes. Britain convicts couple of bomb plot: A man and a woman who met on a Muslim dating website were convicted of plotting a bombing in Britain. Prosecutors say Munir Mohammed, an asylum seeker from Sudan, and London pharmacist Rowaida el-Hassan bonded over their extremist views. Prosecutors said Mohammed volunteered to carry out an attack during Facebook exchanges with a man he thought was an Islamic State commander. Police said they found bombmaking instructions and components for an explosive at Mohammed's home when he was arrested in late 2016. Prosecutors say he drew on Hassan's knowledge of chemicals during his preparations. Advertisement Pakistan releases 147 Indians jailed for illegal fishing: A Pakistani official said 147 Indians detained for fishing illegally have been released from prison and handed over to Indian authorities. The South Asian rivals often arrest fishermen suspected of trespassing in their territorial waters and then periodically release large numbers of them in what is billed as goodwill gestures. Pakistan released 145 Indian fishermen last month and 220 the previous year. India reciprocated after the 2016 release but freed a smaller number of Pakistani fishermen. Madagascar cyclone kills 6, displaces thousands: Authorities in Madagascar said six people have been killed in a cyclone. The government said Cyclone Ava also displaced more than 13,000 people on the Indian Ocean island over the weekend. The island nation was hit hard by a cyclone in March that left at least 50 people dead and damaged the Sava region in the northeast, which produces about half of the world's vanilla. From news services GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share POLICE SHOT and killed 987 people in the United States last year. That is two dozen more than in the year before and nearly identical to the number of people killed by police the year before that. The lack of appreciable change in the numbers is a depressing sign that, though much attention has been focused on this issue in the past three years, authorities are falling short in devising and implementing solutions. The sobering look at the use of deadly force by police is the result of an unprecedented effort by The Post to track fatal shootings in the aftermath of the national debate sparked by the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, outside St. Louis. The ongoing project, using local news coverage, public records and social-media reports, has logged details of 2,945 shooting deaths. The Post's compilation has pointed up the inadequacies of the FBI's record-keeping, which relies on voluntary submissions from police and shows far fewer shootings. More importantly, the project has revealed patterns in the shootings that could lead to more effective action. The decline in the number of unarmed people shot suggests, for example, that heightened awareness and scrutiny may result in police showing more restraint before using deadly force in some circumstances. Particularly striking is how often mental-health issues play a role in police shootings. In 2017, 236 people nearly 1 in 4 of those killed were reported to have been experiencing some form of mental distress at the time of their encounter with police. That rate, the Treatment Advocacy Center calculated in a 2015 report, means the risk of being killed during a police incident is 16 times greater for individuals with untreated serious mental illness than for other civilians. As the public mental-health system has been depleted, with insufficient facilities and other barriers to treatment, police have been unfairly burdened with having to deal with people in mental crisis. The results are too often tragic, as The Post's John Woodrow Cox detailed in the heartbreaking case of a 15-year-old Prince William County boy suffering from depression who was shot and killed last year in a confrontation with police he initiated, apparently as a way of committing suicide. Advertisement Expanding mental-health services could reduce the number of police shootings. So might better training of police and the use of intervention teams schooled in how to respond to people in mental distress so that situations don't escalate into someone being killed. Police have dangerous jobs, and sometimes they must use deadly force to protect themselves or the public. But figuring out ways to avoid such shootings is in the interests of both the police and the public they serve. Read more: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Wow, it looks as though "a new day is on the horizon!" If Democrats decide to fight fire with fire, that is. When Oprah Winfrey delivered that line at the climax of her thunderous Golden Globes speech, my reaction was the same as everyone else's: Is it my imagination, or does that sound like a well-crafted slogan for a presidential campaign? I quickly told myself nah, no way, she wouldn't. But then her longtime partner, Stedman Graham, told the Los Angeles Times she just might. "It's up to the people," he said. "She would absolutely do it." CNN later quoted two unidentified friends of Winfrey as saying that for several months she has been "actively thinking" about running. Step back for a moment and consider where we've come: If I'd told you five years ago that the 2020 presidential race would be Oprah vs. The Donald, you'd have insisted I seek professional help. But today, who can rule it out? Advertisement Culture columnist Alyssa Rosenberg ranks the least and most helpful responses to the #metoo movement at the 2018 Golden Globes. (Video: Gillian Brockell/The Washington Post) President Trump's biggest accomplishment may have been to make the political waters safe for celebrities with 100-percent name recognition and zero government experience. At this point, who's to say that Winfrey couldn't run? Or that she couldn't win? Follow Eugene Robinson 's opinions Follow Add I admit to having mixed feelings about the prospect. On the one hand, Trump's abysmal performance in office proves, as if it needed proving, that experience is a good thing for a president to have. On the other, for the sake of the nation and the world, somebody has to beat Trump in 2020 and it's not as if the Democratic Party has a lineup of potential candidates who begin to match Winfrey in charisma and star quality. I'm assuming she'd run as a Democrat, since that's where her worldview and sensibilities best fit. If you wonder why anyone is taking the Oprah-for-president idea seriously, go back and listen to that speech. I think of myself as pretty hard-bitten and jaded, but I found it inspirational even thrilling. Advertisement Winfrey's delivery wasn't the soft, enfolding, personal empathy of "Oprah on the couch." It was "Oprah on a soapbox" bold and full of vigor. When she raised her volume and used repetition to declare the end of the era when powerful men could abuse women with impunity "But their time is up. Their time is up. Their time is up." it sounded almost like a campaign speech. When she ramped the energy and emotion even higher with her "new day is on the horizon" proclamation, I no longer had any doubt that I was hearing political oratory of a very high order. And I confess, I had a lump in my throat. We know a bit about Winfrey's politics. Her major impact to date was her May 2007 endorsement of candidate Barack Obama at a time when Hillary Clinton was the odds-on favorite to win the Democratic nomination. Winfrey made her first campaign appearances on Obama's behalf in December of that year, and it is logical to assume that her support won him votes in the primaries, though it is not possible to know how many. She endorsed Clinton in 2016. Trump had said at one point that he would love to have Winfrey as his running mate, but she said on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" that if he actually asked, her response would be, "Donald, I'm with her" echoing a Clinton campaign slogan. Advertisement Some Democrats and a few "Never Trump" Republicans, such as Weekly Standard editor at large Bill Kristol reacted to the Golden Globes speech by using the Twitter #imwithher hashtag to tout Winfrey as a candidate. Response from the Hollywood luminaries who witnessed the speech firsthand inside the Beverly Hilton ballroom was little short of rapturous. For Americans traumatized by the Trump presidency, Winfrey's address hit all the right notes. It offered hope a commodity that has been in desperately short supply. Back to reality. One big question is why Winfrey would even consider a presidential run. It would require nearly three years of grinding hard work and in the end, she might win, which would mean four more years of oppressive labor and crushing responsibility. The life of a billionaire media mogul is much more pleasant than the life of a president. Advertisement And the most important question of all: Could she actually be a good president? After Trump, we have to be skeptical of all political novices. But we should also be mindful that many people have underestimated Winfrey throughout her long career. All have regretted it. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Because of President Trump's absence of downward loyalty, his elevation of the morally impaired and his encouragement of staff factionalism, his administration will produce any number of damaging memoirs and leak-filled exposes. Michael Wolff's "Fire and Fury" is the latest in this genre, but surely not the last. Yet, what is most striking about Wolff's book is its superfluity. We do not require a behind-the-scenes look at Trump's instability, childishness and narcissism, because he provides revelations about his fragile state of mind nearly every day. Trump is damaged most, not by sabotage, but by self- revelation. The intimacy of Twitter providing daily and sometimes hourly updates on the state of Trump's mind encourages a question: Is the president reaching some kind of psychological breaking point? That is difficult to diagnose from afar. More likely, Trump is exhibiting a set of compulsions and delusions that have characterized his entire adult life. You can't have declining judgment that never existed. You can't lose a grasp on reality you never possessed. What is most striking is not Trump's disintegration but his utter consistency. As some critics question President Trump's mental fitness, many psychiatrists are being reminded of the Goldwater Rule. Here's what you need to know about it. (Video: Elyse Samuels/The Washington Post, Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post) Advertisement We have almost too much information in assessing Trump's stability and fitness for high office. His combination of transgression and transparency is numbing. If the secret tape of a president threatening a private citizen with jail were leaked, it would be a scandal. With Trump, it is just part of his shtick. Even the most easily alarmed among us have come to discount outlandish and offensive things. But what if we took this seriously? What should we learn from the tell-all that Trump himself has authored? The president's defenders, in perpetual pursuit of the bright side, argue for the value of unpredictability in political leadership which is true enough. But Trump is not unpredictable. He is predictable in ways that make him vulnerable to exploitation. He is easy to flatter, easy to provoke and thus easy to manipulate. The Chinese have made an art of this ushering Trump toward regional irrelevance on a red carpet. "I like very much President Xi," Trump has said. "He treated me better than anybody's ever been treated in the history of China." Contrast this with Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has treated Trump like an adult with arguments and criticism. Big mistake. Scenes from Trumps second six months in office Share Share Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Reddit Share on LinkedIn MailSolid Email this link View Photos View Photos Next Image Police officers applaud a line by U.S. President Donald Trump (R) as he delivers remarks about his proposed U.S. government effort against the street gang Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, to a gathering of federal, state and local law enforcement officials at the Long Island University campus in Brentwood, New York, U.S. July 28, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst In addition, Trump has revealed a thick streak of authoritarianism. "I have [an] absolute right to do what I want to do with the Justice Department," he insists. "Libel laws are very weak in this country," he argues. Rivals are not only to be defeated; they should be imprisoned. Critics are not to be refuted; they should be fired. Investigations are not to be answered; they should be shut down. Advertisement Trump's defenders point to the absence of oppression as proof that these concerns are overblown. But protecting legal and political institutions from executive assault has been the constant vigil of the past year as it will be for the next three. And we are depending on the strength of those institutions, not the self-restraint of the president, to safeguard democracy. All this presents a particular problem for elected Republicans. At the beginning, they could engage in wishful thinking about Trump's fitness. Now they must know he is not emotionally equipped to be president. Yet, they also know this can't be admitted, lest they be accused of letting down their partisan team. So GOP leaders are engaged in an intentional deception, pretending the president is a normal and capable leader. I empathize with their political dilemma. But they will, eventually, be exposed. And by then, the country may not be in a forgiving mood. Read more here: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share THE POPULAR protests that rocked Iran during the past two weeks probably won't overturn the dictatorship of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but they have proved one point: The 2015 nuclear deal did not stabilize the Islamist regime. Tehran hoped that in agreeing to drastically reduce its stockpile of enriched uranium and restrict its production of nuclear materials for a period of years, it would be able to revive its stricken economy through renewed oil exports and foreign investment. But oil prices have remained relatively low, investment has lagged, and almost three-quarters of Iranians said in a June 2016 poll that they had seen no economic improvement. That disappointment, along with hikes in prices for eggs and other basic products, appears to have triggered the unrest. President Trump, who labeled the nuclear accord "the worst deal ever," ought to consider this when he decides this week whether to maintain the suspension of U.S. sanctions, allowing the agreement to survive. Even as the regime struggles economically and is threatened by the resulting unrest, it continues to meet its obligations under the pact, according to the reports of international inspectors. That means there is virtually no chance that Iran will be able to produce a nuclear weapon in the next few years or match North Korea in aspiring to threaten the continental United States. On the contrary, Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps is coming under pressure for its use of precious resources for wars in Syria, Yemen and elsewhere. Demonstrators are shouting slogans against the foreign adventures, which could give an argument to those inside the regime who want to rein them in. In short, it is Iran's nationalists, not Mr. Trump, who should be calling the nuclear deal a disaster. Advertisement That may not remain true down the road. The great weakness of the accord is that it removes restrictions on Iran's nuclear activities beginning in six years and does not effectively constrain Tehran's ongoing work on long-range missiles. Eventually the regime will be allowed to produce as much uranium as it wishes with advanced centrifuges meaning it could assemble a bomb within weeks. The Trump administration is right to worry about that future and to develop a strategy to head it off. Voiding the deal by reapplying sanctions now, however, would not be a solution. Instead, it would split the United States from its partners in the accord the European Union, Russia and China and give Iran an opening to resume nuclear activity immediately. It would also distract from the grievances being raised by Iranian protesters by providing the regime with an external threat, an excuse for further economic failures. Mr. Trump can ratchet up pressure on the Khamenei regime without inviting these setbacks. He can continue to impose sanctions on entities in and outside Iran involved in missile production as well as those involved in repressing demonstrators. The State Department should also step up funding for technologies that allow Iranians to circumvent the regime's Internet blockages. Advertisement Congress could do Mr. Trump a favor by repealing the legal requirement that he renew the sanctions suspension every 90 days. For now, however, it is up to the president to avoid the self-defeating blunder of destroying a deal that is clearly in the U.S. interest. Read more: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Lisa Foster is a retired California Superior Court judge, co-director of the Fines and Fees Justice Center and former director of the Office for Access to Justice in the Justice Department. Lorenzo Brown, a 58-year-old disabled resident of Montgomery, Ala., was arrested at his boardinghouse in 2014 for failure to pay fines and fees imposed for traffic tickets. Brown, whose sole source of income was a Social Security disability check, was kept in jail for three days before he was brought to court. There, the judge told him he could be released if he paid $1,400 half of what he owed and twice the amount of his monthly disability check. Because he didn't have that much money, the judge sentenced him to serve 44 days in jail, repaying his debt at the rate of $50 per day. Brown is not alone. Across the country, millions of people including children are charged a fine as punishment for traffic, misdemeanor and felony offenses and then taxed with fees used to fund the justice system and other government services. In California, the fine for running a stop sign is $100, but the additional fees imposed to pay for everything from court operations to emergency medical services can raise the total cost of the ticket to a staggering $490. Advertisement The Posts Matt Zapotosky explains how Jeff Sessions has been quickly and effectively implementing President Trumps vision for America. (Video: Joyce Lee, Matt Zapotosky/The Washington Post) It's a tax on justice that harms poor people of all races and people of color disproportionately, entrenching poverty and undermining confidence in our justice system. Yet the Justice Department under Attorney General Jeff Sessions retracted two important legal guidances last month that were intended to help courts reform abusive practices. The decision is unconscionable. As was the case with Brown, fines and fees are often enforced in ways that blatantly violate the Constitution. People who cannot afford to immediately pay the full amount charged face additional fees, suspension of their driver's and vocational licenses, loss of voting rights and, far too frequently, arrest and jail. Since 1983, however, the Supreme Court has held that it is unconstitutional to punish a person "solely because he lacks funds to pay a fine." Yet courts across the country have ignored that unequivocal command. Practices that unquestionably violate the Constitution have become routine and rarely if ever questioned or appealed. Advertisement That's why the Justice Department provided legal guidance to state courts on the enforcement of fines and fees in March 2016 and an advisory regarding fines and fees imposed on children in early January 2017. Both reminded courts of established constitutional principles. They were well-received and sparked meaningful reform. Judges and court administrators relied on the guidance and advisory to change court procedures; lawyers cited the guidance to successfully challenge egregious collection practices; and advocates used both to lobby for legislative reforms. Apparently, Sessions's Justice Department does not believe it has a role in ensuring that the Constitution is enforced in state and local courts. The attorney general's narrow and shortsighted interpretation of his department's mandate forsakes leadership on a critical national issue and abandons the most vulnerable among us. It's also wrong. The Justice Department routinely asserts its interpretation of the Constitution pursuant to both explicit statutory authority and long- standing tradition. It does so formally, for example, in amicus briefs and statements of interest filed in state and federal courts. Advertisement I have a vested interest in this issue. I co-wrote the guidance with Vanita Gupta, then head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, and the advisory with Karol Mason, then head of the Office of Justice Programs. But my position is neither ideological nor partisan. The American Legislative Exchange Council, the Charles Koch Institute and the R Street Institute all conservative organizations have strongly opposed such fines and fees. In one resolution, ALEC noted that the practices can lead to "unnecessary incarceration" and encourage law enforcement to make decisions "on grounds other than public safety while undermining public confidence in the integrity of the criminal justice system." Moreover, red and blue states alike have reformed fine and fee collection practices. Mississippi and California recently ended their long-standing practice of suspending the driver's licenses of people who cannot afford to pay fines and fees. Texas recently enacted legislation requiring judges to assess whether a person can afford to pay his or her fines and fees before being punished for nonpayment. Similar legislation is pending in Massachusetts. Some states will act to fill the vacuum left by Sessions and the Justice Department. But the guarantees of the Constitution do not depend on where one lives in the United States. The Constitution must be upheld for every person in every courthouse in the country. To rescind the guidance on fines and fees is to condone unconstitutional conduct and tell millions of Americans that the Justice Department refuses to live up to its name. Read more on this topic: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Richard Nixon will forever be remembered for his November 1973 protest: "I am not a crook." Donald Trump, likewise, may be recorded in history for the assertion he made over the weekend to a skeptical nation: I am not an idiot. Opinions to start the day, in your inbox. Sign up. ArrowRight The commander in chief volunteered an unexpected defense of his intellect and sanity in response to a book in which many of his aides are portrayed as believing the boss to be, in the medical parlance, a few fries short of a Happy Meal. "My two greatest assets have been my mental stability and being, like, really smart," Trump tweeted because, like, nothing says "intelligence" like using the word "like" like that. Trump went on to tweet that his achievements qualify him as "genius.and a very stable genius at that!" Washington Post opinion writer Jennifer Rubin explains the probability of impeachment or enacting the 25th Amendment in the Trump era. (Video: Adriana Usero, Kate Woodsome, Danielle Kunitz/The Washington Post) At a mini news conference that same day, Trump explained why he felt compelled to defend his mental health and acuity: "I went to the best colleges for college. I went to a I had a situation where I was a very excellent student." Advertisement This was, like, almost as ill-advised as what Sen. William Scott (R-Va.) did in 1974 upon being named the dumbest member of Congress by an obscure publication. He held a news conference to deny that he was dumbest thereby proving the charge. Follow Dana Milbank 's opinions Follow Add But maybe this is, like, a misunderstanding. Maybe Trump didn't mean to type that he is a "stable genius" but a "stable genus" that is, of a genus and species typically found in a stable. In this case, an argument can be made that Trump is indeed a stable genus specifically a descendant of Sus scrofa known as Sus domesticus. The common pig. Before you accuse me of being rude (which would compel me to host a news conference to deny it), I am not suggesting that the president is a pig in the pejorative sense Trump meant when calling Rosie O'Donnell a pig. (Although, if the hoof fits . . .) I mean pig in the best sense that of the most intelligent animals on the farm, and the ones George Orwell selected to lead all other animals in "Animal Farm." Advertisement It has been many years since I read the 1945 classic, but I have perused the CliffsNotes, and my horse sense tells me there are some echoes in current affairs. There is Snowball, a pig who is the ideological leader of the animal movement. But the leader forces him into exile and thereafter blames him for all hardship. Snowball was originally seen as a Trotsky figure, but after the past week, it is pretty clear that Snowball's demise foreshadowed Steve Bannon. There is also the sycophantic Squealer, top pig propagandist, glorifying his boss and vilifying Snowball with misdirection so effective he "could turn black into white." When the pigs steal the cows' milk and apples, he convinces the cows that the pigs did it to help the cows. After watching CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday, it is clear that Squealer is reincarnated as Stephen Miller the White House official who defended Trump's "stable genius" claim by mounting an unrelated and extended attack on CNN and anchor Jake Tapper, who accurately called Miller a "factotum." Advertisement The horses in the story are loyal but naive. One mighty horse, Boxer, believes the leader "is always right." When Boxer collapses in service to the cause, the pigs promise to send him to a veterinarian but instead sell him to make glue. In modern times, Paul Ryan, Jeff Sessions, Rex Tillerson and Gary Cohn all play the role of loyal steed destined for the knacker. The sheep, who chant the pig-devised slogan "Four legs good, two legs bad," immediately revise their tune when the pigs start walking on two legs: "Four legs good, two legs better." Clearly, the sheep are the Fox News of the story. Then there is Orwell's lead pig, Napoleon, a power-hungry swine who rose with a populist promise of wealth to all animals. But then he took milk and apples from cows to feed fellow pigs. He broke his promises, and, when things went wrong, he made scapegoats of animals who did not praise him. Advertisement From "Animal Farm": "It had become usual to give Napoleon the credit for every successful achievement and every stroke of good fortune. You would often hear one hen remark to another, 'Under the guidance of our leader, Comrade Napoleon, I have laid five eggs in six days'; or two cows, enjoying a drink at the pool, would exclaim, 'Thanks to the leadership of Comrade Napoleon, how excellent this water tastes!' " I cannot think of any current figure who resembles the pig Napoleon. Maybe I could if I were, like, really smart. Twitter: @Milbank GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share William J. Burns, a former deputy secretary of state, is president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Jake Sullivan, a former director of policy planning at the State Department, is a senior fellow at the organization. Opinions to start the day, in your inbox. Sign up. ArrowRight Recent protests across Iran offer a new opportunity for American policy just not the one to which President Trump is instinctively drawn. Over the next few days, the president has to decide whether to continue the nuclear deal with Iran. Trump and his team may be tempted to argue that abiding by the deal while the Iranian government cracks down on protesters is a fool's errand. But that would amount to a strategic own goal. It would make the issue about us, not the vulnerability and wounded legitimacy of a regime out of touch with its people. It would also miss the real policy opportunity before us to renew international pressure against the Iranian leadership's threats to the region and its people, while still constraining its nuclear ambitions. The Trump administration could reset its Iran policy in a way that puts Washington back in the lead and Tehran on the diplomatic defensive. Advertisement The nuclear deal with Iran reserves the option for the United States to take measures against the Iranian government for non-nuclear transgressions. There is nothing inconsistent with enforcing the nuclear deal and, for example, passing new economic measures that target human rights abusers in Iran, as well as actors outside of Iran who are supplying the Iranian security services with the tools to crack down on and censor civilians. The chances of persuading our European and other partners to join similar measures are substantially enhanced if the nuclear agreement is not abandoned. Furthermore, rather than turning the Iranian economy into a juggernaut or consolidating the regime's stability, the agreement deprived the regime of the argument that outside pressure not chronic mismanagement, corruption and misallocation of resources is the source of the miserable economic circumstances of most Iranians. Two years into implementation of the deal, the clerical regime is not sitting comfortably in Tehran. Much as the supreme leader feared during the nuclear negotiations, the deal has exposed the regime's vulnerabilities, not erased them. Some argue that restoring nuclear sanctions will hasten the end of the regime through economic pressure. Not only is this speculative at best, such a course runs the risk of empowering the Iranian government, creating an us-vs.-them dynamic in Iran that distracts from the moral clarity of the protests. It runs the parallel risk of starting a global battle of who did wrong, Tehran or Washington, while letting the rest of the world off the hook. Advertisement Finally, it would give a green light for Iran to break out of the deal's nuclear shackles, accelerating a nuclear crisis in the Middle East when we already have our hands full with one on the Korean peninsula. Instead, the Trump administration should signal to its European partners that it will continue to enforce the deal but also expect them to join in a serious campaign to push back against the regime's behavior at home and abroad. If Iran's violent response escalates, so should our pressure, making use of sanctions authority we retain outside the nuclear agreement. We should do all we can to make our public condemnations part of a chorus of international statements, not just a solo performance. We should continue to look for ways to enable the information technology and social media tools that connect Iranian citizens to the world and to one another. The administration would also be wise to use this moment to lift its ban on Iranian travel to the United States, which keeps the very people out demonstrating in Iranian streets from coming here to study or visit family. This strategy should be accompanied by something else that has been missing in the administration's recent comments: humility. Given the practiced repressive capacity of the Iranian regime, significant political change may be elusive. Instead of appreciating the possibilities and limits of this important moment, the president, vice president and others are going out of their way to make this about political score-settling with former President Barack Obama. Along the way, they are overdrawing the lessons of 2009 and overstating their own capacity to shape events in Iran. Advertisement Ultimately, smart support for the Iranian people, and for our strategic interest in a less threatening Iran, lies in keeping the onus on the Iranian regime. It doesn't lie in blustery tweets or foolish moves to abrogate agreements that only help an adversary change the subject. Balancing different tools is the hallmark of effective U.S. diplomacy, as President Ronald Reagan demonstrated in managing hard-nosed arms-control agreements with the Soviet Union while simultaneously pressing human rights concerns and mobilizing international pressure against dangerous Soviet behavior. That's not a bad model to follow at a moment when Iran's internal contradictions are becoming more evident. Read more here: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share In May 2016, journalist Joshua Green asked Donald Trump, who had just clinched the Republican presidential nomination, to envision the future of the party under his leadership. "Five, 10 years from now different party," Trump predicted. "You're going to have a workers' party." Opinions to start the day, in your inbox. Sign up. ArrowRight The notion that Trump, with his record of callousness and corruption, would ever seriously address the challenges facing working people was always ridiculous. As president, Trump has demonstrated that his interest in workers begins and ends with his ability to profit, both politically and financially, from their anger and pain. He spent much of his first year in office traveling to his own business properties at taxpayers' expense, and his only significant legislative achievement is a massive tax break for corporations and the rich. This is plutocracy on steroids, not economic populism. It's not simply that Trump has failed to live up to his lofty promises to protect factory workers and negotiate better trade deals. Since taking office a year ago, Trump has presided over a systematic assault on the rights of American workers that is poised to intensify in 2018. The attack is being waged on several fronts. Among other destructive steps, Trump's Labor Department abandoned an Obama-era rule to expand overtime pay and recently proposed a new rule that would enable employers to legally steal workers' tips. The Economic Policy Institute estimates that the rule would rob tipped employees of $5.8 billion annually. In December, the National Labor Relations Board also issued a series of pro-corporate rulings, including one that will make it more difficult for smaller groups of workers within large organizations to unionize. Meanwhile, after a year in which the number of coal miner fatalities across the country doubled, the administration is reportedly considering doing away with regulations intended to prevent miners from contracting black lung. Advertisement The gravest threat to workers' rights today, however, may be the presence of Trump-appointed Justice Neil M. Gorsuch on the Supreme Court. In the coming months, the court could strike a devastating blow to public employee unions in Janus v. AFSCME, a case that has the potential to yield "the biggest anti-union judicial pronouncement in 40 years." In a lesser-known case that involves three separate lawsuits, businesses are asking the court to roll back protections for low-wage and non-union workers that date all the way back to the New Deal. In both cases, Gorsuch, whose record of pro-corporate judicial activism is well-documented, could cast the deciding vote. Marc Thiessen counterpoint Biden slips and exposes the truth about the Inflation Reduction Act Although it is a disaster for the country, Trump's anti-worker crusade gives Democrats a major opening to earn back the trust of working people who in recent years have felt neglected by the party. And Democrats made some important strides in 2017. The "Better Deal" agenda that party leaders unveiled in July includes worker-friendly policies such as a $15 minimum wage, paid sick and family leave and a crackdown on corporate monopolies. In November, they added a series of explicitly pro-labor measures to the platform, including federal legislation protecting the collective bargaining rights of public employees and a proposal championed by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) to prohibit anti-union "right-to-work" laws. Announcing the Better Deal's labor plank, Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), long associated with the party's pro-Wall Street wing, signaled that perhaps Democratic leaders have been motivated by the temper and movements of the times. "Democrats are redoubling our commitment to working men and women with these proposals," he declared. "We're offering the middle class and those struggling to get there a better deal by taking on companies that undermine unions and underpay their workers, and beginning to unwind a rigged system that undermines every worker's freedom to negotiate with their employer." Those are encouraging words. Still, as the midterm campaigns begin, Democrats need to prove that not only speaking for but actually serving the interests of working people is a real priority. In exposing Trump's broken promise, they should also finally give American workers a party to call their own. 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Ireland Uruguay, Eastern Republic of Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Viet Nam, Socialist Republic of Wallis and Futuna Islands Western Sahara Yemen Zambia, Republic of Zimbabwe Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III reportedly has asked President Trump's attorneys about whether and how the president could be interviewed by investigators from Mueller's office. The president's lawyers apparently are also exploring options short of a live interview, such as having the president answer written questions or submit a sworn affidavit. With discussions at such an early stage, these talks could play out in many ways. But there are a few things about which we can be fairly confident. First, it's unlikely Mueller will conclude his investigation without at least attempting to question the president. The special counsel's probe is focused on possible Russian interference with the election and contacts with the Trump campaign. Whether or not investigators suspect the president himself of wrongdoing, as the candidate at the head of that campaign he is a critical witness. Second, the president's lawyers would almost certainly prefer the president not have to talk to Mueller's people at all. Again, even if they believe the president has done nothing wrong, there generally is little upside for the defense in submitting to a grilling by federal prosecutors. And although he may behave differently in a more formal setting, if the president's Twitter feed and public statements are any guide, his lawyers have good reason to be concerned about what he might say. Third, Mueller's team will not be satisfied with an affidavit or written responses to questions. It would be extremely unusual for prosecutors to agree to either for someone so central to their investigation. Prosecutors always want to eyeball a witness. They want to see his demeanor and body language, to see and hear how he reacts when confronted with difficult questions or contradictory information. Opinion | If President Trump fires the bane of his legal troubles, he could spark a legal and constitutional crisis. (Video: Adriana Usero/The Washington Post) Advertisement Written answers or an affidavit from the president would be carefully crafted in consultation with his lawyers. Sterile legalisms on a page would not give prosecutors the true measure of the president's knowledge and state of mind, nor would they allow the probing follow-up questions that are the mark of a skilled examiner. All that being said, this is a negotiation and both sides have some leverage. As a legal matter, the president does not have to agree to answer questions at all. No citizen is required to submit to an interview by federal investigators. And although political conventional wisdom would suggest that refusing to cooperate is not a viable option, this president has successfully defied political convention before. Suppose the president's lawyers told Mueller, "It's written responses to questions or nothing take it or leave it." Mueller would then have two options: agree, or subpoena the president to the grand jury. There is a familiar precedent for the latter: Independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr subpoenaed President Bill Clinton, who testified for several hours before a grand jury via video and audio link about his affair with Monica Lewinsky. But it's possible Trump would not agree to comply and his lawyers would mount a constitutional challenge to the subpoena of a sitting president. That could delay Mueller's investigation for months. Advertisement On the other hand, the president's lawyers must consider that during a voluntary interview they can at least be in the room and participate. If Mueller called their bluff and subpoenaed the president and he ended up in the grand jury, prosecutors could examine him under oath with no defense attorney present. From a defense perspective, a voluntary interview accompanied by defense counsel is always preferable to having the client enter the lion's den of the federal grand jury room alone. An additional consideration for the defense will be whether the president should invoke his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent in response to a subpoena or an interview request. Again, in normal times that would seem like political suicide, but in our current political environment, who knows? This is where the ongoing efforts by the president and his allies to discredit Mueller's investigation and the FBI may come into play. If the president succeeds at painting the investigation as biased or illegitimate, it could give him the necessary political cover to refuse to cooperate in the "witch hunt" or even to take the Fifth. The Republican-controlled Congress thus far has given little indication it would make the president pay a political price for such a move. Advertisement This legal dance may continue for some time. In a more typical case, in the end the parties would likely reach some compromise to get prosecutors the information they needed. But, of course, this case is anything but typical. A dispute over the president's testimony is just one more potential constitutional flash point in the Mueller investigation. Read more here: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share The Interior Department has adopted a new screening process for the discretionary grants it makes to outside groups, instructing staff to ensure those awards "promote the priorities" of the Trump administration. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight The Dec. 28 directive, obtained by The Washington Post, represents the latest attempt by Trump political appointees to put their mark on government spending. Last summer, the Environmental Protection Agency instituted a system requiring that a political appointee in the public affairs office sign off on each grant before it is awarded. Scott J. Cameron, Interior's principal deputy assistant secretary for policy, management and budget, instructed other assistant secretaries and bureau and office heads to submit most grants and cooperative agreements for approval by one of his aides. Those include any award of at least $50,000 "to a non-profit organization that can legally engage in advocacy" or "to an institution of higher education." Advertisement The EPA directive also targeted federal grants to universities and nonprofit groups. Although Cameron did not identify the total amount of funding affected by the new policy, and the department declined to comment on the matter, Interior officials said it involves hundreds of millions of dollars. An attachment to the directive listed Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke's "Top Ten Priorities" by which each award would be scrutinized. The list begins with "Creating a conservation stewardship legacy second only to Teddy Roosevelt" and includes "Utilizing our natural resources." Interior spokeswoman Heather Swift said in an email Tuesday that the department had been reviewing grants and cooperative agreements totaling at least $100,000 since April and that "the new guidance continued the responsible stewardship of tax dollars." Advertisement Although Interior secretaries under Democratic and Republican presidents have directed federal dollars to support their priorities, the new approval process appears to be without precedent within the department. David J. Hayes, who served as Interior's deputy secretary under Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, said in an email Monday that laws passed by Congress govern these programs. "Subjugating Congress' priorities to 10 of the Secretary's own priorities is arrogant, impractical and, in some cases, likely illegal," said Hayes, executive director of the New York University School of Law's State Energy and Environmental Impact Center. "Our senior leadership team never set up a process like this that is, a process that identifies broad categories of contracts, at modest financial levels, that must be kicked upstairs to headquarters for political sign-off," Hayes added. "To the contrary, we recognized that government contract processes are complex, and that political interference would sully the integrity of contracting processes that applicants have a right to expect are governed with fairness, impartiality, and integrity as their guide." Advertisement Cameron's memo warns, in a sentence that is bolded as well as italicized, that employees who defy the directive will be subject to even stricter oversight as a result. "Instances circumventing the Secretarial priorities or the review process will cause greater scrutiny and will result in slowing down the approval process for all awards," it states. Rep. Raul M. Grijalva of Arizona, the top Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee, said in a statement that he would need to review the new system, "but I'm immediately skeptical given the administration's track record." "This grant approval process looks like a backdoor way to stop funds going to legitimate scientific and environmental projects," he said. "Using the federal grant process to punish scientists doing important work because they disagree with that philosophy is unacceptable, and there's good reason to think that's what's really happening here." Advertisement Interior has ordered the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine to halt two studies that conflict with the administration's goal of expanding domestic fossil fuel production. Officials said they had questions about the studies' expense to taxpayers. One, stopped in August, was looking at whether residents near surface coal mining sites in Appalachia face higher health risks than other Americans. The second, suspended last month, was aimed at updating and enhancing the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement's oil and gas inspection program. Swift did not identify how many grants, or which ones, had been canceled as a result of the earlier review. She said it was too early to say how many awards would now come under scrutiny "since the guidance is so new." Read more: GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share The Labor Department revived 17 opinion letters to employers issued during the final days of George W. Bush's second term, a move that represents a shift in how the department will enforce compliance with overtime and other wage requirements. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight The letters from the Wage and Hour Division, which were withdrawn once Barack Obama took office, provide interpretations of how the Fair Labor Standards Act applies in individual cases. The Obama administration stopped issuing these letters altogether, instead releasing broader "Administrator's Interpretations" that laid out how the department viewed employers' specific obligations under the law. Businesses and labor advocates have sparred over how best to provide guidance on these issues for a decade. The National Association of Manufacturers and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce welcomed the Trump administration's move, saying it revives a narrowly tailored approach that does not establish new legal precedent. Critics said these individual letters allow employers to skirt paying overtime and complying with other aspects of the far-reaching labor law. Advertisement The administration is evaluating other aspects of how to interpret the FLSA, which covers everything from child labor to record-keeping. On Friday the Labor Department announced it was changing the way it evaluates whether interns and students qualify as employees under the 1938 law, to better reflect recent court rulings. Marc Freedman, executive director of labor law policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said in an interview that the revived approach was a "far superior way for employers to provide specific advice on compliance questions" than "the sort of broad pronouncements from on high" issued through such interpretations. "These pronouncements were made with no public involvement, no public engagement," Freedman said. National Employment Law Project executive director Christine Owens, however, blasted the revival of the nine-year-old letters as "another example of how this administration is siding with big business to make it harder to get paid for working overtime and to make it easier for companies to reap the benefits of young workers' labor without paying a cent for it." Advertisement David Weil, who served as wage and hour administrator under Obama, said in an email that opinion letters "are problematic" because they take considerable time and effort to craft, yet only address one company's situation. "In the past they have been used as 'get out of jail free' cards by some companies and create uneven patterns of expectations among employers," he said, adding that the interpretations he issued while in the job were more comprehensive. If Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta reverts to opinion letters, Weil added, "I would hope they provide the public transparency on who has requested them," and that workers and their representatives be allowed to make the same sorts of requests. The letters in question were all posted online in January 2009, but they were never mailed. Obama officials rescinded them immediately upon taking office. Advertisement In a similar vein, Acosta withdrew in June two of the most controversial Administrator's Interpretations issued under the Obama administration. One dictated that if a subcontractor failed to comply with FLSA requirements, the company that hired it could be held liable. The second interpretation reset how to classify workers as employees covered by the FLSA, triggering overtime as well as other requirements. "Because they were issued with no process, they could be withdrawn without a process," Freedman said of the two interpretations. The letters reissued on Friday address individual cases that arose nearly a decade ago. But allies and opponents of the administration agreed the change could have a major impact, in part because employees have used opinion letters to buttress their case in pending litigation. Patrick Hedren, vice president of labor, legal and regulatory policy at the National Association of Manufacturers, said in a statement that the letters help employers comply with the law by answering "fact specific questions, and since they are made public, [others] with similar questions can see how the Labor Department interprets the law." GiftOutline Gift Article As some critics question President Trump's mental fitness, many psychiatrists are being reminded of the Goldwater Rule. Here's what you need to know about it. (Video: Elyse Samuels/The Washington Post, Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post) Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share The White House is struggling to contain the national discussion about President Trump's mental acuity and fitness for the job, which has overshadowed the administration's agenda for the past week. Trump publicly waded into the debate spawned by a new book, "Fire and Fury" Michael Wolff's inside account of the presidency over the weekend by claiming on Twitter that he is "like, really smart" and "a very stable genius." In doing so, the president underscored his administration's response strategy by being forceful and combative while also undermining it by gleefully entering a debate his aides have tried to avoid. Trump privately resents the now-regular chatter on cable television news shows about his mental health and views the issue as "an invented fact" and "a joke," much like the Russia probe, according to one person who recently discussed it with him. Advertisement At a news conference at Camp David Jan 6., President Trump responded to a question from a reporter about a tweet he posted on his mental state earlier that day. (Video: The Washington Post) Doubts about Trump's state of mind have been whispered about in Washington's corridors of power since before he was elected and have occasionally broken into the open, such as when Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) said last August that Trump lacked "the stability" and "some of the competence" to be successful as president. But Wolff's book has thrust the topic to the forefront of public debate, prompting the White House to confront the issue directly. So far, Trump's advisers have adopted a posture of umbrage and indignation. Rather than dignifying questions about whether their 71-year-old boss is fit to be president, they attack the inquisitors for having the gall to ask. Trump aides and administration members attacked Michael Wolff, his new book "Fire and Fury," and Stephen K. Bannon on Jan. 7. (Video: Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post) In an emailed statement Monday, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders slammed what she called "ridiculous reports from detractors" and described an "outpouring of support from a totally indignant staff." Advertisement "The White House perspective is outrage and disgust that people who do not know this President or understand the true depth of his intellectual capabilities would be so filled with hate they would resort to something so far outside the realm of reality or decency," she said. Asked Monday by reporters whether Trump's physical exam, scheduled for Friday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, would include a psychiatric component, deputy White House press secretary Hogan Gidley barely engaged the question. He replied, simply, "No." Former Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller charged that there were partisan motivations behind the talk of Trump's fitness. "The political left wants this to become a debate about made-up attacks against the president rather than the president's successes and the success of the country," he said. "This is a pretty pathetic move." Advertisement White House officials are trying to present Trump as hard at work doing his job. A long-planned working retreat at Camp David over the weekend became a showcase for the commander in chief. The traveling pool of reporters was invited to the presidential getaway in Maryland, where Trump parried their questions Saturday while Vice President Pence, Cabinet members and Republican congressional leaders flanked him with approving nods and applause. "Just from a visual standpoint, it shows a very united front," one White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share an internal assessment, said of the Camp David news conference. "Everyone's on the same page. There are no fractures. From an optics standpoint, it works very well." Scott Reed, a veteran Republican strategist who works for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said Trump can best help extinguish emerging doubts by advancing his policy agenda, including proposals for new spending on infrastructure projects. "This needs to move beyond talking heads and be met with action and discipline," Reed said. Advertisement U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley also fired back against critics on ABC's "This Week" on Sunday, emphasizing the president's accomplishments rather than his state of mind. "As much as everyone wants to talk about stability, was he unstable when he passed the tax reform?" she asked. "Was he unstable when we finally hit back at Syria and said no more chemical weapons? Was he unstable when we finally put North Korea on notice? Was he unstable when he said, 'Wait, we need to look at Iran because this is getting to be a dangerous situation'? Was he unstable with the jobs or the economy or the stock market?" But Monday, as Trump delivered a speech on agriculture policy in Nashville, neither CNN nor MSNBC carried his full remarks live. Instead, anchors Jake Tapper and Nicolle Wallace, respectively, interviewed journalists and pundits about Wolff's book and Trump's reaction to it. Some Trump allies voiced frustration that the White House does not appear to have implemented a full-scale crisis communications plan. Advertisement "When you raise an issue like the mental acuity of the president, there is no organized effort to push back," said one ally, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk candidly. "How do you disprove a fallacy?" After several days of blanket coverage of Wolff's book, the Republican National Committee sent some talking points to Trump allies Friday evening. The memo, titled "Pundit Prep," urged Trump's defenders to first focus on "jobs, jobs, jobs," and offered tips on discrediting Wolff and his tome. The document did not address how to answer questions about Trump's fitness for office. White House officials said organizing a public response has been relatively easy, as administration aides and allies have been naturally frustrated and eager to push back. A number of Cabinet members and other people who have worked closely with Trump over the years have come forward with testimonies of the president's mental capacity. Advertisement "He is absolutely no different than the day he got elected, and he has used this unconventional but very effective manner of managing for the 30 years that I've known him in business, finance, media and now governing," Thomas J. Barrack Jr., Trump's longtime friend and inauguration chairman, said in an interview Monday. "It's not mental instability," Barrack added. "It's management by controlled and orchestrated chaos." Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said Monday on Hugh Hewitt's radio show that his boss is "focused, he's determined, he's a business guy. He asks tough questions, and expects solid answers." When Hewitt asked if Trump was "really smart," as the president claimed in his tweet, Perdue replied: "I think he is really smart. He's instinctive. He has a unique, inherent gift of just being able to figure stuff out. It's like street smarts." CIA Director Mike Pompeo, appearing Sunday on CBS's "Face the Nation," talked about Trump's engagement during the near-daily intelligence briefings that Pompeo helps deliver. Advertisement "We engage in complex conversation about some of the most weighty matters facing the world," Pompeo said, adding: "He asks really hard questions. He delivers policy outcomes based on the information that we provide him." A more combative defense came from Stephen Miller, Trump's senior policy adviser, who tangled with Tapper on Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union." Miller trashed Wolff as "a garbage author of a garbage book." "One of the other tragedies of this grotesque work of fiction is its portrayal of the president," Miller said. "The reality is, is the president is a political genius." As Miller repeated himself again and again, he and Tapper began talking over each other, and the interview grew so contentious that the CNN host eventually cut it and Miller off. Afterward, Miller was delighted. He told others he was proud of his performance and thought the exchange went well. So did the president, who chimed in with Twitter praise, saying his policy adviser had "destroyed" the "Fake News" Tapper. Josh Dawsey contributed to this report. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share The political battle over the FBI and its investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 election intensified Tuesday with the release of an interview with the head of the firm behind a dossier of allegations against then-candidate Donald Trump. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight The transcript of Fusion GPS co-founder Glenn R. Simpson's interview with the Senate Judiciary Committee was released by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (Calif.), the panel's senior Democrat, over the objections of Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa). Feinstein's action comes alongside an effort by Republicans to discredit the dossier as a politically motivated document that the FBI has relied too heavily upon in its investigation. Feinstein sought to push back against that perception and to bolster the FBI's credibility. "The innuendo and misinformation circulating about the transcript are part of a deeply troubling effort to undermine the investigation," she said. The Russia probe got its start with a drunken conversation, an ex-spy, WikiLeaks and a distracted FBI. (Video: Meg Kelly/The Washington Post) Advertisement Grassley, who said Feinstein's move "undermines the integrity of the committee's oversight work," had refused requests by Simpson to release his entire 10-hour interview, which was conducted in August. The Senate committee has been probing how the FBI handled allegations it received from a British ex-spy, Christopher Steele, who compiled a series of memorandums, later collected as a dossier, alleging that the Trump campaign coordinated with the Kremlin a claim the president has repeatedly denied. The 312-page transcript shows that Republican staffers on the committee repeatedly pressed Simpson about whether he had political motivations in hiring Steele. Simpson acknowledged that he didn't like Trump as a candidate but said his job was to find facts, not to push an agenda. The Washington Post examines how, more than a year into his presidency, Trump continues to reject evidence that Russia supported his run for the White House. (Video: Dalton Bennett, Thomas LeGro, John Parks, Jesse Mesner-Hage/The Washington Post, Photo: "Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post) In his testimony, Simpson said Steele contacted the FBI with concerns about Russian meddling in early July 2016. When the bureau reinterviewed Steele in early October, agents made it clear, according to Simpson's testimony released Tuesday, that they believed some of what Steele had told them. Advertisement Simpson also said Steele was told that the FBI had someone inside Trump's network providing agents with information a claim he also made in an op-ed for the New York Times last week. "My understanding was that they believed Chris at this point that they believed Chris might be credible because they had other intelligence that indicated the same thing and one of those pieces of intelligence was a human source from inside the Trump organization," Simpson said. Simpson said he didn't know whether the person was connected to the Trump campaign or a Trump company, adding that his understanding was that the source was "someone like us who decided to pick up the phone and report something." Several people familiar with the probe said Simpson's comments refer to a report from an Australian official who contacted U.S. officials in late July with concerns about a conversation months earlier in London with Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos. In 2017, Papadopoulos pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI and is cooperating with investigators. Advertisement At another point in the interview, a lawyer for Fusion GPS, Joshua A. Levy, made a jarring assertion: that the dossier's publication had led to someone's death. "Somebody's already been killed as a result of the publication of this dossier and no harm should come to anybody related to this honest work," Levy said late in the interview, according to the transcript. Levy did not expand on that claim in the interview, nor is there any public information that would tie a specific killing to the information in the dossier. A person close to the investigation said Fusion GPS has long worried that Steele's overseas sources could be in danger, given a handful of killings that took place in the months after the dossier's existence became known. Representatives for Fusion GPS declined to comment. Fusion GPS was hired in mid-2016 by a lawyer for Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee to dig into Trump's background. Earlier that year, the firm had investigated Trump for a conservative website funded by a Republican donor, but that client stopped paying for the work after it became clear that Trump would win the GOP presidential nomination, according to people familiar with the matter. Advertisement After Democrats began paying for the research, Fusion GPS hired Steele, a former senior officer with Britain's intelligence service, MI6, to gather intelligence about any ties between the Kremlin and Trump and his associates. As the investigation by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III has gathered momentum in recent weeks, Republicans have expanded their attacks on Fusion GPS, Steele and the FBI. Conservatives have accused the bureau's senior leaders of being biased or corrupt in their handling of investigations involving Clinton and Trump, attacking the reputation of an institution that has long held itself to a standard of being nonpartisan and evenhanded. Democrats and even some Republicans were alarmed last week when Grassley made a criminal referral to the Justice Department, suggesting it investigate Steele for possibly lying to the FBI. Advertisement Feinstein countered by releasing the Simpson transcript, a move that at least one senior Republican applauded. "I think that's a good idea,'' said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.), who said he wanted more transparency on how the FBI gathered information and the extent to which investigators may have used the dossier as a partial basis for obtaining a surveillance warrant. In urging the committee to release the full transcript of his interview, Simpson has argued that Republicans are trying to obscure what happened in 2016. Through much of 2017, Feinstein and Grassley made joint requests for information about Russia and the FBI's investigation of election interference. In the fall, however, tensions between the two senators spilled into the open as Grassley requested information from the FBI and other sources without Feinstein's support. Increasingly, the Democrats and Republicans on the committee are going in different directions, with Grassley moving to investigate matters involving Clinton when she was secretary of state and Feinstein concentrating on Russian interference in the election. Erica Werner and Rosalind S. Helderman contributed to this report. GiftOutline Gift Article Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share BEIRUT A series of mysterious attacks against the main Russian military base in Syria, including one conducted by a swarm of armed miniature drones, has exposed Russia's continued vulnerability in the country despite recent claims of victory by President Vladimir Putin. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight The attacks have also spurred a flurry of questions over who may be responsible for what amounts to the biggest military challenge yet to Russia's role in Syria, just when Moscow is seeking to wind its presence down. In the most recent and unusual of the attacks, more than a dozen armed drones descended from an unknown location onto Russia's vast Hmeimim air base in northwestern Latakia province, the headquarters of Russia's military operations in Syria, and on the nearby Russian naval base at Tartus. Russia said that it shot down seven of the 13 drones and used electronic countermeasures to safely bring down the other six. It said no serious damage was caused. Advertisement The drone attack, however, came less than a week after two Russian servicemen were killed in a sustained mortar assault on the same base, which appears to have caused some damage to Russian military assets. The Russian Defense Ministry denied a report in the Russian Kommersant publication that seven warplanes were put out of action in the mortar attack, including two of its premier Su-35 fighter jets and four Su-24 attack aircraft, losses that would represent the worst single day for the Russian air force in decades. A Russian journalist posted photographs of damage that suggested at least some planes had been hit. Taken together, the drone and mortar attacks appear to represent the most concerted assault on the Russian headquarters in Syria since the military intervention in September 2015, which has broadly succeeded in its goal of shoring up President Bashar al-Assad's fight to suppress the seven-year-old rebellion against his rule. Russian news outlets have also reported two smaller drone attacks against Russian outposts in the provinces of Homs and Latakia, as well as another attack against Hmeimim, all in the past two weeks. Military police who had been deployed in Syria arrived at Makhachkala airport in Russia Dec. 12. Russia began withdrawing troops from Syria Dec. 11. (Video: Reuters) Advertisement The Hmeimim base, the heart of Russia's military operations in Syria, is deep in Syrian-government-held territory and until now had seemed immune to attack, said Maxim Suchkov of the Russian International Affairs Council, who also writes for the publication Al-Monitor. "They thought the base was secure, but now it seems it is vulnerable," he said. Among the questions being asked in Moscow, he said, are whether the Russian military had adequately secured the base and whether it had failed to detect the acquisition of new technology by its adversaries. The attacks also raise questions about the sustainability of Russia's gains in Syria, said Jennifer Cafarella of the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War. In December, Putin visited the Hmeimim base and said Russia would start to wind its presence down because the war in Syria is essentially over. Advertisement The events of recent days are a demonstration "that whoever conducted these attacks can still penetrate regime areas and impose costs on the Russians," she said. "The gains the regime has made are not secure and are at high risk of being temporary." Perhaps the biggest question of all, however, is who was responsible. What makes the attacks especially unusual is that there has been no claim, triggering a frenzy of speculation in the Russian and Syrian news media over who may have carried them out. Russia's Defense Ministry on Tuesday appeared to accuse the United States of supplying the technology for the drone attack, saying the assault required a higher level of expertise than any armed group in Syria is known to possess. Compounding the suspicions, the ministry said in a statement on its Facebook page that a U.S. Poseidon reconnaissance aircraft was in the skies above the area for four hours during the drone assault. Advertisement Pentagon spokesman Eric Pahon said the allegation was "absolutely false." The Islamic State has often used armed drones against U.S.-allied forces in eastern Syria and Iraq without "significant impact," he said, adding that small drones are readily available commercially. But the nearest Islamic State positions are hundreds of miles from the western coastal province where Hmeimim is located, making the group one of the more unlikely culprits. Most of the Islamic State drones used against U.S. allies, moreover, had a range of no more than one to two kilometers, according to an analysis by the defense consultancy IHS Markit group. The Russian Defense Ministry statement said the drones used in the Hmeimim attack came from between 50 and 100 kilometers away, making them far more sophisticated and expanding the pool of potential suspects, the IHS analysis said. Advertisement One of the myriad Syrian opposition groups is the most probable suspect, Suchkov said. According to a report Wednesday in the Russian Defense Ministry's official Krasnaya Zvezda newspaper, the drones were launched from a village controlled by the "moderate opposition" called Muazzara in southern Idlib province. Russia has sent a letter to Turkish authorities urging them to comply with Turkey's obligations in the area under ceasefire agreements with Russia, the report said. But that nonetheless leaves a question mark over which of the many groups was involved. because rebel groups typically claim all their operations. "If it was the opposition, they tend to put everything online and boast about it," Suchkov said. Among the theories circulating widely is that disgruntled Alawites from Assad's own minority sect were responsible. A statement about the attacks on the base, which is in a predominantly Alawite area, was posted online in the name of a shadowy group called the Free Alawite Movement. It warned Alawites who support the Syrian regime that the attacks proved Assad's hold on power is not secure, but did not explicitly claim that it carried out the attacks. A number of Alawite opposition members said they did not think the group is real and speculated that foreign intelligence agencies are seeking to create the impression of strife among regime loyalists. Advertisement Another claim made in Syrian opposition news outlets is that an Iranian-backed militia fighting on behalf of the regime and located in the government- controlled hills nearby was responsible. According to that theory, Iran wants to thwart Russia's efforts to impose a peace settlement on Syria that would undermine Iranian interests. "There are so many theories," Suchkov said. "But it's a mystery at the moment." Suzan Haidamous and Louisa Loveluck in Beirut, Heba Habib in Stockholm and Zakaria Zakaria in Istanbul contributed to this report. GiftOutline Gift Article Donald D. Lawrence Audio Article Friends and family of Compatriot Donald D. Lawrence are deeply saddened to announce his passing on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022,... Guadalupe Lupe Campos Audio Article Guadalupe Lupe Campos of La Vernia, Texas, passed away in his home on Sunday, Nov. 6, 2022. Lupe was born... Manuel A. Acevedo Audio Article Manuel A. Acevedo passed away in San Antonio, Texas, on Sunday, Oct. 30, 2022, at the age of 76 years... Hey there, time traveller! This article was published 09/01/2018 (1774 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. For the third time, a refugee claimant crossing into Canada on foot at the Manitoba border near Emerson has suffered serious frostbite. On Thursday night, after paying US$700 to a driver to bring him from Minneapolis, 36-year-old Kangni Kouevi said he was left in the bitter cold on the side of the road and pointed in the direction of Canada. toThe man from the African country of Togo was wearing good boots, which saved his feet; however, he suffered frostbite on his hands during his walk across the border. PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Kangni Kouevi walked across the Emerson border crossing Thursday night. He suffered severe frostbite to both his hands in the extreme cold. At the time, it was -31 C in Emerson with the wind chill. On Monday morning, his bandaged, frostbitten fingers were too blistered and oozing for Canada Border Services Agency officers to fingerprint him. Im fine, Kouevi said in English, before asking an interpreter in French to tighten the belt that had become loose on his jeans. His interpreter, University of Manitoba law student Darryl Strain, who volunteers at Winnipeg refugee assistance organization Welcome Place helping refugee claimants fill out their paperwork, obliged. With Strain interpreting, Kouevi said theres feeling returning to his fingers and hes in great pain. He said he fled Lome, the capital of Togo, because he faced death threats after converting to Christianity and couldnt count on authorities to protect him. His father is a well-known faith healer in the west African country of 6.8 million people, where more than half practice Indigenous animist religions. Witch doctors and soothsayers still have a significant role, the African Union says in its Togo fact sheet: half-doctor, half-magician, these fetish priests have individualized amulets that provide protection against evil spells or that increase the strength of the person on whom they are bestowed. As his fathers only child, Kouevi said he was expected to follow in his fathers footsteps. He made statuettes that contained (things like) sheeps blood, feathers and alcohol, he said through the interpreter. He would ask for answers to problems through the statuettes and God would answer through the statuettes. Prominent people including police and government ministers would come to buy the statuettes for spiritual protection, said Kouevi, who worked in Togo at a butchers shop and as a window installer. As a Christian, he couldnt inherit the role that is passed down from generation to generation, and thats when his trouble began, he said. The whole community was upset and my father would threaten me with death, he said, adding he couldnt turn to the police or any government official for protection. Togo is a dictatorship. Theres no real protection. Friends in the United States chipped in to help Kouevi flee Togo. He travelled to Brazil, though Ecuador and Central America to Mexico. I wanted to enter the States legally and properly and presented myself at the border to claim asylum, Kouevi said. He did, and was locked up in an Arizona immigration jail for 11 months. With no legal help, his case was rejected by an immigration judge. He was released and told to wait for his removal to Togo. I was really worried about being deported, Kouevi said. So he went to Minneapolis and paid for a ride to Canada. He was dropped off at 7 p.m. Thursday, farther from the border at Emerson than he expected. Kouevi said he walked for three hours. He found an abandoned shed and took shelter. His hands were so frozen he could barely press 911 on his cellphone. The RCMP took him to the Canada Border Services Agency at Emerson and officials sent him to hospital in Morris. He was treated, then taken back to the CBSA. A Welcome Place worker later picked him up and took him to Winnipegs Health Sciences Centre for further treatment. A year ago, two refugee claimants from Ghana Seidu Mohammed and Razak Iyal suffered severe frostbite crossing from the U.S. on foot. Both men lost their fingers. Hospitality House Refugee Ministry settlement director Karin Gordon is worried about Kouevi losing his as well. We dont know how much damage there is, or if it will heal, she said Monday after taking Kouevi to the CBSA office in Winnipeg. Right now, the big concern is infection, said Gordon, who retired from the HSC before running settlement services for the charity. One of the men staying at the residence helped Kouevi shower and Gordon washed his clothes and spoon-fed him breakfast and brushed his teeth. She hopes that once Kouevis paperwork is complete, hell be eligible to get more care. Hes very vulnerable right now. carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca Hey there, time traveller! This article was published 08/01/2018 (1775 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. Mayor Brian Bowman has indicated the controversial clause which has resulted in firefighter union leader Alex Forrests salary being paid in part, or in full, by the city for years should be renegotiated in the next round of collective bargaining. The city had historically paid 100 per cent of Forrests salary and benefits, with no reimbursement from the United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg (UFFW), according to a spokesman for the mayor. That changed in March 2014, when it was agreed the city would pay for 60 per cent of Forrests six-figure union salary and benefits including sick time, overtime pay, and pension payments. It remains unclear whether the city has been paying Forrests salary and benefit costs since he became union president in 1997. He is a captain in the Winnipeg fire department, with 27 years of firefighting experience, Forrests biography page on the UFFW website says. RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES Alex Forrest, president of United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg. All of these decision predated Mayor Bowman, who was elected mayor in October 2014. Like councillors, the mayor was made aware of this agreement late last week, a spokesman for the mayor wrote in an email Monday. Mayor Bowman recognizes the 2014 agreement represents a better deal for taxpayers, and feels the agreement should be honoured as agreed to in good faith. He will be recommending that this issue be considered in an open and transparent way in the next round of collective bargaining. Both the taxpayers and the rank and file of the local firefighters union should be concerned by news of this unusual agreement, according to Todd MacKay, prairie director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. This is a bad arrangement. Taxpayers should not be paying for positions in other organizations like unions. Theyre paying for firefighters to keep them safe through taxes, certainly, but this is really wrong, MacKay said. Most unions are responsible for their own bills. Theyre happy to pay their own bills. I think its very odd this union is passing their bills onto the taxpayers. Im not aware of any other situation where taxpayers are on the hook for a salary that should ultimately be paid for by the union, he said. Why didnt (the city) fix the problem entirely (in 2014)? When you realize youre doing something wrong, you dont do less of a bad thing, you stop doing the bad thing completely. The reduction indicates they recognized they were doing something wrong. They need to fix it and rip up this deal entirely, MacKay said. He also said out the union rank and file should be concerned over the disclosure of the agreement, as it creates a potential conflict of interest. Think about it from the other side. If the city managers handling the firefighters budget were getting 60 per cent of their salaries paid by the union, peoples eyebrows would be raised pretty high, he said. They (the firefighters) need to know their management is working for them. You have to have very clear lines on this stuff. This type of arrangement makes the lines very blurry and that can only end badly. After news of the agreement broke, Forrest defended the arrangement over the weekend by pointing out he sits on several civic committees and has worked as a liaison for the city emergency response services negotiations with the province. However, Michelle Finley of the citys communications department, said Forrest does not perform any work on behalf of the City of Winnipeg and does not represent the City of Winnipeg on any committee, civic or otherwise. When reached for comment Monday, Garth Smorang, legal representative of the UFFW, said the arrangement was not unusual, despite admitting it wasnt common and being unable to think of another example in the citys public sector. That doesnt mean this isnt done in the public sector. From the employers point of view, this can be money well-spent, it can actually save the employer money and give them larger access to the union representative, Smorang said. I dont think anyone would ever accuse Alex (Forrest) of being in any way in conflict in terms of who he represents. He represents his members, and he does so aggressively. Forrest earned $116,342 in 2016, according to the citys annual compensation disclosure, meaning nearly $70,000 was paid by taxpayers. Two city councillors contacted by the Free Press both expressed concern over the agreement. Coun. Russ Wyatt (Transcona) called it outrageous; Coun. Jeff Browaty (North Kildonan) said he was disappointed and surprised. In addition, Browaty said based on discussions hes had with other city councillors, it would appear there is little to no support on council for the arrangement. A request for an interview with Bowman was declined Monday. Forrest has said hes planning to stand again for another two-year term as union president in February. with files from Alexandra Paul ryan.thorpe@freepress.mb.ca Twitter: @rk_thorpe Hey there, time traveller! This article was published 09/01/2018 (1774 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries is the latest Manitoba Crown corporation to employ a senior executive who is commuting to a distant city on weekends. Deanne Carson, MBLL vice-president of marketing and communications, has been trekking back and forth to Winnipeg from Calgary since she was hired in early April of last year. A former vice-president of marketing for the Calgary Stampede, Carson was hired to oversee marketing, communications, loyalty programs and digital media. Liquor & Lotteries exec Deanne Carson is commuting to Calgary on weekends. Scott Thomson quit as head of Hydro in 2015 to move back to B.C. According to the corporation, Carsons is a new position that combines two previous executive roles chief community relations and marketing officer and vice president, corporate communications and social responsibility. In 2016, according to MBLLs staff salary disclosure document, the two executives who held the positions earned a combined $380,000. I live here. I have a place here. Ive committed to a full-time job here, said Carson, who keeps an apartment in Winnipeg. I work evenings, weekends and whatever else is required to get the job done. And on weekends, on my personal time, thats kind of mine, right? Carson said Monday she pays the cost of her travel between Winnipeg and Calgary to visit her family. But should someone who takes a corporate executive position in a Crown corporation not be expected to live in the city of their employment full-time? Especially in the case of Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries, whose mission statement speaks of community investment and supporting our communities? Todd MacKay, Prairie director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, said his concern would be whether Carson is covering her own travel expenses. If shes paying her own way on the commute and doing a good job, we wouldnt be overly concerned, he said. However, if shes sticking taxpayers with the bill for the commute and/or failing to do her job fully as a result of the commute, wed be concerned. While technology has made it easier for executives to keep in touch with the office while out of town, long-distance commuting comes with personal and professional pitfalls, says Barbara Bowes, president of Legacy Bowes Group, which helps corporations recruit executive talent. Im seeing it more and more, she said of such hires. I know it doesnt last. A company thats of this high-profile also has weekend events in which somebody at that level probably should be attending, Bowes said. And she either stays in Winnipeg to attend or shes missing the public relations opportunity. Unforeseen circumstances, such as a snowstorm, can disrupt travel plans and cause a commuting executive to miss meetings, Bowes added. Bowes said even if Carson is covering her weekend travel costs, her paycheque likely reflects the fact she is commuting. She says shes paying it, but its probably built into her salary, the HR expert said. Scott Thomson, the former president and chief executive officer of Manitoba Hydro, made news when his family moved to British Columbia in 2014, and he commuted to the West Coast on weekends. A year later, he left the provinces largest corporation. With my family being in Vancouver and me being here five days a week, it wasnt sustainable, he said at the time. On the other hand, Hydro vice-president of marketing and customer service, Siobhan Vinish, has been commuting between Winnipeg and Calgary since she started at the Crown corporation in 2015. She travels on her own time and on her own dime Manitoba Hydro does not and has never compensated Ms. Vinish in any way for her travel or her Winnipeg residence, company spokesman Bruce Owen said Monday. He noted Vinishs husband also treks to Winnipeg some weekends. (Vinish) remains on call and reachable on weekends, as do all our executives, Owen said, comparing her travel to that of Manitobans who drive to the cottage on weekends. Meanwhile, Carson held out the possibility she may reside full-time in Winnipeg in the future. My family and I are still in transition, but as to ultimately making a home in Manitoba, that was the intention, she said in an email. larry.kusch@freepress.mb.ca Opinion Hey there, time traveller! This article was published 09/01/2018 (1774 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. It can be the relatively small stuff thats still big in the infuriating moment. Perhaps something like a seemingly inexplicable, and hence confusing, downtown Saturday parking policy blunder. Or it can be the something bigger and even more baffling. RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES Ethical guidelines should be consistent for all at city hall, says Integrity Commissioner Sherri Walsh. Such as the sudden, even more inexplicable, appearance of a preferred option for the extension of the Sterling Lyon Parkway whose existence the citys chief administrative officer and the areas councillor claim they didnt know about until the people whose properties it was about to run through informed them. In the case of the free-parking fiasco, Winnipeg Parking Authority chief operating officer Randy Topolniski characterized it as an operational failure. We didnt intend to confuse people, Topolniski said, in response to allegations of a city cash grab from some of the people who were ticketed over a three-week period in December (and either had the infractions cancelled or payments refunded). Meanwhile, the senior city bureaucrat who is ultimately responsible for the parking authoritys performance, has performance issues of his own to account for. We dropped the ball, City of Winnipeg CAO Doug McNeil said, by way of explaining the backroom dealings that, late last year, led to the public exposure of that multimillion-dollar road-extension option he should have been aware of. All of that and what city Coun. Russ Wyatt said Monday are general concerns council has about not receiving factual information from the administration made me wonder something. Who is the ethics watchdog for city hall? And for senior civic administrators, in particular? Who performs integrity commissioner Sherri Walshs role for the bureaucrats and even the mayors political staff some of whom, in Wyatts view, potentially can exercise more power than elected representatives. In theory, the city auditor whos independent from the public service and has subpoena powers occupies the integrity-check position for the public administration. But Wyatt said in the 15 years hes been on council which included the, shall we say controversial, era of mayor Sam Katz and CAO Phil Sheegl successive auditors havent acted effectively in a watchdog role. Clearly, city councils integrity commissioner cant take on the job for the public service. Still, Walsh is scheduled to meet this week with chief corporate services officer Michael Jack to talk about the planned revisions to the citys employee code of conduct. Because, as she told me last week, I think its important that there be consistencies between the ethical guidelines and rules that govern city administrators and those that govern members of council. Theres something else on this topic thats important: the publics own responsibility to watch over city hall, where again, in Wyatts opinion theres a lack of checks and balances. It was a group of Charleswood neighbours, led by orthopedic surgeon David Ames, who not only investigated and uncovered the proposed road to plow through their properties, but applied so much pressure McNeil ended up sitting at Amess kitchen table apologizing. Wyatt said its not just the public, its the public service that has a responsibility to report situations individuals come across that should be investigated. Again, in a city hall culture that only now appears to be waking up to enforcing ethical behaviour, wheres the publics watchdog? Wyatt had the answer. Last fall, when Wyatt and I chanced to meet at a charity dinner, he related the story of how in the fall of 2013 members of then-mayor Katzs executive policy committee met without the mayors knowledge, agreed Sheegl had to leave his CAO position and presented it as a fait accompli. What moved them to force a shakeup? Wyatt said it was being contacted by a Winnipeg Free Press reporter, who told them something they didnt know: there had been a multimillion-dollar cost overrun on the conversion of the former Canada Post building into the new Winnipeg city police headquarters (which ultimately formed part of an RCMP investigation that still isnt finished). On Monday, Wyatt put what that suggests in perspective. He lamented that when he first took office in 2002, there were five full-time reporters covering city hall. Today, while reporters still come and go, Wyatt said there is only one maybe two full-timers at 510 Main St. (Which is why, the odd time I visit him, Free Press reporter Aldo Santin is alone in the buildings press offices.) It is the media that is Winnipegs constant watchdog at city hall. And, Im proud to say, the Free Press still has the loudest bark. And biggest bite. gordon.sinclair@freepress.mb.ca Opinion Hey there, time traveller! This article was published 09/01/2018 (1774 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. Could this be the end for Alex Forrest? The ubiquitous president of the United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg is on the hot seat after it was revealed the city continues to pay 60 per cent of his $116,000 annual salary and related benefits even though he works full-time for the union. The unusual construct of his salary and make no mistake, it is unusual raises significant questions about his relationship with his employer and the firefighters he represents. RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES Alex Forrest, president of United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg In simple terms, public-sector unions almost always pay the salaries and benefits of their full-time presidents and others who are seconded to work full time for the union. This holds true even if the president was a full-time public-sector employee. Typically, government continues to pay the president the same salary they earned before taking on union responsibilities, and the union repays government. The reasons for this are fairly simple: the head of a public-sector union should be, in almost all respects, committed to the goals and interests of union members, without fear or favour. This is the principle applied by almost every other public-sector union. Unions representing nurses, police officers and general government workers all insist on paying the entire salary of its full-time presidents and other senior union officials so they can ensure there is no conflict of interest. Forrest, for his part, has very little in the way of an explanation for being an outlier on this issue. In an exclusive interview with the Free Press, Forrest complained this story is only coming out now to discredit him and the UFFW in the lead up to this falls Winnipeg civic election. Forrest said he continues to draw salary from both the union and the City of Winnipeg because he sits on several civic committees and serves as an emergency response services liaison for the city in any negotiations with the province. There are two problems with this explanation. First, the city confirmed Forrest does not do any official work on behalf of the city. Second, the work he describes could easily fall under the umbrella of his duties as UFFW president. Both city council and UFFW members should be concerned about this wholly insufficient response. Forrest cannot do his job as union president while drawing some of his salary from the city. He insists he can serve two masters, but seems to miss the point it is not a matter of whether he can do the things he does, but whether he should. In fact, this blind spot has defined much of Forrests public life. A firefighter who put himself through law school, Forrest has controlled the sometimes-influential UFFW for more than 20 years. In that time, he and his union have become players in politics at both the provincial and civic levels, endorsing candidates and parties while making grand and unabashedly obvious shows of support on the campaign trail. Forrest was a lusty supporter for the New Democratic Party under former premier Gary Doer. Firefighters in bright yellow UFFW T-shirts became a regular sight during provincial election campaigns. UFFW members raised money, knocked on doors and helped get out the vote on election day. What did the UFFW get for all its efforts? The results are actually pretty hard to identify. In this most recent interview with the Free Press, Forrest once again noted his role in convincing the former NDP government to pass a law awarding disability pensions for certain kinds of cancer that have been linked to firefighting. That was a coup, at the time, and allowed Manitoba to claim a precedent for a benefit now available to firefighters across North America. However, Forrest has been living on that one accomplishment for some time. Beyond that one victory, it is hard to see what his members have gotten from all his bombast and politicking. In recent elections, it certainly seems evident Forrest and the UFFW have outlived their usefulness for most parties and politicians. The diminished influence is largely a result of the fact Forrest spread his support all over the political map. He would support right-leaning mayors and councillors at the civic level, and then throw the weight of his organization behind the left-leaning NDP at provincial election time. UFFW politics became particularly messy in the lead up to the 2016 Manitoba election. In 2014, Forrest suggested publicly his union would consider supporting the Progressive Conservatives. And yet, his public musings did not stop him and UFFW delegates from taking a major role in the 2016 NDP leadership convention, during which dissident cabinet minister Theresa Oswald nearly ousted then-premier Greg Selinger. Forrests rather indiscriminate use of his endorsements and his unpredictable nature have created as many, or more, political enemies as they have allies. Perhaps that explains why his penultimate achievement as union president disability benefits legislation happened nearly 20 years ago. Individual Winnipeg councillors have suggested it may be time to revisit Forrests unique contract with the UFFW, to see if its appropriate for the city to be making any contribution to a union presidents salary and benefits. Given the standard that has been established in other unions, if council does take another look at this arrangement, you can bet there will be changes. Forrest has theorized this attack against him is largely the work of enemies of the UFFW trying to discredit the union so it cannot play a role in deciding the civic election this fall. Once again, Forrest is missing the point. This is not an attack against the UFFW. Its a direct challenge to the president of the UFFW, who has demonstrated on numerous occasions he is unpredictable to the point of being untrustworthy. For more than two decades, Forrest has shown Winnipeggers, firefighters and citizens at large the full extend of what he can do. It may take someone else to finally show him what he should have been doing all along. dan.lett@freepress.mb.ca Hey there, time traveller! This article was published 08/01/2018 (1775 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current. Elderly low-income Manitobans living in Lions Place were staggered three days after Christmas when letters hitting them with a $179-a-month rent increase were slipped under their doors. Lions Housing Centres told the tenants that an agreement with Manitoba Housing ends July 31 as of Aug. 1, theyll pay market rates of $776 a month. Theyll lose the $169-a-month rental subsidy from Manitoba Housing, and the building is seeking an additional $10 a month. JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Margaret Topham (from left) speaks about the Lions Place rent-hike notice on Monday at the legislature as fellow resident Jean Feliksiak and Wolseley MLA Rob Altemeyer listen. There are a lot of people very frightened, very afraid, very confused, Jean Feliksiak, 86, told a news conference Monday. If it hadnt been low-income, we wouldnt have been there in the first place. Were finding it very difficult to go that high in one shot. The bottom line is, I personally cant pay it, said Margaret Topham, 80, leaning on her walker in the rotunda of the Manitoba legislature. That high a rent would eat up 80 per cent of her income, she said. Id have no money for food or medicines. Im still paying for an ambulance (from) a year ago. Where can we go? Topham asked. And why were they told in that manner right after Christmas, she demanded: Why did we have a note shoved under our door? Topham said Lions Place held a seminar last Thursday on how to apply for help under the provincial Rent Assist program, but Topham said the money wouldnt be enough, and would reduce her tax credits. Provincial officials speaking under the direction of Families Minister Scott Fielding said Monday that the timing coincides with the end of a 35-year mortgage agreement between Manitoba Housing and Ottawa for the seniors building at 610 Portage Ave. As part of the provincial agreement, Manitoba Housing entered into an operating agreement to provide an operating subsidy that would allow some units to be offered on a rent-geared-to-income basis. The Manitoba Housing operating agreement is linked to the mortgage amortization period and will also end this August once Lions pays off its mortgage, said an official, who was not authorized to be quoted by name. Manitoba Housing has met with and continues to meet with the Lions group to discuss solutions for its low-income seniors, he said. It was not clear Monday how many tenants in the 18-storey building are subsidized. In Ottawa, federal officials told the Free Press that a 1998 agreement between Ottawa and Manitoba sought to get these projects on their own feet when the agreements end. The non-profit residence and Manitoba Housing now decide what residents will pay. There has been a report of a similar rent-increase notice at a personal-care home in Garson. However, an aide to Fielding said theres no relation to whats happening at Lions Place. Manitoba Housing says notices of rent increase issued in those properties would be as a result of a specific tenants income. Housing says this is unrelated to the subsidy agreement at Lions Place, she said. The province said that with the mortgage paid off, Lions Place should be in a much stronger financial position and able to help the low-income seniors. Operating agreements for subsidized housing providers (government and non-profit) are expiring across Canada. The federal government is considering this in the development of its National Housing Strategy. Manitoba Housing continues to work with non-profit and co-operative housing providers across the province to help them plan for the expiry of operating agreements, the province said. The province pointed out that Lions Place cant raise rents without Manitoba Housing approval. New Democrat MLA Bernadette Smith said the tenants should never have been informed by a letter under the door. Obviously, theres a lapse in communications. We want (Fielding) to work with the federal government. Wolseley MLA Rob Altemeyer of the NDP said the government of Premier Brian Pallister has never publicly rejected the advice of KPMG in its value-for-money audit calling for the government to scrap Rent Assist and allow the private sector to handle public housing. Smith, the families critic, demanded Fielding get involved right away and sort it out for the seniors, and also demanded assurances that the massive rent hike isnt happening elsewhere. Feliksiak said the tenants deserved far better. (The letter) didnt say who had cancelled it, why it was done (they) treated us all as though were morons because were older. Said Altemeyer: Its not reasonable to expect tenants to know when a funding agreement will expire. with files from Dylan Robertson nick.martin@freepress.mb.ca New Zealand police announced in late November that they will not prosecute anyone over the collapse of the six-storey Canterbury Television (CTV) building, which resulted in 115 deaths. The poorly designed and unsafe office building was flattened in the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake, which killed 185 people in total and devastated entire suburbs. The police investigation, which took four years, considered charges of negligent manslaughter against Alan Reay and David Harding. Reays consultancy firm managed the construction of the building, while Harding worked directly as the engineer on the project. Police and the Christchurch Crown Solicitor received advice from engineering firm Beca, which found that Harding was working beyond his level of competence and without proper supervision. Crown Law dismissed the advice, however, arguing that despite significant deficiencies in the buildings design, there was insufficient evidence that Reay and Hardings work on the building amounted to a major departure from what would normally be expected. At a press conference, Superintendent Peter Read asserted that there was no reasonable prospect of conviction based on the evidence available. He added that there were technical legal obstacles because of the passage of time: the negligent conduct that led to the deaths happened in 1986 when the building was constructed. The decision provoked significant public anger. A protest on December 10 was attended by around 150 people at Latimer Square. Organiser Maan Alkaisi, whose wife Maysoon Abbas died in the collapse, said the law was allowing people to get away with murder. He told Fairfax Media on December 14: Im now determined to go ahead and keep fighting until justice is done. Because after listening to other family members it is clear that the arguments put by police [are] not convincing. Many have compared the decision to the refusal to lay charges over the Pike River mine disaster. Sonya Rockhouse, whose son Ben was killed in the mine explosion in 2010, attended the CTV families protest. She told the World Socialist Web Site that the police said exactly the same thing to them that they said to us: not enough evidence to prosecute, not enough public interest. I mean, not in the public interest, for gods sake! In our case 29 people died unnecessarily, with the earthquake victims 115 people. What on earth has to happen before it is in the public interest? The decision not to prosecute follows a Royal Commission finding in 2012 that the CTV building should never have received a construction permit by the Christchurch City Council in 1986. Consenting officer Graeme Tapper claimed to have been pressured by council chief engineer Bryan Bluck to approve the permit. Structural weaknesses were identified by Holmes Consulting Group in January 1990, which found the building non-compliant. Madras Equities bought the building in December that year, and in November 1991, Reays firm installed steel bars to remedy the defects. However, this was only on levels four, five and six, and was done without a permit. Further problems in the construction were uncovered after the building collapsed. While foreman Bill Jones was found competent, construction manager Gerald Shirtcliff had not carried out adequate or regular site inspections. At one point, construction had not been supervised for five months. After an earlier earthquake in September 2010, the CTV building was inspected by engineer David Coatsworth. Building manager John Drew failed to provide Coatsworth with structural drawings, which hampered the inspection. Following another quake in December 2010, the assessment by council officials was rushed and the building green-stickered as safe. Lawyer Nigel Hampton, representing the families of some of the victims, criticised the flimsy excuses not to prosecute. Responding to claims that too much time had elapsed since construction, Hampton wrote in Fairfax Media on December 1 that a building engineer has a legal duty to design and engineer a building that will have a safe life of not less than 50 years." The families have urged the Labour Party-led government to intervene. Justice Minister Andrew Little, with his usual cynicism and hypocrisy, told Fairfax Media on November 30: like the Pike River families, [the CTV families] will be extremely disappointed that yet again, another tragedy, another disaster, that seems to have been avoidable, everybody involved seems to walk away scot-free Thats not right and I think we do have to do better. However, on December 17, Newshub reported that Little told families he cant and wont intervene on the CTV case. At the time of the Pike River disaster, Little was national secretary of the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union, which represented the miners. Speaking to Radio New Zealand only days after the disaster he defended Pike River Coal, claiming the company had a good health and safety committee thats been very active. He told the New Zealand Herald that there was nothing unusual about Pike River or this mine that weve been particularly concerned about. Little told Newstalk ZB on December 1 he was considering drawing up corporate manslaughter laws, even though he admitted such laws had been spectacularly unsuccessful in the UK. He praised legislation in Canadaa country where, in the vast majority of workplace deaths, employers can act with impunity. In the UK, no one has been held accountable for the Grenfell Tower fire of June last year, which was the result of cheap, flammable cladding. At least 71 people were killed, although the true death toll has been concealed by the government. The Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO), which managed the building, may have evaded a corporate manslaughter charge by handing over management to the city council. Even if KCTMO or the council are found guilty, no individuals will be held responsible and, after paying a nominal fine, the organisations will be able to continue business as usual. The police decision not to prosecute over the CTV building implosion is an example of class justice, designed to protect those in power. Charges were only considered against two individual engineers, even though a series of companies, city council administrations and governments were complicit in its construction and in allowing the building to stand without remediation for more than a quarter of a century. Construction took place during a period of sweeping deregulation and downsizing in every industry, begun by the 1984-1990 Labour Party government. This process culminated with the National Party government's Building Act in 1991, which allowed for self-regulation in the building industry. Hundreds more buildings throughout New Zealand are potential death traps. In January last year, following an earthquake in 2016, Wellington City Council identified 96 unsafe buildings. By December 2017, only nine of these buildings had had the necessary reinforcements completed. The aftermath of the CTV building collapse, the Pike River mine explosion, the Grenfell Tower fire and countless other preventable tragedies throughout the world, demonstrate that under capitalism the legal system is rigged in favour of the corporate elite and against the working class. The authors also recommend: Fire risk in most New Zealand high-rise buildings [21 July 2017] New Zealand earthquake report whitewashes government's role [19 December 2012] Five years after the Christchurch earthquake [1 March 2016] In spite of a series of initiatives carried out by the local political establishment in response to a recent public health crisis, the city of San Diego continues to remain in the grips of a homelessness crisis. Official reports indicate that more than 9,000 homeless people live on the streets of San Diego, with over a thousand of them being concentrated in the downtown area. According to these latest figures, which are widely believed to underestimate the problem, San Diego has the fourth largest homeless population in the country. In 2017, the total number of homeless people nationwide reportedly increased for the first time in seven years. While the national number increased by about 1 percent, the number of homeless people in San Diego went up significantly, by 5 percent. The number of homeless people dying in the streets of San Diego has also been steadily increasing. While 56 homeless people died in San Diego County in 2014, the number spiked to 90 in 2015, 115 in 2016, and 117 last year. The local political establishment in the city routinely proclaims that a solution for the problem is at hand. As was the case for his predecessors, current Republican Mayor Kevin Faulconer professed a great deal of concern for the problem. Stating that his administration would make homelessness its number-one social service priority, Faulconer promised swift action in his 2017 state of the city address a year ago. These initiatives included a new hotel tax hike to provide financial resources, the creation of a centralized intake homelessness center hub, and hundreds of new shelter beds. By the summer of last year, none of these promises had been fulfilled. However, a serious outbreak of hepatitis A in San Diego began to make national, and even international news, at the end of the summer, threatening among other things the standing of San Diego as a desirable tourist destination. While the outbreak, the deadliest in the US in many decades, was centered in San Diego, other cases were reported in other cities in California as well. To this day, the hepatitis A outbreak has infected more than 500 people and led to the death of at least 20 individuals. More than half of the infected, and the majority of the victims, are homeless people, as the disease tends to spread under poor sanitary conditions. The outbreak compelled the local political establishment to suddenly snap into action. Three large severe weather shelter tents were put up in different locations of the city by the end of the year. Given the quantitative scope of the problem, the response by the city is totally inadequate. The three new tents together can only host a total of 700 individuals, leaving several thousands more in the streets. Inside, they consist of tightly packed-together bunk beds, thus hardly alleviating the issues that have led to the hepatitis A outbreak in the first place. Finally, the tents are temporary, meant to operate for seven months from December 1. The tents have been established by the city as a form of bridge housing. That is, the homeless can remain there for no longer than 120 days. The stated goal of this arrangement is for 65 percent of those leaving the tents to find permanent housing afterward. In reality, the Regional Task Force on the Homeless indicates that only about 25 percent of homeless people who enter shelters in San Diego are then able to move into permanent housing. The agencies that win multimillion-dollar contracts to set up temporary shelters have to prove, by various means, that a certain percentage of inhabitants transition to permanent housing; however, many tenants are then unable to remain housed and keep up with increasing rents. What this snap initiative has accomplished is to secure a total of $6.5 million for various service-providing outfits, including $2.8 million for the Alpha Project and $1.9 million for Veterans Village of San Diego. The hepatitis outbreak is now apparently subsiding; a handful of cases per week are currently being reported, less than at the peak of the outbreak. The health emergency that had been officially declared on September 1 of last year may be called off by the end of this month. This means that the citys paltry response to the homelessness crisis that was triggered by the hepatitis A outbreak, far from constituting the beginning of a serious effort to solve the problem, will be a temporary and inadequate band-aid. The homelessness problem, moreover, is more than simply a matter of having a sufficient number of beds available for those who live in the streets. In San Diego, as elsewhere, the homeless crisis is the concentrated expression of all the manifold problems that exist intractably under capitalism. These include housing availability and costs, but also the lack of jobs, low wages, public health and addiction problems, lack of resources for mental health problems, and inadequate education. This is all capped by the corruption and indifference of the political establishment and the unwillingness on the part of the ruling class they represent to make the slightest economic sacrifice in order to address the pressing social problems confronting the poor and working class. Reporters from the World Socialist Web Site spoke to homeless individuals in downtown San Diego last weekend about the conditions they face and the response by the government. Rachel, a young woman who has spent time homeless in her hometown of Seattle, Washington, then in Tijuana, Mexico, and finally in San Diego, reviewed her experience living on the streets in the Southern California city. I was really surprised when I came here to see how many people are in the streets here. Ive never seen anything like that before, she said. There is a minimal amount of shelters for women. I was turned away from three shelters because there wasnt space. I finally got into the Alpha Project tents, where Ive been for about two weeks now, with 300 other men and women. They feed us there once a day, at 5 p.m., so it gets really crazy, theres fights, drama. Rachel explained that the tents changed things a little bit, but they change the rules daily in there, they dont really know what they are doing. Ever since the hepatitis A outbreak, [the city] wanted to deal with the problem really fast. They promised us there were going to be housing coordinators helping us get into long-term housing. The Alpha Project is supposed to be a bridge to something else, but not permanent housing. There has to be something after that. We are supposed to talk to housing coordinators, but nobodys talked to me about it. No one really has an answer. Debra, 61, originally from Colorado, worked for a hospice for 13 years, then as an in-home caregiver. I became unemployed, then homeless three years ago, she explained When I lost my job I took two trips to Alaska to try to make that work, that was the last shot I gave it. I couldnt do the minimum of 16 hours per day they required there. I am just not that young anymore, so I had to come back. No matter how many applications I put out here, due to my age, they wouldnt hire me. They never gave me a chance. Ive been out here homeless about three years. Ive seen it go from bad to worse. The city doesnt provide much for us. We dont have facilities to go to the bathroom. I am surprised they actually brought out stations to wash our hands after the outbreak of hepatitis, she said about the hepatitis outbreak in the city. They stopped giving out tents and started setting up big ones. Now everybodys got to live close to each other, and nobody knows what the other guy has. Tuberculosis could possibly break out. You are talking close quarters, you know? Feet-to-feet, head-to-head bunk beds. Who wants to live like that? Debra also addressed the possible upcoming visit of President Trump to San Diego, explaining her attitude toward the political establishment: The last time we had somebody big like that they started cleaning up the streets, made it look like theres not a problem here, and I think thats sad. This is government covering up the real issues. Why cover up the streets? You cant sugarcoat it, paint it another color. I think we are going to end up in concentration camps, because thats what those tents look like. This is supposed to be America, the land of the free, where you can come and live the American dream. ... I dont think the government really cares, I really dont. If they did, things would have been changed by now. Its getting deeper, and its getting worse. The US Department of Homeland Security announced Monday that it is terminating Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than a quarter-million immigrants from El Salvador. The immigrants, a large majority of them poorer workers, have 18 months, until September 9, 2019, to leave the US or be arrested and deported. Including the roughly 190,000 children of the 262,000 Salvadoran TPS recipients, the total population immediately affected is larger than the population of a city the size of Toledo, Ohio or New Orleans, Louisiana. Rounding up the TPS recipients for deportation will require Gestapo-type operations in the Washington DC metropolitan area, where 50,000 Salvadoran TPS recipients live; Los Angeles, where 40,000 live; and Houston and New York City, where a combined 50,000 reside. The Salvadorans are the largest single group covered by the TPS program, under which the DHS secretary may allow people fleeing natural disasters or civil wars to stay in the United States for more extended periods of time than under traditional refugee status. The Salvadoran TPS recipients constitute a significant section of the working class in the US, where most have put down deep roots. The average Salvadoran covered by TPS has been living in the US for 21 years. Those now facing deportation are primarily of middle age and have lived here for most of their adult lives. By one estimate, removing these workers will slash the US gross domestic product by nearly $110 billion over the next 10 years. Some 190,000 were admitted before 1994 and all 262,000 entered the country before 2001, when several major earthquakes devastated El Salvador. Tens of thousands escaped the civil war that ravaged the country from 1980 to 1992, during which US-backed death squads razed villages and massacred the population, including the estimated 1,200 peasants murdered in the village of El Mozote 37 years ago last month in what is known as El Salvadors My Lai. The move is a death sentence for hundreds or even thousands of those who will be sent back to a country with one of the highest murder rates in the world, dominated by criminal drug gangs that operate with impunity, protected by a corrupt military that rakes in money from both narcotics trafficking and US military aid. According to a 2015 report in the Guardian, dozens of deported Salvadorans were murdered after being deported by Obama in 2014-2015 alone. The decision to terminate TPS for Salvadorans signals the Trump administrations determination to put an end to the program entirely. Previously, DHS Acting Secretary Elaine Duke terminated TPS for 2,500 immigrants from Nicaragua, giving them until January 5, 2019 to leave the United States, and for 57,000 immigrants from Haiti, whose TPS status is set to expire July 22, 2019. But equal responsibility for the move lies with the Democratic Party, which paved the way for Trumps mass deportation program during the Obama administration. President Obama deported 2.7 million immigrants, including hundreds of thousands when the Democratic Party controlled Congress in the first years of his administration. This makes the phony statements of support for immigrants by leading Democrats all the more cynical. Barack Obama jailed tens of thousands of Salvadoran children and their mothers who crossed into the US during a flare-up of Central American violence in 2014. As for Trumps request for $15 billion more in funding for border security, the Democratic Party has long embraced the militarization of the border and has made clear it will back the allocation of additional billions to increase what is already a small army of border police and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. The Democrats opposition to Trumps demand for $18 billion to build a physical wall along the US-Mexico border is a political maneuver to divert attention from their basic agreement on stepping up the war against undocumented workers. When the precursor to Trumps wall was first proposed in the 2006 Secure Fence Act, signed into law by President George W. Bush, top Senate Democrats backed it, including then-senators Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Joseph Biden, as well as Charles Schumer, now the Senate Democratic leader. As a result of this and other bipartisan border militarization measures, up to 27,000 immigrants have died crossing the desert in the last 20 years. In 2013, the Democrats agreed to spend $40 billion on border security, doubling the number of Border Patrol agents to 40,000 and expanding the use of high-tech surveillance equipment, including sensors and drones. The Democrats also agreed to eliminate the visa lottery, exclude siblings of US citizens from family reunification visas, and expand visa offerings based on education levels and work expertise, along the lines demanded by US corporations seeking highly skilled labor. The bill was voted down by the Republicans. Today, they are proposing to go above and beyond their previous anti-immigrant pledges. The move to deport TPS recipients comes as the Democratic Party and Trump are engaged in Kabuki theater negotiations over the fate of 800,000 young people brought to the US as children who are enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program enacted during the Obama administration. Trump rescinded the DACA order, effective March 5, at which point mass roundups of former DACA recipients could begin, using the information they supplied to the government as part of their applications for DACA. The White House is also demanding cuts in legal immigration as part of a compromise on DACA, including the elimination of the visa lottery program and so-called chain migration, which allows US citizens and legal residents to sponsor family relations for entry. Last week, Senator Schumer made clear in advance of talks on DACA that he supported further measures to militarize the US-Mexican border. Senator Bernie Sanders reiterated his support for stepped-up attacks on undocumented workers in an appearance Sunday on the ABC program This Week. Sanders declared that while he opposed Trumps border wall, I dont think theres anybody who disagrees that we need strong border security. If the president wants to work with us to make sure we have strong border security, lets do that. Sanders, in line with the trade union bureaucracy, echoes Trumps economic nationalism and pseudo-populist attempts to pit American workers against their class brothers and sisters in other countries. The vast majority of Americans disagree with the anti-immigrant nationalism of Trump, with nine in 10 believing the government should give citizenship to immigrants who have lived in the US for a number of years. Mass protests broke out at airports across the country in January and February 2017 after Trump announced his initial travel ban. Since then, the Democratic Party has worked systematically to divert and suppress popular opposition to Trumps anti-immigrant, pro-corporate and pro-war program. It has instead promoted reactionary, anti-democratic campaigns. These include the so-called Me Too movement, which rejects basic democratic principles such as the presumption of innocence and due process in order to promote the feminism of privileged layers of the middle class; the anti-Russia campaign, which seeks to shift American foreign policy to an even more aggressive military posture against Russia; and the campaign against fake news, which is being used to justify censorship of the Internet and social media. In December, the Supreme Court allowed a revised version of Trumps travel ban to take effect shortly after House Democrats voted two-to-one against a move by a Democratic congressman to introduce articles of impeachment citing Trumps mass deportation program. Socialists reject the entire reactionary framework of the so-called debate over immigration reform. The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) rejects the position of Democrats and Republicans alike that undocumented workers are guilty of a crime and must be made to pay in one fashion or another for their supposed misdeeds. The SEP upholds the right of workers from every corner of the globe to live and work in whatever country they choose with full citizenship rights, including the right to return to their home countries without the threat of being barred from re-entry to the US and being separated from their families. The total number of people who work in the same factories, construction sites and other industries alongside the 262,000 Salvadoran TPS recipients number in the millions or tens of millions. The attack on them is an attack on the entire working class. Only the power of the working classunited across race and nationalitycan block the drive to destroy the lives of hundreds of thousands of Salvadoran workers living in the US. Chaos and protracted delays at New York Citys John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) continued into a fifth day Monday, leaving thousands of passengers stranded, sleeping on floors and searching for lost luggage. The blizzard that struck the Northeast of the United States on Thursday forced the shutdown of JFK and other area airports, but after the snow storm subsided things only went from bad to worse. More than 1,000 flights to New York airports were cancelled on Thursday, with many passenger jets forced to divert to other airports or return to their point of departure after JFK pushed back its reopening from Thursday afternoon to Friday. When the delayed flights began to arrive on Friday, planes were unable to find open gates, leaving passengers, many of them having flown from Asia, Europe and elsewhere around the world, stuck for up to eight hours on the tarmac in freezing cold, without food, power or toilets. Some of those trapped on the planes began calling 911 for emergency assistance, while others threatened to open the emergency doors to escape. After finally being allowed off the planes, they were herded into overflowing terminals filled with a sea of unsorted luggage, with many of them forced to wait as long as another five hours to collect their bags. Airport authorities attributed the chaos in part to staffing shortages and the freezing up of ground equipment. Even as it seemed that conditions could not become more hellish, a massive water main break Sunday flooded Terminal 4, the old International Arrivals Terminal, sending water cascading from the ceiling and spilling over flight monitors. Suitcases and luggage carts floated in what became a three-inch-deep lake. Passengers were evacuated in darkness as power was shut off. The pipe that burst had not been weather-proofed, making the disaster all but inevitable. Port Authority Director Rick Cotton said the catastrophe would be investigated. The Port Authority is committed to providing the highest caliber of service to all travelers and we will hold those responsible accountable for any shortcomings we find, he said. No one should hold his breath for the Port Authority to make those who bear the real responsibility for the disastrous conditions at JFK accountable. The Port Authority is perhaps the most unaccountable agency in the United States, its executive positions filled by political hacks appointed by the governors of New York and New Jersey. A pair of them were recently convicted on conspiracy, fraud and other charges stemming from the closure of lanes leading onto the George Washington Bridge as an act of political retaliation on behalf of New Jerseys Republican Governor Chris Christie against a New Jersey mayor. Cotton shrugged off any responsibility on the part of the agency itself, the nominal operator of JFK. He pointed out that Terminal 4, where the flood occurred, was run not by the Port Authority, but rather by a private Dutch-based consortium. The most recently reported annual compensation of that firms CEO topped $900,000. All of the terminals are leased out to different concessionaires, most of them formed by alliances of airlines, which guard their control of gates as a guarantee of market share. This profit-driven arrangement played a major role in the havoc of the past five days, as planes were able to land but not deboard their passengers. Pilots had to wait for gates to open up in the terminals run by their airlines, even as gates sat empty at other terminals. JFK is the premier international air passenger gateway to North America. While critics, including US President Donald Trump, have described conditions at it and other New York area airports as third world, in many countries given this label airports and other transportation facilities are better run and more efficient than what prevails in the United States. That such conditions exist in New York City, the so-called capital of the worldin reality, the capital of US finance capitalis testament to the criminal neglect of basic infrastructure on the part of a parasitic financial oligarchy that controls both major political parties and pursues socially destructive policies aimed solely at furthering its own self-enrichment. The disaster at Kennedy comes barely three weeks after a similar breakdown saw Atlantas international airportthe busiest in the USentirely shut down by a power outage, snarling air traffic throughout the country during one of the busiest flying seasons. The same week saw the derailment of an Amtrak train in Washington state, killing three passengers, the latest in a series of accidents plaguing the chronically underfunded and antiquated passenger rail service. New York City, home to Wall Street and the surging stock exchange, is plagued by the protracted deterioration of basic infrastructure even as a thin layer at the top amasses unimaginable wealth. The city is home to the worlds largest concentration of billionaires, 82 of whom boast a combined net worth of $397.9 billion. Another nearly 9,000 individuals in the city each have at least $30 million in net assets. Two weeks ago, Bloomberg reported that the worlds richest 500 billionaires increased their combined assets by $1 trillion in the course of 2017, an increase of 23 percent, to $5.3 trillion. This colossal diversion of resources into private wealth accumulation by the financial oligarchy starves society of the resources it needs to deal with the most basic problems. Nowhere is this seen more starkly than in New York City. Side by side with the financial aristocracy, the citys homeless population is at a record high since the Great Depression of the 1930s, with more than 60,000 people in shelters every night and many more sleeping on the streets. Monday was typical for the citys deteriorating subway system, upon which millions of workers depend to get to work and home again. Fifteen separate subway lines saw delays and slowdowns due to mechanical breakdowns, signal failures and switch problems, with passengers forced to wait in some cases 40 minutes for a train, and half-hour commutes into Manhattan turning into 90-minute ordeals. In the citys public housing, thousands of people went without heat and hot water during the record cold snap because of inadequate boilers in their buildings. For the moneyed elite that monopolizes the citys wealth, these are not real issues. They no more use JFK than they do the subways. They are able to take helicopters to private jets and VIP terminals in places like Teterboro, New Jersey, never having to brush up against the working people that make the city run. Holding accountable those responsible for the havoc wreaked upon passengers at JFK, not to mention the homeless, or the working people who lose hours each day due to a crumbling subway system, is possible only by means of a struggle to break the stranglehold exercised by Wall Street and the financial elite over the whole of society. The vast wealth of this financial oligarchy must be expropriated and utilized to resolve the pressing social problems of housing, health care, education and mass transit. The trillions being spent on Washingtons military and intelligence apparatus to carry out war and mass murder across the planet must be redirected into confronting these problems, both in the US and internationally. The entire economy, both in the US and around the world, must be placed on new foundations, based on the abolition of private ownership of the banks and corporations and the establishment of public ownership and democratic control. The vast wealth produced by the working class must be used to meet social needs, not squandered on satisfying the insatiable drive of the oligarchs for profit and personal wealth. The debacle at JFK, the gateway to America, expresses in a concentrated form the rot and historical bankruptcy of the capitalist system. The reorganization of society on socialist foundations is a matter of ever greater urgency. The author also recommends: The oligarchy versus society [28 December 2017] Its official! Gwyneth Paltrow is heading down the aisle again. The Goop CEO has confirmed that she is engaged to producer and writer Brad Falchuk. We feel incredibly lucky to have come together at this juncture in our lives when our collective successes and failures can serve as building blocks for a healthy and happy relationship, the couple said in a joint statement to Good Morning America. Paltrow, 45, and Falchuk, 46, appear together on the cover of the new issue of Goop magazine, hitting stands on Tuesday, to discuss the happy news. Photo: Steven Pan / Courtesy of Goop Its not surprising that the official announcement involves Goop: After all, it was on Paltrows website where she revealed that she and Chris Martin were splitting in a post famously titled Conscious Uncoupling. GMA teased the issue with a black-and-white photo of the couple on Twitter. CONGRATS to @GwynethPaltrow, ENGAGED to Brad Falchuk! pic.twitter.com/GCjJBDWmt1 Good Morning America (@GMA) January 8, 2018 It was reported in November that the couple was engaged and that they apparently kept it secret for a year. They have been dating for three years. The Iron Man star first met Falchuk in 2010 when she guest-starred on Glee, which he co-created. They were both married at the time, but their friendship turned romantic when they found themselves single in 2014. Falchuk ended a 10-year marriage in March 2013 while Martin and Paltrow announced their separation in March 2014 after a decadelong marriage. Clearly, theres no awkwardness between Martin and Falchuk. Paltrow shared a photo of her ex-husband and her fiance brunching together in November. Paltrow captioned this snap, Sunday brunch #modernfamily. (Photo: Gwyneth Paltrow via Instagram) Paltrow and Martin share two children, Apple and Moses, while Falchuk has two children, Brody and Isabella, with ex-wife Suzanne. No word yet on any details for their impending nuptials but we have a feeling well find out eventually on Goop. Story continues Read more from Yahoo Entertainment: James Francos Golden Globes win didnt sit right with some women watching at home. As the Disaster Artist star accepted the award for Best Actor wearing a Times Up pin, an unverified Twitter account attributed to actress Ally Sheedy slammed the actor, implying misconduct. Why is a man hosting? Why is James Franco allowed in? Said too much, one tweet read. Another said, Ok wait. Bye. Christian Slater and James Franco at a table on @goldenglobes #MeToo. James Franco attends the 75th Annual Golden Globe Awards. (Photo: Getty Images) A third exclaimed, James Franco just won. Please never ever ask me why I left the film/tv business. After gaining traction on Twitter, all three of the tweets were deleted. Yahoo reached out to representatives for both Franco and Sheedy but did not receive a response. Image: Twitter The Breakfast Club actress worked with Franco on the 2014 off-Broadway play he directed, The Long Shrift. In a New York Times article that summer, Sheedy noted that the pair had never met until that spring while calling him a beautiful, generous man. While its unclear what if anything transpired between the two, Sheedy was not the only one to take issue with Francos win. James Franco and Ally Sheedy are all smiles at the after-party for The Long Shrift on July 13, 2014, in New York City. (Photo: J. Countess/Getty Images) Two other women made unverified claims against the actor on Twitter Francos publicist has yet to respond to Yahoos request for comment and many people referenced the 2014 incident when he allegedly tried to pick up an underage girl on social media. Whatever I still remember James Franco trying to pick up a teenager on Instagram Jessica Valenti (@JessicaValenti) January 8, 2018 when is the time up on James Franco miel (@miel) January 8, 2018 Its rich of James Franco to be wearing a Times Up pin Doree Shafrir (@doree) January 8, 2018 James Franco, noted dude who slid inside a 17-year-old girls DMs and noted director and writer of a film of a dude who was in a relationship with an underaged person he was teaching won a Golden Globe, which proves that the non-action of wearing black was double useless. Jeans Skinny xD Like Squidward O_o (@whateverchrissy) January 8, 2018 Franco, 35 at the time, pursued the 17-year-old Scottish tourist on Instagram. The flirty exchange was published online by the teenager, who admitted her age in the supposed messages. While they did not meet up, Franco copped to messaging her during an appearance on Live With Kelly and Michael. Story continues Im embarrassed, and I guess Im just a model of how social media is tricky, Franco embarrassingly said. Its a way people meet each other today, but what Ive learned is you dont know whos on the other end. I used bad judgment and I learned my lesson. As usual, Twitter #NeverForgets. Read more from Yahoo Entertainment: The U.S.S. Discovery returned Sunday night after nearly two months away for viewers, at least. At the end of midseason finale Into the Forest I Go, the crew had notched a major tactical victory against the Klingons and deployed the controversial spore drive a final time to travel to Starbase 46 with a coveted Klingon cloak-breaking algorithm in hand. But Lt. Stamets convulsed while facilitating the jump, leaving Discovery adrift in a mysterious chunk of space with no Federation outpost in sight. Despite Yourself explains that absence: Discovery has crossed into a parallel universe where the Federation doesnt exist. But while its unfamiliar territory for the ships crew, the alternate reality has appeared in iterations of Star Trek since the franchise debuted in the 60s. Before Discovery premiered in September, its creators told EW that the show would allegorically tackle contemporary political issues through the conflict between the Federation and the Klingons. However, the decision to revisit the Terran Empire which Spc. Michael Burnham describes in Despite Yourself as an oppressive, racist, xenophobic culture that dominates all known space marks a bolder, more effective attempt to achieve political resonance. As some decry an alleged global rise in fascism, its savvy for Discovery to revisit the fascistic, human-only organization that Trek first deployed in 1967s Mirror, Mirror, just over two decades after the conclusion of the Second World War. The crew doesnt immediately realize where theyve arrived, of course. Upon completion of their ill-fated jump, Capt. Gabriel Lorca and his colleagues have little time to process the wreckage of a Klingon ship that surrounds them before a Vulcan vessel appears and opens fire. What the Discovery believes to be the U.S.S. Cooper soon arrives and neutralizes the threat. Spooked by rebels, Discovery? its captain inquires via an audio-only transmission. Youre losing your edge. Off the bridge, Lorca explains to Burnham and Cdr. Saru that he and Stamets had suspected the mycelial network could lead to parallel universes. The 133 spore drive jumps Discovery has taken, he estimates, filled in the gaps and made travel to such an alternate reality possible. To begin to grasp their surroundings, Lorca sends Lt. Ash Tyler on an exploratory mission to retrieve a data core from the Klingon wreckage. Upon its retrieval, Burnham analyzes the core and learns about the Terran Empire. The existence of the human-only organization explains certain inconsistencies like why Vulcan and Andorian bodies littered the Klingon wreckage. In this universe, alien species have allied to fight back at the oppressive human regime. The episode gets a little whimsical from there. When the Cooper reappears and opens a communication line with Discovery, Burnham prevents Lorca from speaking because in the Terran Empire, he isnt the ships captain. Awkward, oversharing Cadet Sylvia Tilly occupies that role, and is forced to masquerade. What the heck! Hold your horses! she exclaims in a hilarious scene before handing off to Lorca who, in an homage to Scotty, pretends to be the ships Scottish engineer. In order to pass as Terrans while they figure out a way home, the crew rebrands. To successfully crash a party you have to look like you belong, Lorca explains in a voice-over. You must project confidence. Every detail of this so-called Terran Empire must be replicated exactly and where we may fall short, we have to get creative. The subsequent transformation is a little far-fetched beyond renaming themselves the I.S.S. Discovery, the crew does things like renovating the bridges interior and making replica Terran uniforms but also thrilling. Going off rebel intelligence, Burnham explains to Tilly that to Terrans shes a ruthless captain known by monikers like the Slayer of Sorna Prime, the Witch of Wurna Minor, and Captain Killy. But if Tillys captain, what does that make Lorca and Burnham? As Burnham tells Lorca, theyre crucial players in the Terran Empire. Or, were. The Terran Lorca initiated a rebellion against the despotic emperor, killed Terran Burnham when she attempted to intervene, and struck out on the lam. Amazing, isnt it? Lorca tells Burnham as the duo gazes out at the stars. Different universe, but somehow the same people had a way to find each other. The strongest argument Ive ever seen for the existence of destiny. Other destinies continue to unfold elsewhere on Discovery throughout the episode. A cloudy-eyed Stamets spends nearly the entire episode unresponsive in the sick bay as doctor and lover Lt. Cdr. Hugh Culber cares for him. Lorca visits Culber to apologize for ordering Stamets to make excessive numbers of spore drive jumps but when Culber suggests Stamets well-being falls to me now, the captain informs him that hes ordered another doctor to handle the case, as medicine requires professional objectivity. Culber flags Lorcas hypocrisy: Suddenly you care about protocol? Meanwhile, Tyler visits the still-imprisoned LRell, who was both his lover and torturer while he was in Klingon captivity, in the brig to inquire about his increasing bouts of PTSD. The Klingon convinces Tyler to release her; when he does, she begins to speak in her native tongue and triggers Tyler to respond to her in Klingon. What did you do to me? he says when he snaps out of it. Im not myself. As LRell laments that the prayer she uttered hasnt worked as planned, Tyler locks her back up. Despite temporarily holding off LRell and her mind games, Tyler eventually succumbs. He visits sick bay later in the episode to ask Culber if the doctor can identify any odd experiments the Klingons may have performed while he was in captivity. When Tyler leaves, Stamets has a moment of clarity where he warns Culber, Be careful, the enemy is here. The cautions warranted. Upon Tylers return, Culber tells the security officer that the Klingons performed bone-crushing procedures on him that have transformed him both mentally and physically and Tyler snaps his neck. While its unfortunate that Stamets and Culber, two of Discoverys most compelling characters, appear to have been sidelined (at least for the time being), those plot developments have given the show some real stakes. After offing Culber, Tyler arrives at the transporter chamber, where he meets Lorca and Burnham. The trios preparing to transport to the I.S.S. Shenzhou after concocting an elaborate plan. As Lorca and Burnham explain to Saru, theyve discovered that another Starfleet vessel, the U.S.S. Defiant, previously stumbled into the Terran universe. (Trekkers know this story from Enterprises In a Mirror, Darkly arc.) By accessing Terran databases, they can ascertain how the Defiant returned to its proper timeline. How to do that? A risky gambit where the presumably dead Burnham returns to the Shenzhou a ship shes the captain of in the Terran Empire with the captured traitor Lorca. A better-prepared Tilly initiates contact with the ship and its new captain, Danby Connor (Sam Vartholomeos), to set the plan in motion. Once she transports aboard the Shenzhou with Lorca and Tyler, Burnham asserts her dominance over Connor, per Terran custom, refusing to let the officer or his crew take possession of Lorca lest they take credit for the fugitives capture to curry the emperors favor. She intends the move to protect Lorca from excessive Terran torture, though even she cant figure out a believable reason to spare her companion from the finest agonizer booth the Shenzhou has to offer. And when Burnham finds herself alone in an elevator with Connor, he attempts to murder her to solidify his command and the fealty of his underlings. In a harrowing scene, Burnham kills him in defense and when the door opens to the bridge, Connors dead body falls to the floor as Shenzhous officers begin to chant, Long live Capt. Burnham! Long live the Empire! The episode ends in this dystopian gray space. Tyler visits Burnham in her quarters aboard the Shenzhou, and she tells him she hasnt yet found an opportune time to research the Defiant. Unaware that hes compromised by the Klingons, she begins to make out with Tyler as the show cuts to a final scene of Lorca in an agonizer booth. While Despite Yourself went heavy on exposition, it provided some promising strands for the forthcoming five episodes thatll conclude Discoverys debut season. For one, the show has abandoned the extensive Klingon scenes that hindered its initial run, without excising some of its most fascinating plot elements. And the Terran Empire story line exhilarates in a zany, Trekkian way while achieving contemporary relevance and paying homage to the shows storied past. 6 bookmark-worthy speeches women made at the 2018 Golden Globes As hoped and expected, women in Hollywood commandeered the 2018 Golden Globes. Winning actresses gave inspiring and supportive women power speeches. Women and men acted in solidarity with victims and survivors of sexual abuse by wearing black. Many donned pins to support the newly formed Times Up campaign, which aims to raise awareness for the marginalized women affected by sexual misconduct and abuse. Womens empowerment was radiating throughout the Globes and we feel change is on the horizon. Alongside symbolic wardrobe and speeches, several actresses invited activists from different fields to join them at the ceremony. Meryl Streep brought Ai-jen Poo, director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance and co-director of Caring Across Generations. Streep and Ai-jen aimed to bring awareness to the power imbalance that causes abuse not only in Hollywood but in domestic industries as well. Michelle Williams invited womens rights activist and founder of the #MeToo movement, Tarana Burke. Burke noted that she never expected her movement to grow as much as it has. Two different worlds have come together to support each other and Burke said she is incredibly humbled. Once celebs entered the ceremony, the female empowerment only grew stronger. Here are 6 of the most inspiring speeches that came from winning women at the 2018 Golden Globes. 1. Oprah Winfrey Cecil B. de Mille Award In what was arguably the most empowering speech of the night (you can read 9 of Oprahs most inspiring points here), Oprah recognized the weight of being the first black woman to receive the Cecil B. de Mille Award. She shared her respect for the press. And she expressed gratitude to the women who have stepped up to speak their truths. What I know for sure is that speaking your truth is the most powerful tool we all have, Oprah said. And I am especially proud and inspired by all the women who have felt strong enough and empowered enough to speak up and share their personal stories. Story continues 2. Rachel Brosnahan Best Actress in a Television Series, Comedy There are so many womens stories out there that still need and deserve to be told, Brosnahan said. So as we enter this new year, please lets continue to hold each other accountable and invest in, and make, and champion these stories. 3. Frances McDormand Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Drama Lets face it, they managed to elect a female president, McDormand said of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. She also noted that she was thankful to be at the Golden Globes and to be a part of the tectonic shift in [the] industrys power structure. 4. Elisabeth Moss Best Actress in a Television Series, Drama We were the people who were not in the papers, Moss quoted from Margaret Atwoods novel The Handmaids Tale. We lived in the blank white spaces at the edge of print. It gave us more freedom. We lived in the gaps between the stories. Moss then added, Margaret Atwood, this is for you, and all of the women who came before you and after you who were brave enough to speak out against intolerance and injustice and to fight for equality and freedom in this world. We no longer live in the blank white spaces at the edge of print. We no longer live in the gaps between the stories. We are the story in print, and we are writing the story ourselves. 5. Nicole Kidman Best Actress in a Limited Series Kidman stated that she and her female costars of Big Little Lies pledged allegiance and commitment to each other. This is ours to share, Kidman said. Wow, the power of women. She continued, This character that I played represents something that is the center of our conversation right now abuse. I do believe and I hope we can elicit change through the stories we tell and the way we tell them. Lets keep the conversation alive. 6. Laura Dern Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television Laura Derns character in Big Little Lies is the mother of a girl who is too afraid to speak up when shes being bullied and abused at school. Dern said in her speech, Many of us were taught not to tattle. It was a culture of silencing and that was normalized. I urge all of us to not only support survivors and bystanders who are brave enough to tell their truth, but to promote restorative justice. May we also, please, protect and employ them. May we teach our children that speaking out without the fear of retribution is our cultures new North Star. Lets keep supporting each other and fighting for the much-needed change in Hollywood and in other industries around the world. President Donald Trump has made it abundantly clear that he thinks the liberal media or the fake news is out to get him. And his son is able to echo that sentiment because of a tweet NBC sent out during the 2018 Golden Globes. After host Seth The ex-Google employee who wrote an offensive letter about women is now suing the company for discriminating against white conservative men James Damore, the ex-Google engineer who wrote an offensive memo about women last year, has filed a lawsuit claiming Google fired him for being white, male and conservative. According to the lawsuit, the search engine giant failed to protect employees with views deviating from the majority view at Google from workplace harassment. Damore made headlines in early August after he wrote a 10-page internal memo otherwise known as a manifesto against diversity arguing that women in tech are not as successful as their male counterparts because they are biologically less capable of engineering (fyi: there is literally zero scientific evidence to back that up). Now, five months after being fired from Google, Damore and David Gudeman, another former Google engineer, filed a lawsuit in Santa Clara Superior Court seeking monetary, non-monetary and punitive damages. Damore, Gudeman, and other class members were ostracized, belittled, and punished for their heterodox political views, and for the added sin of their birth circumstances of being Caucasians and/or males, the lawsuit reads. This is the essence of discrimination Google formed opinions about and then treated Plaintiffs not based on their individual merits, but rather on their membership in groups with assumed characteristics. You shouldnt have to prove you didnt vote for the president to get a job at Google, Damores laywer, Harmeet Dhillon, said. Live now! Press conference with Ex-Googler James Damore and attorney Harmeet K. Dhillon to discuss their class action lawsuit against Google. Feel free to share this video. Posted by Dhillon Law Group Inc. on Monday, January 8, 2018 It may come as no surprise that Google says it looks forward to defending itself in court. At the time of Damores firing, Google CEO Sundar Pichai issued a memo of his own which made it clear that Damore was fired because he violated the companys code of conduct by advancing harmful gender stereotypes in our workplace. Story continues Aka, Damore wasnt fired for being, white, male, or conservative he was fired for discriminating against women. Damores lawsuit comes in the wake of another suit against Google. In September, three former female employees filed a class-action complaint that alleges the company knowingly underpays women. Basically, while women fight for equal pay, Damore is fighting for his right to discriminate against others. Were extremely interested to see how both suits unfold The 2018 Golden Globes red carpet was filled with so many gorgeous fashion moments we had a hard time keeping track of all of the showstopping outfits. But there is one ensemble that definitely deserves a closer look, and that's Emma Watson's get up. At first glance, it might look like she's wearing heels, but the actress chose beautiful flats to pair with her custom Ronald van der Kemp gown. It turns out the comfortable (and chic) shoes are from New York-based brand Creatures of Comfort. Prato Slip On Courtesy $246 (Originally $410) Creatures of Comfort The slip-on style flats come with a wraparound tie that you can lace up around your ankles for casual days, or you can go all outlike Watsonand pull it up around your calves. The suede babies were originally priced at $410, but you can catch them on sale for $246 on the Creatures of Comfort website. It's definitely worth it, especially since the backless flats are just as pretty as any pair of heels. VIDEO: All the Glamorous 2018 Golden Globes Red Carpet Arrivals Unfortunately, with any celebrity-approved item, these are guaranteed to sell out. But you can find more comfortable shoes from Creatures of Comfort on the Need Supply website. We're stocking up on the comfortable shoes right now before its too late. Gal Gadots $6 lipstick at the 2018 Golden Globes looked like a million bucks While the 2018 Golden Globes had a different tone than normal, we were just as excited to see all our favorite stars wearing ultra-glamorous beauty looks. And proving that special-event makeup doesnt have to cost a fortune, Gal Gadot wore drugstore lipstick to the Golden Globes it doesnt get much more accessible than that. If you thought the women of Hollywood were looking especially fierce last night, youre right they came out en masse making powerful and bold statements about abuse and inequality both with their words and their actions. Along with their powerful words, they all used the opportunity to wear black in solidarity, and the effect was palpable. In fact, the result of having all the women dressed in black dresses meant that the opportunities for creativity shone through, with beautiful makeup looks that ran the gamut from goth glam to soft and sweet. Gal Gadots makeup was particularly gorgeous. She radiated warmth, beauty, and strength, and her beauty look was the perfect complement to her sleek dress and glamorous jewelry. Cant get enough of Gals makeup? Youll be glad to know that you can easily recreate her lip look. According to Allure, you can rock her same lipstick with Revlons Super Lustrous Lipstick in Bombshell Red for just $5.99. Gal Gadot Golden Globes It doesnt get much better than this ruby red shade. You can pick one up at Target for yourself! We cant overstate how amazing Gal looked last night. From her neutral eye, big lashes, and those perfect red lips, she couldnt go wrong. Gal Gadot Golden Globes Even her brows dont have a hair out of place. We are so impressed by how great all the women looked last night, and are loving scrolling through all their eclectic beauty looks. Did you have a fave? The flight was en route from Boston to Punta Cana before turning around. An "unusual odor" on a JetBlue flight delayed a Dominican Republic getaway for a bunch of cold Northeasterners. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) will investigate after a JetBlue flight en route to Punta Cana from Boston's Logan Airport turned around this weekend after a strange odor was detected on board, an FAA representative told Travel and Leisure. JetBlue Flight 1095 returned to Logan Airport in Boston after "an unusual odor" on the A320 aircraft left "customers and crew members feeling unwell" with some asking for medical attention, according to a statement from the company published in the Boston Globe. The airplane was in the air for just over an hour and underwent an inspection upon landing at 6:24 p.m. Saturday, according to JetBlue's FlightAware tracker. It is unclear what caused the odor. According to JetBlue's FlightAware tracker, it appears the flight had been delayed for six hours on Saturday already before the issue arose in the air. Representatives from JetBlue did not respond to a request for comment from Travel and Leisure. The issue of a strange odor on board is nothing new for JetBlue. On an August flight from Boston to Charleston, an odor caused by nail polish remover sent two crew members to the hospital. Several other JetBlue flights on Airbus A320 planes in particular have been diverted as a result of mysterious fumes in recent months, according to CBS News. Boston was one of the East Coast cities most heavily hit by Winter Storm Grayson this week as it tore through a number of U.S. states. Logan Airport had very low visibility Thursday as the storm caused more than 15 inches to fall in the city, canceling school for many students and leaving some cars in a Boston suburb trapped in frozen ice. Meghan Markle's father comments on Prince Harry for first time since engagement announcement Meghan Markle's father is speaking out on her engagement to Prince Harry for (essentially) the first time. Thomas Markle released a joint statement with his ex-wife, Meghan's mother Doria Ragland, on the day that the couple's engagement was announced in November and later declared that he would "love" to walk his daughter down the aisle, but since then he's laid very low. SEE ALSO: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle make unusual travel decision during New Year's trip to Monte Carlo He reportedly lives in Rosarito, Mexico, and has yet to meet Harry in-person (though Harry says that he's spoken to Thomas on the phone). Over the weekend, a so-called "passerby" at a convenience store in the small Mexican town asked Thomas what he thought about the upcoming royal wedding, scheduled for May 19. The footage was obtained by British outlet The Sun. "I think its wonderful," he responded. "Im very delighted. I think theyre [a] very good match. Im very happy for them, Meghan and Harry. I love my daughter very much -- Harrys a gentleman." "Now leave me alone, please," he concluded. "Dont bother me anymore. No more flashing cameras in my eyes or Ill flash back." SEE ALSO: Queen Elizabeth is breaking protocol for Meghan Markle: Here's why The comments come in the weeks after Harry turned heads by declaring that Meghan joining the British royal family represents a "family she never had." Meghan's half-brother and half-sister both publicly condemned the comments. The former "Suits" actress is incredibly close with her mother, who has met Harry in person on multiple occasions, including at the Invictus Games in September, where Harry and Meghan made their first joint public outing as a couple, too. So much so that reports surfaced recently that Meghan is hoping to "break" royal tradition in May by having her mother walk her down the aisle at Windsor Castle instead of her father. More from AOL.com: Pregnant Kate Middleton attends church with Prince William & sister Pippa: Pics Queen Elizabeth's granddaughter expecting another royal baby Queen Elizabeth shares memories of her 1953 coronation to mark 65th Anniversary Meghan Markle sure does love her neutrals! Prince Harry and his fiancee attended their second engagement as a couple on Tuesday at a 24-hour underground music radio station, the only one in the UK presented by people under 25 years old. For the occasion, Meghan kept it classy in a neutral ensemble -- a grey Smythe coat, black Burberry trousers and a matching sweater by Marks & Spencer. She accessorized with several dainty rings on her fingers alongside her stunner of an engagement ring which includes stones from Princess Diana's personal collection. The former "Suits" actress kept her makeup light and her long brunette tresses in a low chignon bun, with the latter getting mixed reviews. Some called the hairstyle "relatable" while others called it "too messy." Prince Harry was rocking his own neutral look -- a pair of black trousers, white button-down shirt underneath a grey sweater and an olive-hued wool coat from Club Monaco. The two were all smiles as they entered the venue, showing PDA in the form of holding hands and linking arms. The appearance comes following the couple's getaway to Monaco to ring in the New Year. Just days before, Harry and Meghan spent Christmas in Sandringham. For the momentous occasion, Meghan pulled out all the stops in the fashion department for Christmas morning mass in a wrap camel coat from Canadian luxury brand Sentaler. She polished off the look with a chestnut brown hat, Stuart Weitzman boots and a Chloe handbag. Check out the slideshow above for more on Harry and Meghan! On Tuesday, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle stepped out for the first time together in 2018, which also happened to be just their second official appearance together since announcing their engagement in November. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle step out together for their second official appearance since their engagement. (Photo: Getty Images) The pair visited Reprezent Radio in Brixton, London, which, according to Kensington Palace, holds a training program in radio and broadcasting that supports people under the age of 25. It was established in 2008 in response to a rise in knife-related crimes in South London and is designed to help teenagers gain skills ahead of employment. Bustling crowds began to gather hours ahead of the couples visit, with many holding signs reading Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, Brixton loves you. And royal fans were certainly not disappointed, as the couple was greeted by excited screams. Just six weeks after announcing that theyre set to tie the knot in May, Harry and Markle have been quick to embrace charity work together, and upon arrival, they met with the CEO of the radio station, Shane Carey. In the On Air studio, Prince Harry and Ms. Markle meet presenter Glory as she records her show for @ReprezentRadio. pic.twitter.com/72HjEQpAjv Kensington Palace (@KensingtonRoyal) January 9, 2018 Prince Harry and Ms. Markle chat to young people on the @ReprezentRadio programme about their experiences, and how Reprezent has helped them to develop important skills. pic.twitter.com/zKtJTEZ7g4 Kensington Palace (@KensingtonRoyal) January 9, 2018 For the occasion, Markle wore one of her go-to coats by Canadian label Smythe. She also demonstrated her desire to test out British brands, as she also wore a $60 sweater from Marks & Spencer (that surprisingly isnt sold out yet!). The 36-year-old finished off the ensemble with wide-leg Burberry trousers that retail for $650 and a scarf by Jigsaw (which, funny enough, is where Kate Middleton worked as a buyer before becoming a member of the royal family). Story continues While Markle typically has her hair blown out in loose waves or styled straight, she changed things up by pulling it back in a messy bun. Reactions to the casual style were mixed, with some calling it relatable and others calling it too messy. Unofficial critique of Meghan Markle's style: I like the outfit, even the bulky scarf, but please tidy the hair it's a tad too messy https://t.co/3mw4E18g69 WriteRoyalty (@WriteRoyalty) January 9, 2018 I'm already jealous of #MeghanMarkle's effortless bun. Seriously, nothing is harder than putting your hair in a bun and making it look like you didn't spend half an hour on it. Cate Dashwood (@catedashwood) January 9, 2018 Thank you, #MeghanMarkle, for wearing your hair in a messy bun today. Next time my mum will complain about my hairdo, Ill just tell her Im pulling a Meghan. Rebecca Brambilla (@beckybrambilla) January 9, 2018 I LOVE the fact Meghan Markle is doing official royal events with her hair in a messy bun. I know it's just hair, but it feels so much more relatable/less stuffy Coco's Tea Party (@cocosteaparty) January 9, 2018 Related Video: Read more from Yahoo Lifestyle: Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day. Oprahs Golden Globes speech included an inspiring tribute to Recy Taylor, who fought for justice after her 1944 rape. (Photo: Getty Images) Everyone is buzzing about Oprah Winfreys inspiring Golden Globes speech as the first black woman to accept the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement. And its subject, the late Recy Taylor, deserves much of the credit. On Sunday, the A Wrinkle in Time star delivered the rousing speech to a sea of audience members wearing black, an act of solidarity to protest sexual harassment. The dress code was organized in the wake of the #MeToo movement, sparked by allegations that Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein and other famous men targeted dozens of women. Winfrey commended the media for its insatiable dedication to uncovering the absolute truth that keeps us from turning a blind eye to corruption and to injustice. And theres someone else, Recy Taylor, a name I know and I think you should know too, said Winfrey. In 1944, Recy Taylor was a young wife and mother walking home from a church service shed attended in Abbeville, Ala., when she was abducted by six armed white men, raped, and left blindfolded by the side of the road coming home from church. They threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone, but her story was reported to the NAACP, where a young worker by the name of Rosa Parks became the lead investigator on her case and together they sought justice. But justice wasnt an option in the era of Jim Crow. Recy Taylor, who was raped nearly seven decades ago by a gang of white men as she walked home from church, was photographed in her Florida home in 2010. (Photo: AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File) She continued, The men who tried to destroy her were never [prosecuted]. Recy Taylor died 10 days ago, just shy of her 98th birthday. She lived, as we all have lived, too many years in a culture broken by brutally powerful men. For too long, women have not been heard or believed if they dare speak the truth to the power of those men. But their time is up. Their time is up. Winfrey was referencing Times Up, a new Hollywood-backed initiative that established a multi-million-dollar legal defense fund to help underprivileged women to report sexual crimes. In September 1944, Taylor was only 24 when she was kidnapped at knife- and gunpoint, gang-raped, blindfolded, and discarded on the side of the road by six white men while walking home with a friend and her 18-year-old son, West. Despite the mens threats to kill Taylor if she reported them, the young mom did just that an incredibly brave move in the Jim Crow era, a slang term to describe a period of time marked by racial segregation. Story continues Jim Crow laws were established in the 1890s by Southern states that required black people to abide by humiliating and degrading rules, such as using separate water fountains and sitting in colored sections of restaurants, buses, and libraries. Black people were not allowed to vote, attend the same schools as whites, or in some states marry a person of another race. So for Taylor, a black woman, to report a crime against herself and by a group of white men, to a justice system where black people often faced all-white juries, took an incredible amount of courage and fortitude. Recy Taylor visited the White House in 2011, nearly seven decades after she was denied justice following a violent assault. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) According to the Congressional Record, no arrests were made, so the NAACP in Alabama took on Taylors case, assigning it to a woman named Rosa Parks, who more than a decade later would become a famous civil rights leader by getting arrested for refusing to give her seat to a white man on a Montgomery bus. Parks organized the Alabama Committee for Equal Justice for Mrs. Recy Taylor, supported by fellow activists W.E.B. DuBois and Langston Hughes, which prompted a second investigation and a confession from one of the men but no convictions. In 2011, when Taylor was 91 and living in Florida, the state of Alabama issued an apology to her for neglecting her case, in response to publicity from the book At the Dark End of the Street: Black Women, Rape, and Resistance a New History of the Civil Rights Movement From Rosa Parks to the Rise of Black Power by historian Danielle L. McGuire. Taylors younger brother Robert Corbitt of Abbeville said he remembers the day his sister was raped 67 years ago like it was yesterday, saying the police tried to blame his sister, and the family was harassed so that he was not allowed to play in the front yard, according to the House Joint Resolution, which called the event a deplorable lack of justice. The document also read, Be it further resolved, that we express our deepest sympathies and solemn regrets to Recy Taylor and her family and friends. I never lived in a way that nobody cared about my feelings, Taylor told The Root a few months later at a D.C. event called Reintroducing Rosa, which honored Parks for her work in Taylors case. I never lived that kind of life, but I always wanted it. Now I believe that a lot of people care about me, and that makes me feel good. Of the apology, Taylor further told The Root, I was proud to hear that they [apologized]. But I cant explain just how I feel right now. I find myself getting nervous talking about it too much because it gets me disturbed, thinking about what happened. But I felt good over the apology. According to an obituary published by the New York Times, Taylor died three weeks after the release of the documentary The Rape of Recy Taylor. I just hope that Recy Taylor died knowing that her truth, like the truth of so many other women who were tormented in those years, and even now tormented, goes marching on, said Winfrey on Sunday. It was somewhere in Rosa Parkss heart almost 11 years later, when she made the decision to stay seated on that bus in Montgomery, and its here with every woman who chooses to say, Me too. And every man every man who chooses to listen. Read more from Yahoo Lifestyle: Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day. A whale saved a diver from a shark, and the whole thing was caught on video Swimming with whales is a pretty sweet job, and for whale biologist Nan Hauser its just a day in the life. But a video surfaced of something utterly out of the ordinary a whale saved her from a shark. As in, Hauser was protected by the very creature that she works so hard to protect. As Hauser was snorkeling for research in the Cook Islands, she was approached by a 15-foot tiger shark. The 50,000 pound humpback whale she was swimming with sensed the danger and tucked Hauser under his fin, shielding her from the shark and even lifting her out of the water at one point. Hauser also later told the U.K. paper The Mirror that there was another whale out of the shot slapping the water with its tail to divert the shark. The incident occurred back in October, and Hauser said that initially she didnt realize a shark was in her vicinity and thought it was another whale coming to play. She said being rescued by the 63-year-old humpback was like being saved by a fireman willing to sacrifice his life by running into a burning house. Hauser says this is proof that whales are naturally intuitive, a fact that she has longed to capture on film in her 28 years as a whale biologist. Not only that, but she also told The Mirror that theyre willing to risk their lives for other species. Thankfully, Hauser can now continue to protect the animals that literally have her back. The ad has been replaced with just a photo of the hoodie. By Lola Jacobs Everyone has to stop and wonder whether the progress alluded to since the civil rights movement is a fallacy when a major fashion retailer can release an ad featuring the reported comparison of a black boy to a monkey amid the enlightenment of the 21st century. This weekend, an ad circulated the internet after Stockholm-based retailer H&M posted a photo of a black child wearing a coolest monkey in the jungle hoodie to their U.K. site. The ad was only removed after the company received backlash from multiple media outlets and social media users across the West. To twist the knife, the dark advertisement was accompanied by a white child in a hoodie from the same line that read mangrove jungle survival expert and another white child in an animal-patterned hoodie with no print. The event is a PR nightmare to say the very least. In the year 2018 theres no way brands/art directors can be this negligent and lack awareness. If look at other sweaters in same category they have white kids. We have to do better. pic.twitter.com/Av4bS4t6yn alex medina (@mrmedina) January 8, 2018 H&M Spokeswoman Anna Eriksson eventually issued an apology to the Daily News after what may as well be coercion. This image has now been removed from all H&M channels and we apologize to anyone this may have offended, she said. Story continues They managed a haphazard apology. But the company has yet to acknowledge the ineptitude of such a decision external to public response, begging the question of whether there is any internal representation. We like to believe that everyone has a modicum of knowledge regarding simianization, a comparison that most are aware of but understand to be a past phenomenon, not to be perpetuated by a major retailer in the present. Many platforms chalked the error up to unawareness or lack of education on the subject but that excuse can no longer suffice. The mistake was careless. Perhaps, the topic ought to be revisited in boardrooms as H&M is not the first and probably not the last company to go public with such negligence. In April of last year, Nivea came under fire for a White is Purity advertisement, posted to their Middle East Facebook Page. And that was hardly their first offense. Later in the year, the repeat offender received backlash for advertising their body wash with the text, For Visibly Fairer Skin in countries like Nigeria, Cameroon, Senegal, and Ghana. In October, Dove removed and apologized for an ad after it was deemed racist. The company, emphasizing the cleanliness offered by its body wash, showed a black woman removing a layer and becoming a white woman. New York Times columnist Charles Blow took to tweeting the company directly, writing @hm Have you lost your damned minds?!?!?! And he spoke for an entire set of people. The picture has since been replaced with just the hoodie. This post H&M Removes Controversial Ad Of Black Boy Wearing Coolest Monkey In The Jungle Hoodie first appeared on Vibe. A rooftop fire at President Donald Trumps Trump Tower in New York City injured a firefighter and a civilian Monday morning, officials said. The New York City Fire Department responded to the electrical blaze around 7 a.m., FDNY spokesman Frank Dwyer told HuffPost. Trump was in Washington at the time. Injuries were non-life-threatening, and the blaze was declared under control by 8:15 a.m., Dwyer said. More than 70 firefighters responded to the fire a standard number for a blaze on the roof of a high-rise building, he said. The fire started in the buildings rooftop HVAC system, the FDNY tweeted. The cause wasnt immediately determined. Trumps son, Eric, characterized the blaze as small, and said it started in a cooling tower. There was a small electrical fire in a cooling tower on the roof of Trump Tower. The New York Fire Department was here within minutes and did an incredible job. The men and women of the #FDNY are true heroes and deserve our most sincere thanks and praise! https://t.co/xuTmq1GBbj Eric Trump (@EricTrump) January 8, 2018 Trump tower on fire! pic.twitter.com/lUnpkc219J Susan D. Ball (@SusanSball4) January 8, 2018 This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. By Philip Pullella ROME (Reuters) - Nearly 170 people, including mayors, businessmen and local administrators, were arrested on Tuesday in a large anti-mafia blitz in Italy and Germany against clan members who controlled restaurants, garbage collection and funeral services. Police and investigators told a news conference that most of the arrests, which totalled 169 by early afternoon, were carried out in the southern Italian region of Calabria, base of the 'Ndrangheta crime group. More could be apprehended, they said. In recent years the 'Ndrangheta has overtaken the Cosa Nostra, or Sicilian mob, in drugs and arms trafficking and extortion rackets, extending its tentacles into northern Europe, the United States and Canada. In Germany, police also arrested about a dozen men, as part of the same operation, on suspicion of blackmail, attempted murder, money laundering and other organised crime offences. Police searched six apartments and four restaurants in Germany and confiscated cash, mobile phones, documents and storage devices, they said. Investigators said the clans of the Farao and Marincola families, based in the Calabrian city of Ciro Marina, had infiltrated businesses in both countries, particularly firms involved in wine, food, garbage collection and funeral services. At least three Italian mayors were arrested, including the mayor of Ciro Marina, as well as a number of city councillors. The clan members forced restaurants to buy meat, fish, wine and other produce from complicit retailers or wholesalers associated with the mob. The farmers' group Coldiretti estimates that at least 5,000 restaurants in Italy are in criminal hands and that the so-called "agro-mafia" business, including harvesting and distribution, is worth about 21.8 billion euros a year. The clans also took control of some private garbage collection and recycling companies as well as funeral services, forcing people to use them instead of others. In at least one case, investigators found links between the 'Ndrangheta and managers of a government-financed migrant shelter on the Calabrian coast. Most of the tens of thousands of migrants who have made the dangerous crossing of the Mediterranean from North Africa to Europe land first in Sicily but many are later moved to shelters on the mainland, including Calabria. Arrests were also made in several regions of central and northern Italy. Eurojust, the Netherlands-based group that helps coordinate investigations and prosecutions of cross-border crime in the European Union, said in a statement that some of the Italian food producers were used as front companies to launder illicit profits made through other criminal activities. There are believed to be about 100 Ndrangheta families in Calabria, and they have become more successful than their Sicilian counterparts because their family ties are closer. The 'Ngrangheta's more horizontal structure - which gives families more independence - has made it harder for investigators to crack than the Sicilian mob, which is based on a hierarchical structure with fewer top bosses. (Additional reporting by Thomas Escritt in Berlin,; Editing by Gareth Jones) Los Angeles (AFP) - The Golden Globes on Sunday honored television shows tackling the abuse of women, with "Big Little Lies," a mini-series that highlights domestic violence, and the dystopian "The Handmaid's Tale" the night's big winners. The Emmy-winning "Big Little Lies" -- which stars Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon and Shailene Woodley as three California mothers hiding huge secrets -- earned the Globe for best TV movie or limited series. It also took home a trio of acting awards -- best actress for Kidman as an abused wife, best supporting actor for Alexander Skarsgard as her violent husband and supporting actress for Laura Dern, who plays a mother trying to find out who is bullying her daughter. The HBO series, directed by Canada's Jean-Marc Vallee, was conceived as a seven-episode adaptation of Liane Moriarty's best-selling novel, but has been renewed for a second season after taking home eight Emmys in September. It aired amid a growing societal focus on the treatment of women as the #MeToo movement gathered force following revelations of chronic sexual harassment by Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein and others. "This character that I played represents something that is the center of our conversation right now -- abuse," Kidman said as she accepted her fourth Golden Globe. "I do believe, and I hope, we can elicit change through the stories we tell and the way we tell them. Let's keep the conversation alive," she said. Skarsgard, a veteran Swedish actor who won his first Golden Globe, saluted Kidman on stage. "Nicole, I love you. Thank you for making this the greatest experience of my career," he said. - More acclaim for 'Handmaid's Tale' - "The Handmaid's Tale," a series about a misogynistic authoritarian regime that takes control amid a fertility crisis, won in the separate category of best television drama series with its star Elisabeth Moss taking best actress. Story continues It was the latest victory for the series of on-demand service Hulu, which won five Emmys. Moss paid tribute to Margaret Atwood, whose book was the basis for the series. "This is for you and the women who came before you and after you who were brave enough to speak out against intolerance and injustice and to fight for equality and freedom in this world," Moss said. "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel," an Amazon Studios series about a woman who becomes an unlikely stand-up comedian after splitting with her husband, won best comedy or musical series, and its star Rachel Brosnahan won best actress. "This is a story about a bold and brilliant and complicated woman, and I'm endlessly proud to be a part of it. But there are so many women's stories out there that need and deserve to be told," Brosnahan said. Aziz Ansari won his first Golden Globe for best actor in a comedy for "Master of None," his series about the adventures of a struggling New York actor. "I genuinely didn't think I would win because all the websites said I was going to lose," Ansari said. Updated Jan. 9 4:40 p.m PT to reflect new death toll. The rains have finally come to Southern California after months of bone dry weather and multiple wildfires, but they're not helping the previously parched state. In fact, the deluge has created treacherous conditions in several regions, sparking evacuation orders in Santa Barbara, Ventura, and Los Angeles counties and leaving at least 13 people dead. SEE ALSO: Thomas Fire becomes largest blaze in California history, during state's worst fire year A combination of heavy rain and scarred vegetation after last fall's huge blazes have created mudslides in a number of places. Montecito was one of the worst hit regions, with many homes simply washed away. #CAstorm- Scene from the 300 block of Hot Springs Road in Montecito following debris and mud flow due to heavy rain. pic.twitter.com/L8KkHdlQVQ SBCFireInfo (@EliasonMike) January 9, 2018 Driver becomes stuck in flooded road on N Jameson Ln along 101 fwy #montecito that washed down car, debris across all lanes. @CBSLA @NWSLosAngeles pic.twitter.com/JDMxCeHLnZ JASMINE VIEL (@jasmineviel) January 9, 2018 The destruction this #CAstorm left is unbelievable. This is #Montecito along East Valley Road and also along Olive Mill Rd. #CAwx pic.twitter.com/mRfx2oj0ZG Fabiola Ramirez (@_FabRamirez) January 9, 2018 The 101 freeway, which leads north from LA into Santa Barbara County, was closed north of Ventura an area hit hard by last year's Thomas Fire. Some lanes on the infamous 405 near the Getty Center in LA were also closed due to a mud and rock slide. Cars in the region were seen caked up to their rims in sludge. Story continues Unbelievable. This the 101 North in Montecito/Summerland. Completely blocked with mud. #CAStorm : Joyce Dudley-Santa Barbara County DA pic.twitter.com/49BubOFvkp Joe Buttitta (@KEYTNC3Joe) January 9, 2018 Firefighters, meanwhile, shared images of dramatic rescues, including the safe removal of a 14-year-old girl from a collapsed home and another young person from a wide mudslide. #CAstorm- Firefighters successfully rescued a 14 yr old girl (right) after she was trapped for hours inside a destroyed home in Montecito. pic.twitter.com/QawiGpYbWu SBCFireInfo (@EliasonMike) January 9, 2018 #CAStorm - Firefighters rescue a girl who was trapped in Montecito following heavy rain and mudflow in the 300 block of Hot Springs Road. pic.twitter.com/tfUw0cDbXx SBCFireInfo (@EliasonMike) January 9, 2018 Radar images posted by the Los Angeles National Weather Service on Tuesday morning showed more rain showers organizing on the coast near the Thomas Fire area, which could exacerbate an already tough situation. Current radar shows an area of rain showers organizing along the south coast, heading near #TomasFire area. #CAwx #CAStorm pic.twitter.com/KZZvOtlnrI NWS Los Angeles (@NWSLosAngeles) January 9, 2018 Steady rain is ending, but threat of showers and thunderstorms with brief moderate to heavy rain will remain through the day - especially this afternoon. Flooding threat remains. #cawx #larain #CArain pic.twitter.com/VKqL4DTj7M NWS Los Angeles (@NWSLosAngeles) January 9, 2018 The National Weather Service outpost in Los Angeles says more showers will hit the Santa Barbara area throughout Tuesday. Lawyers for the author and publisher of an explosive new book on President Donald Trump issued a letter Monday to the presidents attorney, refusing to cease publication. Fire and Fury author Michael Wolff gained enormous national attention last week after it came to light that his book included startling comments from former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon. In an interview with Wolff, Bannon said that a June 2016 meeting in New Yorks Trump Tower between Donald Trump Jr. and Kremlin-linked Russian operatives was treasonous. Bannon also implied the elder Trump was aware of the appointment at the time, something the president has denied. Bannon has since backpedaled on his interview after losing the admiration of his supporters. Trumps attorney, Charlie Harder, issued cease-and-desist letters last week to Bannon, Wolff and publisher Henry Holt. The letters only spurred the early release of Fire and Fury, which sold out rapidly once available in bookstores. Holt and Wolffs attorney, Elizabeth McNamara, replied to Trumps attorney in a letter Monday that denounced the presidents attempt to silence critics with an unsubstantiated threat of a libel suit. My clients do not intend to cease publication, no such retraction will occur, and no apology is warranted, McNamara wrote in a letter obtained by HuffPost. Though your letter provides a basic summary of New York libel law, tellingly, it stops short of identifying a single statement in the book that is factually false or defamatory, the letter continued. Instead, the letter seems designed to silence legitimate criticism. Trumps cease-and-desist letter to Wolff and Holt mentioned the obligations for the publisher and author to retain any documents regarding the book and the 200 interviews Wolff conducted in his research. McNamaras letter issues a similar warning to the presidents lawyer. We must remind you that President Trump, in his personal and governmental capacity, must comply with the same legal obligations regarding himself, his family members, their businesses, the Trump campaign and his administration, and must ensure all appropriate measure to preserve such documents are in place, her letter read. Story continues McNamara continued by saying that in the event of a lawsuit, such documents would prove particularly relevant to our defense. Fire and Fury contains several troubling and incendiary claims that have put the Trump administration on the defense. In addition to Bannons Russia comments, Wolff reported on doubts surrounding Trumps leadership abilities and mental capacity. Trump, for his part, spent days on Twitter denouncing Wolff as the author of a phony book and defending himself as a very stable genius. Also on HuffPost Trump throws rolls of paper towels into a crowd of Puerto Rico residents affected by Hurricane Maria as he visits Calgary Chapel in San Juan on Oct. 3. Trump reacts as he sits in a truck on March 23 while welcoming truckers and CEOs to attend a meeting at the White House regarding health care. Trump registers his surprise as he realizes other leaders, including Russia's Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, President of the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte and Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, are crossing their arms for the traditional "ASEAN handshake" as he participates in the opening ceremony of the ASEAN Summit in Manila, Philippines, on Nov. 13. Trump, along with first lady Melania Trump, Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, put their hands on an illuminated globe during the inauguration ceremony of the Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on May 21. Trump looks up toward the solar eclipse while standing on the Truman Balcony at the White House on Aug. 21. Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May are pictured ahead of a photo opportunity of leaders as they arrive for a NATO summit meeting in Brussels, Belgium, on May 25. Trump boards Air Force One to depart for Vietnam from Beijing, China, on Nov. 10. Trump holds up a pen after signing the HBCU executive order in the Oval Office of the White House on Feb. 28. Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel wait for reporters to enter the room before their meeting in the Oval Office on March 17. Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their bilateral meeting at the G20 summit in Hamburg, Germany, on July 7. Trump welcomes 11-year-old Frank Giaccio to the White House on Sept. 15. Frank, who wrote a letter to Trump offering to mow the White House lawn, was invited to work for a day along the National Park Service staff. Trump and Putin shake hands as they take part in a family photo at the APEC summit in Danang, Vietnam, on Nov. 10. Trump jokes with French President Emmanuel Macron about their handshakes at the start of the NATO summit at their new headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on May 25. Trump holds a mechanical tool as he attends a Made in America roundtable in the East Room of the White House on July 19. Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. The publisher of Michael Wolffs explosive expose on the Trump White House has called the Presidents attempt to stop publication of the book unconstitutional. In an email to all employees on Monday morning, Macmillan CEO John Sargent recapped the timing of last weeks demand from President Trump that the publisher cancel its plans to put out Michael Wolffs Fire and Fury. Instead, Macmillan pushed up publication to the following day, four days earlier than initially planned. The book has since gone on to top bestseller charts, selling out at many retailers. Sargent wrote to his staff to emphasize the importance of the decision to move ahead with publication. The President is free to call news fake and to blast the media, he wrote. That goes against convention, but it is not unconstitutional. But a demand to cease and desist publication a clear effort by the President of the United States to intimidate a publisher into halting publication of an important book on the workings of the government is an attempt to achieve what is called prior restraint. That is something that no American court would order as it is flagrantly unconstitutional. Sargent went on to detail Supreme Court cases that support his argument, including the Pentagon Papers case, in which Justice Hugo Black wrote, The press was to serve the governed, not the governors. The Governments power to censor the press was abolished so that the press would remain forever free to censure the Government. We will not allow any President to achieve by intimidation what our Constitution precludes him or her from achieving in court, Sargent wrote. We need to respond strongly for Michael Wolff and his book, but also for all authors and all their books, now and in the future. And as citizens we must demand that President Trump understand and abide by the First Amendment of our Constitution. Macmillan plans to send its formal legal response to Trump later on Monday. The most recent episode of Star Trek: Discovery totally changed the shows status quo, and things are looking very uncertain for Michael Burnham and the rest of the crew. But, in the real world, things are looking just as uncertain for the next Star Trek movie, now that its looking like Quentin Tarantino will actually make an R-rated Star Trek. Chris Hemsworth, who played Kirks dad in the first of the new Trek movies, was supposed to come back for the fourth film in the series, thanks to time travel, but now hes not so sure. Hemsworth, who is best known for playing Thor in Marvels Cinematic Universe, played George Kirk, the Starfleet officer who heroically sacrificed himself to save the fleeing crew of the USS Kelvin in the first scene of 2009s Star Trek. In 2016, shortly before Star Trek: Beyond hit theaters, the studios behind the new movies released a statement teasing that the next movie would reunite father and son thanks to time travel. In the next installment of the epic space adventure, Chris Pines Captain Kirk will cross paths with a man he never had a chance to meet, but whose legacy has haunted him since the day he was born: his father, the press release explained. In December of 2016, Beyond screenwriters Simon Pegg and Doug Jung teased they were writing the script for the fourth movie. But, a month later, in January 2017, Hemsworth said he was unsure if the time travel plot involving him would actually happen, though he said J.J. Abramss pitch was amazing. Now, almost exactly a year later, and things are looking murkier than ever, especially now that Tarantino seems poised to take over the series with an R-rated movie. While speaking to IGN, Hemsworth once again said he wasnt sure if the fourth move would involve a time-traveling George Kirk. I dont know. Its a reminder to call J.J. and ask the same question because I havent heard any updates on it either, he explained. Just the fact that he had a way of reinserting the character into the world. I cant say too much theres not even a script but I always thought, maybe, there was a possibility of him coming back in some way, Hemsworth continued, once again saying that the plan for the possibly canned film sounded great. I didnt know how or what, but he was pretty enthusiastic about what they had planned. Story continues Its unclear if Tarantinos proposed movie would have a connection to the existing Star Trek films, to say nothing of whether or not it would incorporate the time travel plot. Written by James Grebey More articles by James Follow James on Twitter tweetshare More From Inverse Right-wing firebrand Steve Bannons rapid fall from grace continued Tuesday as he was removed from his post at the head of the Breitbart News media organization. Breitbart CEO Larry Solov said in a statement on the organizations website: Steve is a valued part of our legacy, and we will always be grateful for his contributions, and what he has helped us to accomplish. Bannon, in the same post, said he was proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplished in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform. Just a year ago, Bannon was a newly installed senior adviser to then President-elect Trump, having joined Trumps campaign in the summer of 2016. He was characterized for much of the first few months of Trumps presidency as the brains behind the president, and was lampooned on Saturday Night Live as the Grim Reaper who told Trump what to do. Steve Bannon. (Photo: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) But the image of Bannon as the real president infuriated Trump, according to multiple reports, and undermined Bannons influence in the White House. He left in August and immediately returned to Breitbart, which he first took over in 2012, not long after the death of its founder, Andrew Breitbart. Bannon was regarded by the press as a powerful figure, and he moved quickly to demonstrate that he could have a real impact on events by throwing his support behind Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore. Moore defeated Sen. Luther Strange in a late September special election primary, just days after Trump campaigned for Strange. And yet Bannon described himself as fighting to uphold and strengthen the Trump presidency. Moores candidacy, however, was the first major step in Bannons undoing. Allegations of molesting teenage girls sunk the Republican, who lost to Democrat Doug Jones on Dec. 12. And then last week Bannons comments to author Michael Wolff leaked out ahead of the publication of Wolffs book. Trump was said to be incensed by Bannons characterization of the 2016 meeting in Trump Tower between Trump campaign aides and family members, including Donald Trump Jr., and a representative of the Russian government, as treasonous. Story continues President Trump with former national security adviser Michael Flynn and senior adviser Steve Bannon. (Photo: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) A few days afterward, Bannons chief financial patron, Rebekah Mercer, announced that she and her family were no longer providing money to Bannon. My family and I have not communicated with Steve Bannon in many months and have provided no financial support to his political agenda, nor do we support his recent actions and statements, she said. Rumors of Bannons ouster from Breitbart began circulating not long after. Also on Tuesday, Sirius XM radio said it was ending Bannons daily radio show. Breitbart News has decided to end its relationship with Stephen K. Bannon, therefore he will no longer host on SiriusXM since our programming agreement is with Breitbart News, the company said in a statement. Bannon did not respond to a question, sent by text message, about his future plans. Read more from Yahoo News: By Estelle Shirbon LONDON (Reuters) - The BBC's China Editor Carrie Gracie has quit her post in Beijing to fight for her right to pay equality with male peers, posting an attack on what she called the "secretive and illegal BBC pay culture". Gracie's revolt is part of the fallout from pay disclosures the British broadcaster was forced to make last July, which showed that two thirds of the highest earners on air were men, and that some of them were earning far more than women in equivalent roles. Funded by a licence fee levied on TV viewers and reaching 95 percent of British adults every week, the BBC is a pillar of the nation's life, but as such it is closely scrutinised and held to exacting standards by the public and rival media. Gracie's stand was one of the top news headlines of the day on the BBC itself and on other British media, and many prominent women from the BBC and beyond voiced their support on social media under the slogan #IStandWithCarrie. Gracie, who speaks fluent Mandarin and has reported on China for three decades, has not left the BBC. She said she was returning to her former post in the TV newsroom in London where she expected to be paid equally to men in equal jobs. "I am not asking for more money. I believe I am very well paid already -- especially as someone working for a publicly funded organisation. I simply want the BBC to abide by the law and value men and women equally," she wrote on her website. Gracie said she was paid 135,000 pounds ($182,800) a year as China editor. According to last July's disclosures, North America Editor Jon Sopel earned between 200,000 and 250,000 pounds a year, while Middle East Editor Jeremy Bowen was in the 150,000 to 200,000 bracket. Europe editor Katya Adler, the BBC's only other female editor in foreign news, did not feature in the disclosures, meaning her pay was less than 150,000 pounds. Gracie said managers had offered to increase her pay to 180,000 pounds, but that was no solution. She rejected the rise and insisted that all four of the BBC's international editors should receive equal pay. Story continues "I was not interested in more money. I was interested in equality," she said during an interview on BBC radio. Britain enacted legislation outlawing sex discrimination in the 1970s and this was followed by an equality act in 2010, but women still earn less than men across much of the economy. "ENOUGH IS ENOUGH" The BBC defended itself by saying its gender pay gap was below the national average and less bad than at many other organisations, adding that it was committed to wiping it out by 2020. It also said an independent audit of rank and file staff had found "no systemic discrimination against women" at the BBC. Several high-profile women seized on the Gracie story to say the problem was much bigger than the BBC and affected the whole of society. "Tip of the iceberg in @BBC & most other orgs (organisations). Equality Act 2010 means no hiding place for shameful discrimination against women. Ending it long overdue," wrote prominent lawmaker Harriet Harman of the opposition Labour Party, a long-time advocate of women's equality, on Twitter. As in many other countries, pay inequality based on gender has been a persistent problem in Britain, which by some measures has performed worse than comparable European countries in recent years. Britain was ranked 15th in the World Economic Forum's global gender gap index 2017, below France and Germany. But Gracie said her complaint was not about the gender pay gap the BBC admits to, which stems from men earning more on average because they do more of the best paid jobs. "It is men earning more in the same jobs or jobs of equal value. It is pay discrimination and it is illegal," she said. Gracie accused the BBC of adopting a botched "divide and rule" response to the legitimate anger of female staff, offering pay rises to some women while locking down others in a protracted complaints process. In her own case, the process had been "dismayingly incompetent and undermining", she said. "Enough is enough. The rise of China is one of the biggest stories of our time and one of the hardest to tell," she wrote, citing Chinese state censorship, surveillance, police harassment and official intimidation. "I cannot do it justice while battling my bosses and a byzantine complaints process." ($1 = 0.7384 pounds) (Additional reporting by Michael Martina in Beijing; editing by David Stamp) Shenyang (China) (AFP) - While North and South Korean officials hold rare talks this week, in a bustling Korea town in northeast China the rival communities have little to say to each other. Although their nations are separated by a heavily militarised border, North and South Korean restaurants operate side by side in Xita, the Korean neighbourhood in the city of Shenyang. Billboards and signs in Korean script hang across the area, which boasts South Korean beer and fried chicken joints, cosmetics counters and clothing stores. But North Korean businesses now face a Tuesday deadline to clear out as China enforces United Nations sanctions banning their presence following Pyongyang's nuclear and missile tests. After months of tensions that raised fears of nuclear warfare, North and South Korean officials will hold their first dialogue for more than two years on Tuesday. But in this corner of China, relations between Koreans are tense and show no signs of thawing. "We're one ethnicity, a big family, but they have a different way of thinking than us," said a North Korean waitress who works at the Pyongyang Rungrado restaurant. She has lived in Xita for three years but has never spoken to a South Korean. She declined to give her name. Across the street, the owner of a South Korean restaurant called Number 8 Storeroom said she has never had any contact with the owners of the two North Korean eateries near her establishment. "I don't want to talk to them," said Jin Meihua, 43, whose restaurant serves eel and steak barbecue to a mostly Chinese clientele. - Caught in the middle - Shenyang, a city of 8.3 million, is not far from China's border with the North and houses many of China's ethnic Koreans. In recent years it became a destination for North Koreans privileged enough to travel overseas. North Korean eateries and small hotels popped up to feed and lodge them. South Korean boutiques became popular for shopping. Story continues But both sides of Shenyang's Korea town have become ensnared in international disputes. South Korean businesses took a major financial hit after China imposed punitive economic measures on Seoul over its decision to host the THAAD US anti-missile defence system, which Beijing sees as a threat to its own security. "The whole area is in a slump," said Lu Chao, director of the Border Studies Institute at the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences in Shenyang. "Last year there was the THAAD issue with South Korea. Then North Korea created problems with its nuclear testing. Chinese have lost interest in spending their money in Xita." Many South Koreans packed up and went home as their businesses failed, locals say. "Things haven't been good since then," said 27-year old Jin Zhenyou, an ethnic Korean waiter at a South Korean restaurant. The North's own dining establishments are likely to be hard hit by dwindling visitors and a blanket order from China's commerce ministry to shut down North Korean businesses by Tuesday. Some estimates put their number at around 100 across China. In Xita, only one has apparently closed so far and waitresses at other establishments said they had no plans to close come Tuesday. - Socialists vs capitalists - China's ethnic Koreans could bridge the divide between the two sides, but even they say making friends with North Koreans can be difficult. "They don't like South Koreans. They won't eat in our restaurants. There's no overlap at all," Jin said. With the shifting geopolitical situation now hitting the North, South Koreans say they won't be sad to see them go. South Koreans and North Koreans "don't share any special relationship", said a man surnamed Gong at the local Korea Society in Shenyang. The citizens "don't hold any events for building friendly relations, they don't know each other and don't communicate with each other," Gong said. In 2016 the South Korean embassy told citizens to avoid the North's restaurants for safety reasons, according to Chung Young-June, a scholar with the Institute for Sinology at Yonsei University. The government warning filtered into North Korean eateries, further straining relations between the neighbouring restaurant owners. "The South Korean government doesn't allow them to eat our food," said the North Korean restaurant waitress. She had no interest in speaking with South Koreans. "We are a socialist country, they are capitalist," she said. "We work for each other, we work hard for each other. They are all for themselves, earning for their own lives. We are not like this." By Jonathan Stempel NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire Ira Rennert has filed a $214 million malpractice lawsuit against his former law firm, after a jury found him liable for looting his magnesium company to build a huge mansion in New York's Hamptons. Renco Group Inc, Rennert's holding company, said neither it nor the mining mogul would have been liable had Kaye Scholer and partner Peter Haveles objected to faulty jury instructions that Rennert has said led to an "irrational" February 2015 verdict. The lawsuit, filed late on Monday in the state supreme court in Manhattan, may be the last chance for Rennert, 83, to avoid a big payout, after the U.S. Supreme Court in October rejected his appeal of the verdict and resulting $213.2 million judgment. Both had been upheld by the federal appeals court in Manhattan last March. "We will vigorously defend these allegations and we are confident that we have fulfilled our professional obligations," a spokeswoman for Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer, the successor firm to Kaye Scholer, said in an email on Tuesday. Haveles, now a partner at Pepper Hamilton, referred a reporter to his former firm. Rennert is worth $3.8 billion according to Forbes magazine, and has denied the looting allegations. His current lawyer, Steven Kaufman, did not respond to requests for comment on the lawsuit, which also seeks interest. The case arose from the 2001 bankruptcy of Magnesium Corp of America. Lee Buchwald, MagCorp's bankruptcy trustee, accused Rennert of diverting money from the now-defunct company to help build his 21-bedroom, 43,000-square-foot mansion known as Fair Field on 65 oceanfront acres in Sagaponack, on Long Island. The property was valued last March at $248.5 million, real estate records show. Jurors in Manhattan federal court found Rennert and Renco liable for $118 million to the MagCorp estate. The trial judge, Alison Nathan, later added interest. Rennert has long said the verdict made no sense because jurors thought MagCorp was solvent at the time of the alleged transfers. Story continues In Monday's complaint, Renco said its former lawyers wrongly failed to object both to jury instructions that led to the "inexplicably inconsistent" verdict, and to the jury's dismissal after the verdict was read. Had the lawyers spoken up, the jury would have announced a verdict "consistent with the 27 interrogatories it answered finding 27 separate times that the (Renco) subsidiaries were not insolvent or inadequately capitalized," Renco said. The case is Renco Group Inc v Kaye Scholer LLP et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 150184/2018. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Steve Orlofsky and Susan Thomas) Watch news, TV and more on Yahoo View. Black artists have stepped up to create new versions of a racist H&M ad after the brand drew criticism for a photo on its website. The original photo showed a black boy modeling a green hoodie reading coolest monkey in the jungle. The image drew ire on social media, with celebrities and activists denouncing the brand. Yo @HM you need to explain yourself. What the hell is this?https://t.co/YVAvjt0Nsdpic.twitter.com/jGGAPOLS6e alex medina (@mrmedina) January 8, 2018 The Weeknd announced he was ending of his partnership with the brand over the ad. Plies stepped in with a reaction video labeling H&M as shorthand for Horrible Merchandise. The Swedish company apologized for the ad, saying in a statement to NBC News that it is deeply sorry that the picture was taken. Amid the backlash, black celebrities and creatives have stepped up to do what they do best: turn a horrible situation into a reason to celebrate. They took to photoshop, sketchbooks and more to reimagine the boy in the photo with crowns and pure black boy joy. LeBron James posted a new version of the photo with a caption saying, in part, I see a Young King!! The ruler of the world, an untouchable Force that can never be denied! And Diddy joined in, posting on Twitter a reimagined image that in his words put some respect on it. See more of our favorite remixes of the H&M image below: A post shared by Chris Classic (@mrchrisclassic) on Jan 8, 2018 at 4:40am PST A post shared by Kervin Andre (@akomicsart) on Jan 8, 2018 at 7:56am PST A post shared by Kow (@kyle.yearwood) on Jan 8, 2018 at 10:38am PST A post shared by Mimicgawd (@mimicgawd) on Jan 7, 2018 at 8:29pm PST A post shared by Phresh Laundry (@thatlaundry) on Jan 8, 2018 at 8:37am PST A post shared by F is for Folasade (@lovefola) on Jan 8, 2018 at 3:14pm PST Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas son Dylan has reached an important academic milestone. The Cocaine Godmother star revealed to HOLA! TV at the 75th annual Golden Globes that her family is going through a "busy time" with her son's college applications. She said, Michael is with the children. I'm here with my brother. They are not babies anymore but my son is going through all the college applications. It's a very busy time for us." The 48-year-old actress, who shares son Dylan, 17, and daughter Carys, 14, with her husband often speaks about her children. Last year, during an appearance on the Today Show, Catherine confessed that she loves raising teenagers. "I kind of pre-empted the roll-your-eyes teenager years. I love it. I just love the freshness," she said. CLICK FOR GALLERY VIEW GALLERY Catherine revealed that her son is working on his college applications Photo: Instagram/catherinezetajones The mom-of-two added, "It's all so exciting to me I was working when I was my son's age. I was in the theater, and I look at him, and I go, 'Wow, I was working when I was your age.' So I'm just enjoying this time, learning a whole bunch of stuff that I didn't know." GALLERY: HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE 2018 GOLDEN GLOBES Catherine stunned at the 2018 Golden Globes on Sunday, January 7, wearing a black gown by Zuhair Murad that featured a plunging neckline and sheer detailing. During the awards show, the Welsh beauty joined her 101-year-old father-in-law Kirk Douglas on stage, where they were greeted with a standing ovation. MORE: Why stars wore black to the Golden Globes VIEW GALLERY The actress and her father-in-law presented at the 2018 Golden Globes Photo: Paul Drinkwater/NBCUniversal via Getty Images Before the pair presented the award for Best Screenplay, Catherine praised the Hollywood legend, telling the star-studded crowd: "In 1991 my father-in-law, this living Hollywood legend, Kirk, was recognized by the Writer's Guild Of America for his role in ending the Hollywood Blacklist." GALLERY: GOLDEN GLOBES 2018 RED CARPET FASHION She then told the audience how Kirk hired the screenwriter Dalton Trumbo to write iconic film Spartacus, and insisted his name appear as writer. A proud Kirk then told her: "Catherine, you said it all. I would have made a speech but I don't want to say it I could never follow you." On Dec. 24, Saudi Arabias foreign minister, Adel al-Jubeir, called together a delegation of Syrian opposition leaders to deliver a blunt message: Riyadh would be throttling back its military support for their efforts to overthrow Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad. It was time, Jubeir counseled, to devote their energies instead to securing a political deal with Damascus at a peace conference in January in Sochi, Russia, according to two opposition sources and two other diplomatic officials who described the meeting to Foreign Policy. If they were well prepared for Sochi, Jubeir argued, they would be in a better position to get an agreement on a political transition. (Saudi officials in New York and Washington did not respond to requests for comment.) Jubeirs appeals mark another reversal for Syrias beleaguered anti-Assad forces, who already lost the covert military backing of the United States in July. More important, the Saudi message underscores the success of Russias diplomatic push to shape the future of postwar Syria, which is quickly coming to rival the official, U.N.-led process that has sputtered along for five years in Geneva. Even the United Nations is now torn over whether to take part in Russias peace plan, with Staffan de Mistura, the U.N. special envoy for Syria, mounting a behind-the-scenes push to secure a seat at the table in Sochi and urging Saudi Arabia and the Syrian opposition to attend. Moscows growing diplomatic clout in the Syrian endgame has been made possible, in part, by Washingtons passivity. The Donald Trump administration has focused more on fighting the Islamic State and fending off Iran than on shaping the political future of the war-ravaged country. Syria is an example of how U.S. diplomacy is not front and center, one U.N. Security Council diplomat said. The U.S. has lost ground to Russia on that issue. Even if the United States wanted to play a bigger role in postwar Syria, its disengagement has weakened its ability to do so, said retired Marine Gen. John Allen, the former U.S. envoy for the anti-Islamic State coalition. Story continues In many respects, the political trajectory has been decided by the Russians, Allen said last month. And sadly, the United States has little capacity now to exert leadership in this process or to participate. Russias latest diplomatic drive began more than a year ago. In January 2017, the Russian government held talks in Astana, Kazakhstan, with Iranian and Turkish officials to work out a cease-fire; the United States was largely excluded from the process, which is ongoing. Now Moscow is planning to use a conference later this month at the Black Sea resort of Sochi to help determine the contours of Syrias political future which the Russians hope will include Assad. Russias diplomatic push worries many Western governments and Syrian opposition leaders. They fear the meeting will simply consolidate recent military gains by Russia and the Syrian government, perpetuate Assads brutal rule, and drive a new generation of Syrians into the insurgency. They also worry the Russian process will jettison some core parts of what was agreed in Geneva, such as a transitional government and a blueprint for life after Assad. Many critics charge that Russia, as a party to the conflict, cannot be an honest broker. There is no alternative to the Geneva process led by the U.N., Frances U.N. ambassador, Francois Delattre, told reporters late last month. There is no other game in town. More than 130 Syrian opposition groups, alarmed by the apparent willingness of de Mistura to take part in the Sochi talks, sent him a letter on Jan. 3 calling the negotiations a dangerous departure from the [U.N.-led] Geneva process and a serious threat to Syrias prospects for peace. The problem is that the Geneva process is starting to look less viable. Russias military assistance to the Assad regime has made Damascus less open to the idea of ceding power to a transitional government, a key element of the Geneva plan. And Washington is doing little to keep Geneva alive, as the Trump administration focuses instead on stamping out the Islamic State and minimizing Irans influence. European allies privately complain that the United States hasnt used its diplomatic muscle to support the Geneva talks and that theres no single figure at the White House or State Department tasked with shaping the discussions. Someone has to own this and nobody does, said a former senior U.S. national security official who has ties to the White House. To judge by the Saudi message to the Syrian opposition, however, as well as divisions inside the U.N., it increasingly appears that someone does indeed own the process: Russian President Vladimir Putin. (Trump administration officials counter that the United States has more leverage in Syria than it did a year ago, now that its Kurdish partners control more territory and U.S. troops remain on the ground.) While U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has made it clear that the U.N. will only go to Sochi if the United States, Saudi Arabia, and other key allies either attend or give him a green light, de Mistura has argued that both the U.N. and the Syrian opposition should take part. Last month, during the eighth round of Geneva talks, he pulled aside opposition leaders and pressed them to attend the Russian talks. Guterres ordered him to stand down, but not before the message got out. There is a split at the U.N., one diplomat said. De Mistura wants to go so he can inject a U.N. viewpoint into the proceedings. But his colleagues in New York feel it will simply legitimate the Russian aims. So far, the secretary-general feels Sochi doesnt pass the smell test, the diplomat said. Guterres is scheduled to meet with an opposition delegation at U.N. headquarters Monday afternoon. De Mistura has a tendency to lean toward the Russians rather than the United States, said Radwan Ziadeh, a Syrian human rights activist based in Washington. He feels the U.S. has withdrawn from the Syrian file and the only way for him to deliver is to lean toward the Russians. A spokesman for de Mistura declined to respond to questions about his support for the Sochi talks and referred FP to a series of statements by the U.N. special envoy indicating that any constitutional committee that might emerge from Sochi would have to be endorsed by the U.N., in consultation with the U.N. Security Council. Officially, the United States still pins its hopes on the talks in Geneva, with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster, and Secretary of Defense James Mattis all trying to push Assad toward the exit. Geneva is the only way forward, one State Department official told FP. As our focus remains on Geneva and substantive progress from those negotiations, all other methods only serve as a distraction. But there are signs of a split in Washington, too, which could open the door to a more active Russian role. Several top U.S. officials, including Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy for the global coalition to counter the Islamic State; Michael Ratney, the special envoy for Syria; and David Satterfield, the acting assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, favor a limited approach to Syria that focuses on defeating the Islamic State, countering Iranian activities, and then winding down U.S. activities in Syria, according to diplomatic sources. McGurk seems especially open-minded about Moscows diplomatic efforts. Weve engaged with the Russians on this about exactly what they have in mind, and they have said that Sochi would be kind of a gathering of Syrian figures, and then what happens in Sochi would feed directly into Geneva, he told reporters last month. What we would not support and what would have absolutely no legitimacy would be a parallel process thats parallel entirely to Geneva. But with the United States taking a back seat in Syria, a parallel diplomatic push seems to be exactly what is taking place. FP chief national security reporter Dan De Luce and State Department reporter Robbie Gramer contributed to this report. Belfast (AFP) - Racked by tensions over Brexit, Northern Ireland is now on the brink of direct rule by civil servants in London after the province's semi-autonomous government collapsed a year ago on Tuesday. The pro-British Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and the Irish nationalist Sinn Fein are supposed to govern together under a power-sharing accord reached in 1998 to end three decades of sectarian conflict. But year-long negotiations between the two sides, after Sinn Fein brought down the government by pulling out of it, have proved unsuccessful. Relations between the unionist and nationalist parties, which had shared power in Belfast since 2007, have been further strained by Brexit. The DUP staunchly supports Northern Ireland leaving the European Union with the rest of Britain. Sinn Fein backs remaining in the bloc and has called for a referendum on Irish reunification, warning that Britain's withdrawal from the EU could have a devastating economic impact on Northern Ireland. The pair are "unable to shape a shared policy on Brexit," said John Coakley, professor of history at Queen's University Belfast. The DUP has become a key player in the Brexit process following last year's general election in Britain, when British Prime Minister Theresa May lost her parliamentary majority and was forced to rely on the party to govern. The Democratic Unionists have vigorously opposed the province getting any kind of special status after Brexit that could threaten the economic and political integrity of its union with Britain. The party showed its strength in the negotiations by temporarily blocking a deal on the first phase of the talks in December. Sinn Fein, alarmed by the level of influence the DUP holds, faces a "dilemma" over whether to resume power-sharing, according to Coakley. If they agree to form a new devolved executive, it would give the DUP even more power, while doing nothing would disappoint the electorate, he noted. Story continues - Direct rule as 'safety net' - Meanwhile Northern Irish voters, who went to the polls in local elections in March, have watched as direct rule from London has edged ever closer. This would be a return to a five-year period of rule by the Westminster government between 2002 and 2007. In her New Year message, Arlene Foster, leader of the DUP, said "a return to direct rule would be an inferior alternative but it would be a government". Nationalists have said that if negotiations do not progress, the province should be temporarily governed jointly by Dublin as well as London - a red line for unionists. Talks have been deadlocked for months over differences on several thorny issues, including same-sex marriage and an Irish language law. Coakley said the policy disagreements stem from a continuation of the historic sectarian divisions over whether the province should remain part of Britain or reunify with the Republic of Ireland. Public opinion shows signs of weariness, with many denouncing the continued stalemate and calling for decisions in key areas like health and education. "Both parties are faced by strong irritation from members of the public, and in this respect probably lose equally," Coakley said. "Direct rule from London can act as a kind of safety net," he added. Power-sharing negotiations were expected to resume this month, but the resignation on Monday of Britain's Northern Ireland minister James Brokenshire due to ill-health could result in further delays. His replacement Karen Bradley, who had been serving as culture secretary, may need time to adjust to the new role. But she vowed on Monday that forming a executive for the province would be her "top priority." Donald Trump sets time aside for tweeting and television, according to reports - AFP Donald Trump begins his official work day as late as 11am and is known to clock off at 6pm, leaked copies of his private schedule reportedly reveal. The US president often has ill-defined executive time scheduled in the early morning and at other points in the day, according to the political website Axios. The periods are used for Mr Trump to make phone calls, watch television and send tweets, it was claimed often from his private residence in the White House. The late official start contrasts with Mr Trumps early months in the White House and with previous presidents. George W Bush typically arrived in the Oval Office by 6.45am while Barack Obama would work out before holding meetings from 9am or 10am. A White House spokesman defended Mr Trump as one of the hardest workers I have ever seen and said he works when in the residence. The report emerged amid separate claims that White House lawyers are now preparing for Mr Trump to be interviewed by the official investigation into Russian election meddling. Mr Trumps legal team is anticipating that Robert Mueller, the special counsel leading the investigation, will ask to interview him, according to NBC News. The broadcaster said there were discussions about whether Mr Trump should give written response to questions or take part in a sit down interview. Mr Mueller is looking into the Trump campaigns communications with the Russians before the 2016 vote as well as wider concerns about election meddling. Mr Trumps work practices and mental health have entered the spotlight after a controversial book about his White House called Fire and Fury. The book, written by journalist Michael Wolff, claimed that 100 per cent of Mr Trumps senior aides conclude he was incapable of functioning in his job. On Sunday, it was reported that Mr Trump sometimes does not have his first formal meeting until 11am often an intelligence briefing and his schedule can end at 6pm. Story continues Before 11am and scattered throughout the day are periods of executive time, according to a report by Axios. His official working day is longer when travelling. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said: "The time in the morning is a mix of residence time and Oval Office time but he always has calls with staff, Hill members, cabinet members and foreign leaders during this time. The President is one of the hardest workers I've ever seen and puts in long hours and long days nearly every day of the week all year long. It has been noted by reporters many times that they wish he would slow down because they sometimes have trouble keeping up with him." Donald Trump, the US president Credit: UPI / Barcroft Images The timings chime with other US media reports. The New York Times has reported that Mr Trump spends four hours, or sometime even double, in front of a television each day, often on cable news channels. Mr Wolffs book claims that Mr Trump can be in bed by 6.30pm with a cheeseburger watching television and making calls. There have also been numerous reports of Mr Trump spending the morning and evening hours phoning old friends and associates outside politics, as well as sending tweets which often appear to spin off from cable news. The White House has denounced Mr Wolffs book in the strongest terms, dubbing it trashy tabloid fiction". Moscow (AFP) - Pilotless drones carrying explosives attacked Russian bases in Syria over the weekend without causing any casualties or damage, Russia's defence ministry said Monday. "Ten drones carrying explosives attacked the Russian air base at Hmeimim and three others targeted the Russian naval base in Tartus", both in western Syria, the ministry said in a statement run by Russian press agencies. The "terrorist" attacks took place on Friday night causing "neither casualties nor material damage", the statement said. "The Hmeimim and Tartus bases continue to operate normally," the ministry added. Of the 13 drones used in the attacks, seven were destroyed while the six others were intercepted by the Russian army, it said. The statement comes days after Moscow announced that two Russian servicemen were killed in a mortar attack by Islamist militants at the Hmeimim air base on New Year's Eve. According to the Russian Kommersant business daily, seven military planes were "practically destroyed" in that attack, but the ministry dismissed the report as "fake". The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that Russian forces were on alert following drone attacks on the Hmeimim base, the largest Russian military base on Syrian territory. After two years of Russian military support for the regime of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, President Vladimir Putin announced in mid-December the partial withdrawal of forces from the country, saying their task in the war-torn country had been largely completed. The size of the Russian deployment in Syria is not known but independent Russian military expert Pavel Felgenhauer told AFP that up to 10,000 troops and private contractors could have taken part in the conflict. More than 330,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the Syrian war, which began in 2011 as the regime brutally crushed anti-government protests. Millions have been displaced. Ellis Island immigrants Guadeloupean woman, German stowaway, Alsace-Lorraine girl. (Photography by Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library) President Donald Trump reiterated his demands for immigration reform during a bipartisan meeting with lawmakers on Tuesday, saying any bill to address young immigrants brought to the United States illegally must also provide a border wall. Trump, speaking to reporters as he convened the group of Republican and Democratic lawmakers at the White House, said he wants a bipartisan fix and believes both sides will negotiate in good faith on the issue. Over a century ago as immigration to the United States swelled, the Ellis Island immigration station opened in New York harbor in 1900. By 1907, the peak year of immigration, 3,000 to 5,000 newcomers a day were examined at Ellis Island as they sought permanent entry to the country. Many photographers were drawn to Ellis Island by the general human interest and newsworthiness of the scene. One amateur photographer, Augustus Sherman, a registry clerk at Ellis Island, had special access to potential subjects for his camera. It is possible that William Williams, then the commissioner of immigration for the port of New York at Ellis Island, requested that Sherman photograph specific individuals and groups. It is also likely that Shermans elaborately costumed subjects were detainees, new immigrants held at Ellis Island for one reason or another. While waiting for what they needed to leave the island (an escort, or money, or travel tickets), some of these immigrants may have been persuaded to pose for Shermans camera, donning their best holiday finery or national dress, which they had brought with them from home. Shermans photographs were published in National Geographic in 1907 and for decades hung anonymously in the lower Manhattan headquarters of the federal Immigration Service. Incoming correspondence in the William Williams Papers, bequeathed to the New York Public Library, suggests that the commissioner gave copies of Shermans haunting photographs to official Ellis Island visitors as mementos. (Reuters/New York Public Library) Photography by Augustus Sherman/New York Public Library See more news-related photo galleries and follow us on Yahoo News Photo Twitter and Tumblr. New York (AFP) - A blaze broke out in the ventilation system of Trump Tower in New York on Monday, seriously injuring one person, the fire department said. The fire started on the roof shortly before 7 am (1200 GMT) in the Fifth Avenue skyscraper, which is President Donald Trump's private home in New York and houses the headquarters of his company, which is today run by his two adult sons. Twenty-six units of 84 fire fighters were mobilized to quench the blaze, which was under control just over an hour later, said fire department spokesman Ken Reilly. "There was a small electrical fire in a cooling tower on the roof of Trump Tower," the president's second son, Eric Trump, tweeted. "The New York Fire Department was here within minutes and did an incredible job," he added. One person was taken to a hospital with serious injuries, Reilly said. The US president has spent little time in New York since his inauguration a year ago, but has a private triplex home at the top of Trump Tower. The glass building was also his presidential campaign headquarters and is home to private apartments. Workers view a conveyor belt system that is under construction at a new Amazon fulfillment center on August 10, 2017 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) The threat of automation has made many people anxious about the future of their jobs. Automated trucks could one day soon replace truckers. Even pizza delivery could now be done through automation. But as some jobs wane (as has always been the case with advancement chances are you dont see positions open for lamplighters any more, either), other positions are created or grow in demand. 2018 will see certain jobs become more in demand as the nature of our world changes. Daniel Culbertson, economist at job search site Indeed.com, says that there are plenty of jobs that humans need to do, even as automation grows. One of the most widely discussed global labour market issues is the risk that automation poses to the labour force, Culbertson explains to Yahoo Canada Finance. However, the threat posed by automation will not come to a head all at once, but rather will take years to unfold. The occupations at greatest risk are those that are comprised largely of routine tasks easily replicated by machines or software. It is also important to keep in mind that automation may not always be a destructive force, but rather will likely create new jobs as well. Job search site Indeed compiled a list of the five most in-demand jobs this year, and it shows that while technology certainly changes the way we work, different jobs are much more needed. Title: Fulfillment Associate Average Salary: $13.56/hour Growth in Job Listings in 2017: 607 per cent As so much of our shopping moves online, people are still needed to help fill those orders and make sure they get sent to the right place. Amazon is just one of the online retailers that is building new fulfillment centres in Canada. While some of Amazons locations are almost entirely automated, most of their locations still rely heavily on human hands and minds to make sure orders are correctly filled. Title: Machine Learning Engineer Average Salary: $102,555/year Growth in Job Listings in 2017: 150 per cent Story continues The Canadian government is investing millions in artificial intelligence development, and thats creating lots of job openings. Engineers who specialize in machine learning and AI will have opportunities across multiple sectors as more commercial and consumer products automate. Title: Family Medicine Physician Average Salary: $248,580/year Growth in Job Listings in 2017: 138 per cent While automation has taken over many jobs, there are some things that are still better left to humans, and family doctor is one of them. The number of adults over the age of 65 continues to balloon in Canada, and the need for professionals to care for these people is growing, too. Medical professionals across many fields are sought after, but family doctor comes out at the top. Title: Manufacturing Technician Average Salary: $18.74/hour Growth in Job Listings in 2017: 45 per cent Another major area of investment for Canada is in manufacturing, and having people who know how to operate, care for and fix the machines involved is critical. Indeed.com points to NAFTA negotiation outcomes as worth watching in order to know exactly which manufacturing industries will see the most growth in coming years. Title: Technical Recruiter Average Salary: $47,991/year Growth in Job Listings in 2017: 25 per cent The demand for app developers, engineers, and other experts in the field of technology is undeniable. Thats creating a need for people who can identify the ideal candidates for a company. Technical recruiters need a combination of HR skills as well as expertise in software and analytics, making it a niche and in-demand position. Good news for job seekers Even if you dont have the skills for these specific positions now, 2018 still holds a lot of promise for those seeking employment. The good news for job seekers is that Canadas tightening labor market means that employers will likely have trouble filling positions, says Culbertson. It is a job seekers market, and this brightens the outlook for pay raises, opportunities for on-the-job training, and relaxed hiring requirements. Even though the odds are in their favour, job seekers can always improve their chances of landing the career they want by researching the growing skills in their field and working to improve their skill set. Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple and Android. Paris (AFP) - France's most revered actress Catherine Deneuve hit out Tuesday at a new "puritanism" sparked by sexual harassment scandals, declaring that men should be "free to hit on" women. She was one of around 100 French women writers, performers and academics who wrote an open letter deploring the wave of "denunciations" that has followed claims that Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted and harassed women over decades. They called it a "witch-hunt" that they feel threatens sexual freedom. "Rape is a crime, but trying to seduce someone, even persistently or cack-handedly, is not -- nor is being gentlemanly a macho attack," said the letter published in the daily Le Monde. "Men have been punished summarily, forced out of their jobs when all they did was touch someone's knee or try to steal a kiss," said the letter, which was also signed by Catherine Millet, author of the hugely explicit 2002 memoir, "The Sexual Life of Catherine M.". Men had been dragged through the mud, they argued, for "talking about intimate subjects during professional dinners or for sending sexually-charged messages to women who did not return their attentions." - '#MeToo witch-hunt' - The letter attacked feminist social media campaigns like #MeToo and its French equivalent #Balancetonporc (Call out your pig) for unleashing this "puritanical... wave of purification". It claimed that "legitimate and necessary protest against the sexual violence that women are subject to, particularly in their professional lives", had turned into a witch-hunt. "What began as freeing women up to speak has today turned into the opposite -- we intimidate people into speaking 'correctly', shout down those who don't fall into line, and those women who refused to bend" to the new realities "are regarded as complicit and traitors." Story continues It also helped foster "this Victorian idea that women were mere children who had to be protected," the letter argued. Some women who were strong enough to demand equal pay, it claimed, would "not be traumatised forever by a fondler on the metro", even if it is a crime, preferring to see it as a "non-event". The signatories -- which included a porn star-turned-agony aunt -- claimed they were defending sexual freedom, for which "the liberty to seduce and importune was essential." Oscar-nominated Deneuve, 74, is best known internationally for playing a bored housewife who spends her afternoons as a prostitute in Luis Bunuel classic 1967 film "Belle du Jour". Deneuve has made no secret of her annoyance at social media campaigns to shame men accused of harassing women. "I don't think it is the right method to change things, it is excessive," she said last year, referring to the #MeToo hashtag. "After 'Calling out your pig' what are we going to have, 'Call out your whore?'" she said. - 'Hatred of men and sexuality' - "Instead of helping women, this frenzy to send these (male chauvinist) 'pigs' to the abattoir actually helps the enemies of sexual liberty -- religious extremists and the worst sort of reactionaries," the collective of women who signed the letter said. "As women we do not recognise ourselves in this feminism, which beyond denouncing the abuse of power, takes on a hatred of men and of sexuality." They insisted that women were "sufficiently aware that the sexual urge is by its nature wild and aggressive. But we are also clear-eyed enough not to confuse an awkward attempt to pick someone up with a sexual attack." The spectacle of men being forced into "public confessions... and having to rack their brains and apologise for 'inappropriate behaviour' that might have happened 10, 20 or 30 years before... recalled totalitarian societies," the letter went on. This "puritan wave" was already bringing censorship in its wake, the women insisted, claiming that some of them had already been asked to make the male characters in their writing "less sexist", and told to tone down certain scenes to "better show the trauma suffered by female characters". Deneuve sparked an outcry last March for her fulsome support of French-based director Roman Polanski, who is still wanted in the United States for the statutory rape of a 13-year-old girl in 1977. While his victim Samantha Geimer wants the case dropped so she can get on with her life, Deneuve told French television that "she always found the word 'rape' excessive" in the circumstances. The French broadcasting watchdog later called her comments "retrograde". BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany has summoned Iran's ambassador to warn Tehran against spying on individuals and groups with close ties to Israel, calling such acts an unacceptable breach of German law. The move came after the March conviction of a Pakistani man for spying for Iran in Germany went into force. Mustufa Haidar Syed-Naqfi was convicted of gathering intelligence on Reinhold Robbe, the former head of the German-Israel Friendship Society, and an Israeli-French economics professor in Paris, for Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards. The Foreign Ministry summoned the Iranian ambassador to deliver the rebuke once the German constitutional court rejected his appeal. The meeting took place on Dec. 22 but was not disclosed until now. "Spying on people and institutions with special ties to the state of Israel on German soil is an egregious violation of German law," a ministry official said. The official said Philipp Ackermann, acting director of the Foreign Ministry's political section, had told the Iranian ambassador that "such activities would not be tolerated and were completely unacceptable". The foreign ministers of Iran, Germany, France and Britain are due to meet in Brussels to discuss a 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran and concerns about Iran's crackdown on anti-government protesters. Germany, which helped negotiate the nuclear deal, has sought to balance its interest in expanding trade ties with Iran with its commitment to human rights. It has played a key role in European efforts to persuade Washington to keep the nuclear accord in place, an issue that will come up again this week, when U.S. President Donald Trump must decide whether to reimpose oil sanctions lifted under the agreement. Germany's domestic intelligence service, which handles counterespionage, highlighted Iran's spying activities in its annual report in July, saying that Tehran was focused heavily on Israeli or pro-Jewish targets. Separately, the German federal prosecutor's office said it was examining whether charges could be brought against a senior Iranian cleric, Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, the former head of Iran's justice minister, who is receiving medical treatment in the northern city of Hanover. Volker Beck, a former Greens lawmaker, had filed a complaint against Shahroudi with prosecutors, accusing him of committing crimes against humanity. "The complaint has been received and it is being examined," a spokesman for the prosecutor's office said. He said it was unclear how long that legal analysis would take. Robbe said: "It's a slap in the face to exiled Iranians and others to see such a former leader of the Iranian regime being treated in Germany." (Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Alison Williams) The 2018 award season is a big job to tackle. And frankly, its probably a job no well-respected professional host would want to touch with a 10,000-foot pole. With that said, we really feel for Seth Meyers and want to dole out the credit he deserves for hosting an inspiring Golden Globes ceremony. File Meyers under the winners category for his opening monologue alone. Harvey Weinstein and Kevin Spacey jokes knew no bounds, and even a crowd favorite, Billy Eichner, made a comedic appearance that didnt exactly land, but we love him regardless. Nicole Kidman won the first award of the night for her role as Celeste Wright in the captivating HBO series, Big Little Lies. With viewers tears flowing only a few minutes into the ceremony, Kidmans eloquent speech was directed at the ongoing abuse highlighted throughout the evening. This character that I played represents something that is the center of our conversation right now: abuse. I do believe and I hope that we can elicit change through the stories we tell and the way we tell them. An obvious winner through and through, Kidman is no stranger to the prize-winners circle. The most obvious winner of the night was the queen herself, Oprah. (We dont need to write in Winfrey, right?) The Morning Breath was originally skeptical of her receiving the Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award, but we can admit when we are wrong, people! Shes totally an icon in her field; shes a leader in the community, and I didnt know how many movies she was in and produced, admits Claudia. Bringing people to their feet more than once during her nearly 10-minute acceptance speech, the talk show host, movie producer, Oscar-winning actress and Weight Watchers ambassador ended her address with a somber yet hopeful plea. Winfrey said, So I want all the girls watching here now to know that a new day is on the horizon! And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight and some pretty phenomenal men fighting hard to make sure that they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say me too again. Tears! Story continues We also must recognize the shade thrown by the elegant Natalie Portman. When presenting the Best Director award alongside Ron Howard, the actress and mother of two abandoned the teleprompter and said, Here are the all-male nominees. The Morning Breath recognizes that while the newly-formed Times Up movement is a necessary and crucial organization that should be celebrated, its important to note that this is only the beginning. Everyones clapping like the war is over when the war has just begun, says Claudia. Hollywood, thank you for you service in representing the voiceless victims of sexual assault and gender discrimination in the workplace. Where you could do better, though, is eradicating the hypocrisy that is still very much alive in your industry. We assume that assailants are still not only attending award ceremonies but also receiving awards, directing and starring in movies, making money, and yet hurting innocent victims every day. Instead of saying its over, lets start naming names, says Jackie. Ultimately, Hollywood did a magnificent job of promoting and honoring the worthy winners of the night, but Hollywood itself still needs to climb out of the loser category by obliterating the hypocrisy that painfully remains. Netflix (NFLX) stock watchers are constantly trying to evaluate the companys subscription growth. As an ad-free streaming company, subscriptions which begin at $7.99 a month are the chief source of revenue. In a research note circulated Monday, Piper Jaffray detailed its analysis of Netflix (NFLX) and explained exactly how it models subscriber growth. Instead of complicated proprietary systems, the analysts revealed a surprisingly simple method: tracking Netflix and Google searches. Piper Jaffray noted that subscription growth and Google searches for Netflix were correlated with an uncanny closeness. Over 21 quarters, the two sets had a 0.93 to 0.94 correlation coefficient. A coefficient of 1 would mean complete lockstep.) Theres a spike on Google Trends for Netflix searches, a sign that subscriber numbers will rise. (Google screenshot) The note didnt specify exactly the search terms tracked it could be Netflix, show names, or other related terms but its an interesting insight of how analysts use the information available. Piper Jaffray analysts dont just use Google search to determine new subscription modeling, which is why they are projecting lower numbers than what the search trends indicate. Currently, theyre modeling growth of 9% domestic subscriptions and 39% for international subscriptions for year-over-year growth in the last quarter, which is lower than the growth of search interest. Piper Jaffray analysts hedged strongly against taking these numbers as gospel, citing the error inherent in the relationship. Though the historical error isnt not particularly high around 4% domestically and 11% internationally the analysts noted its better to interpret the searches as an indication of general trends and not an exact one to one comparison. On the strength of that, the analysts slapped an overweight label on the stock with a $240 price target. At closing on Monday, the stock was at $212. Ethan Wolff-Mann is a writer at Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter @ewolffmann. Confidential tip line: FinanceTips[at]oath[.com]. Story continues Read More: The crypto boom may have made criminals richer The phone industrys clever plan to stop robocalls Ranked: Banks by number of consumer complaints How to stop people tracking whether youve opened their email Lenovos Smart Display is the first of four new Google Assistant powered smart screens. Google (GOOG, GOOGL) is bringing its AI-powered Assistant from the smartphone to the small screen with its new line of smart displays, and the first such device to make its debut here at CES 2018 is the aptly named Lenovo Smart Display. If it sounds like this device is aimed squarely at taking on Amazons (AMZN) Echo Show, then, well, youre absolutely right. I spent some time with the Smart Display, which will be available for $199 in an 8-inch model or $229 in a 10-inch model late this summer, and its both better looking than Amazons offering, and has one key element the e-commerce giants gadget is missing: YouTube. A screen with smarts The Smart Display man, I wish it had a better name is essentially a screen and speaker that take advantage of the power of Google Assistant. Like Amazons Echo Show, you can ask the Smart Display to pull up your schedule, check the weather and play music. But the Smart Display also plugs into all of the pieces of Google you have scattered through your life. For example, you can ask it for directions to work, and it will pull up the best route to your office. And thanks to Googles Voice Match, results are tailored to whoever is asking a question. So your directions to work will be different than your husbands directions. Voice Match also works for Google Photos, so when you ask to check out pictures from New York, youll see your own specific photos, and not those taken by your wife, kids or roommates. More importantly, Assistant-powered smart displays like Lenovos will offer YouTube functionality, something Google stripped from Amazons Echo Show and Fire TV in retaliation for Amazon not selling Googles hardware products. The joys of cooking One of the impressive use cases Google showed off during my short time with the Smart Display was how well it works when cooking dinner. You can ask the Smart Display what you want to have for dinner and it will automatically pull up a list of suggested recipes. Story continues The Smart Display has an angled back allowing you to use it in horizontal or vertical positions. You can then either tap on the display or say which recipe you want and it will provide you with a list of instructions for cooking mac and cheese or pheasant under glass. Better still, if you need help doing something like chopping rosemary, you can ask how to do just that and your smart display will pull up an appropriate YouTube video. Thats actually a huge help, as I frequently find myself looking up videos explaining how to properly dice chicken or just what a garlic clove is. Searching for everything No Google device would be complete without the ability to search for, well, everything. And while you can do that with ease on your Google Home or using the Google Assistant app on your smartphone, doing so with a smart display is a different story. So Google has created custom search results for the smart displays that appear as interactive graphics. You can, for example, ask your smart display to find a nearby bakery and it will pull up results for bakeries in your area. You can then either tell Google Assistant which result youd like to see or select the result you want by tapping the display. The Lenovo Smart Display comes in 8-inch and 10-inch versions. The 10-inch, seen here, gets a beautiful bamboo back. Once you select the bakery youre looking for, you can dive in to see its Google reviews star rating, store hours, phone number and location. You can even ask Google how to get to the bakery and it will send the directions to your smartphone. Call me, maybe Like Amazons Echo Show, Google smart displays will let you make video calls. And while the Echo Show lets you call anyone with the Amazon Alexa app, smart displays let you call anyone with the Google Duo app. Google says smart displays cant make voice calls just yet, but that might change by the time the products hit the market later this summer. The search giant also says you can cast content to smart displays using devices like your smartphone similar to the way you use Googles Chromecast. For now, you can only cast Google Play Movies and TV, however, that will likely change as companies like Netflix and Hulu enable the feature for smart displays. Stay tuned for more. More from Dan: Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@yahoo-inc.com; follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley. Fashion retailer H&M apologized on Monday for featuring a black child modeling a hoodie with a coolest monkey in the jungle slogan, saying it believe[s] in diversity and inclusion in all that we do and will be reviewing our internal routines. The image, which appeared on the British version of H&M online store, was accused of being racist by hundreds of social media users on Sunday after the offending ad was screen-captured by blogger Stephanie Yeboah. Whose idea was it at @hm to have this little sweet black boy wear a jumper that says coolest monkey in the jungle? I mean. What. pic.twitter.com/6AJfMdQS4L Stephanie Yeboah (@NerdAboutTown) January 7, 2018 The Swedish company removed the ad, which appeared on its U.K. site, in response to the backlash. We sincerely apologize for this image H&M told TIME. It has been now removed from all online channels and the product will not be for sale in the United States.We believe in diversity and inclusion in all that we do, and will be reviewing our internal routines. Others on social media pointed out that two other sweatshirts in the same line, with one that said survival expert, were modeled by white children. In the year 2018 theres no way brands/art directors can be this negligent and lack awareness. If look at other sweaters in same category they have white kids. We have to do better. pic.twitter.com/Av4bS4t6yn alex medina (@mrmedina) January 8, 2018 Many wondered whether the image, which was seen as making an insensitive association between the model and a hateful slur that has been used against black people, could have been avoided with better cultural awareness and a diverse workplace. Story continues Every company should invest in training that encompasses cultural competency and sensitivity. It is absolutely necessary. @hm pic.twitter.com/efMR0oL3jx The King Center (@TheKingCenter) January 8, 2018 I worked for them for years and theyre clueless sometimes. The head office in Sweden is very disconnected to issues of racism, cultural & social challenges. They seriously probably think this is cute. Hasanilove?? (@HasaniReyes) January 8, 2018 Cultural disconnect vs. ill intent. Swedish company, probably not a lot of diversity, racial or cultural, in places of decision making Dina Fierro (@eye4style) January 8, 2018 H&M joins a number of major brands that have been accused of insensitive or racist advertising. In October, Kelloggs came under fire for its Corn Pops cereal box design that showed a darker Corn Pop in a janitors uniform among dozens of yellow-hued Corn Pop characters. Dove was also forced to apologize that month for a social media post, where a looping image showed a black woman removing her shirt to reveal a white woman, which the company said missed the mark representing black women. Stockholm (AFP) - Swedish clothing giant Hennes and Mauritz on Monday apologised and removed an advertisement of a black child after the company was accused of being racist on social media. A photo on the company's online website of a black boy wearing a green hoodie with the inscription "coolest monkey in the jungle" triggered outrage among observers. "Whose idea was it at @hm to have this little sweet black boy wear a jumper that says 'coolest monkey in the jungle'?" style blogger Stephanie Yeboah tweeted on Sunday. "You do know that monkey is a known racial slur to black people right?" she added. "The image has now been removed from all H&M channels and we apologise to anyone this may have offended," the company told AFP. A generic photo of the hooded sweatshirt without the modelling child is still available online. H&M is not the only major company to be hit by an advertisement scandal in recent years. Spanish clothing brand Zara in 2014 removed a striped pyjamas with a yellow star after facing outrage over its resemblance to clothes worn by Jewish prisoners in concentration camps. And in October last year, personal care brand Dove apologised after it was accused of racism for airing a commercial showing a black woman turning into a white woman after removing her top. The rising costs of materials like softwood lumber are burdening homebuilders as they try to keep up with continued demand in 2018. While 2017 was a hot year for the housing market, homebuilders face cost challenges that will carry through 2018. According to John Burns Real Estate Consulting Groups survey of 300 homebuilding executives, 40% were surprised by how much their costs increased last year. Builders have to increase pay for workers as stronger than expected sales have pushed construction trades to the limit, said John Burns SVP Jody Kahn. She specifically cites the lack of immigrant labor as a headwind. Buildable land is also in limited supply, with finished lot prices exceeding the prior 2006 peak by 2%. And, the costs of materials, especially lumber, drywall and concrete have been burdensome on builders, according to Kahn. PulteGroup (PHM) CEO Ryan Marshall echoed the cost concerns around building materials when forecasting 2018 during the companys third-quarter earnings call. Lumber was on an upward trend even before some of the catastrophic natural disaster events that weve seen So thats the one that I think we all need to be paying attention to for 2018. The lumber impacts could be longer lasting, he said. The reason for the increase in lumber price is, in part, due to the tariff on Canadian lumber, which comes amid talks to renegotiate NAFTA terms. The U.S. heavily depends on Canada for its lumber. In 2016, 33% of the softwood lumber used in the U.S. was imported, with more than 95% coming from Canada, according to the National Association of Home Builders. The hurricane effect In addition, the damaging effects of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma could trickle throughout 2018. Eleven billion dollars worth of building materials were required to clean up Florida and Texas, and Kahn expects an additional $10 billion in 2018. She estimates spending on building materials rose 9% last year and may rise another 5% this year. As costs continue to surge, it will only translate to more price increases for homebuyers. Jeff Mezger, CEO of KBHomes (KBH) said that he is cautious and concerned about how subsequent storms would further impact labor shortages during his third-quarter conference call. And, the company has been successful in raising prices above any direct cost increases that theyve experienced, and subsequently reported higher margins. Story continues We do not expect the broad-based labor shortages and related cost increases and delays will resolve in the near future. We also do not anticipate regulatory approval hurdles to ease, or lot and land prices to decline, noted Kahn. Melody Hahm is a senior writer at Yahoo Finance, covering entrepreneurship, technology and real estate. Follow her on Twitter @melodyhahm. Read more: By Bozorgmehr Sharafedin LONDON (Reuters) - Iran said on Monday it might reconsider its cooperation with the U.N. nuclear watchdog if the United States failed to respect its commitments in the nuclear deal Tehran struck with world powers in 2015. U.S. President Donald Trump must decide by mid-January whether to continue waiving U.S. sanctions on Irans oil exports under the terms of the nuclear pact that eased economic pressure on Tehran in exchange for limits on its nuclear program. In October, Trump refused to certify that Iran was complying with the deal, also known by its acronym JCPOA, even though the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said it was. "If the United States does not meet its commitment in the JCPOA, the Islamic Republic of Iran would take decisions that might affect its current cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)," Iran's nuclear chief, Ali Akbar Salehi, was quoted as telling IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano in a phone call. The IAEA is an international organization that seeks to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy, and is scrutinizing Iran's compliance with the agreement. Supporters of the deal insist that strong international monitoring will prevent Iran from developing nuclear bombs. Iran has denied that it is seeking nuclear weapons. Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi said on Monday that Tehran "would not prejudge the decision that America would take on January 13," but said it was ready for all possible outcomes and "all options were on the table". Deputy foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said world powers should be ready for a possible U.S. withdrawal from the deal. "The international community might come to this conclusion that the United States will withdraw from the JCPOA in the next few days," Araghchi was quoted as saying by the state news agency IRNA. "The international community must be ready for this development," Araghchi added, warning that such a decision would affect stability in the region. Trump is weighing whether the pact serves U.S. security interests, while the other world powers that negotiated it - France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China - still strongly support it. U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said in September that the United States should consider staying in the Iran deal unless it were proven that Tehran was not abiding by the agreement or that it was not in the U.S. national interest to do so. (Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin; Editing by Robin Pomeroy, William Maclean) Damascus (AFP) - The Israeli army carried out air strikes and fired rockets at targets in Syria overnight, causing damage near a military position, the Syrian army said Tuesday. Israel's military has carried out several attacks on the Syrian army and its ally Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah since the start of the conflict in Syria in 2011. The Israeli air force conducted strikes on the Qutayfeh area northeast of Damascus, causing the Syrian army to retaliate and "hit one of its planes", the Syrian army said in a statement. Syrian air defences intercepted one rocket, but several more hit "near a military position, causing material damage," it added. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said the air strikes targeted Syrian army and Hezbollah weapon depots. The strikes sparked "successive explosions and fires, causing material damage" in the depots, where land-to-land missiles have been stored among other weapons, the Observatory said. The Syrian army also said Israel launched land-to-land missiles into Syria from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, but it intercepted them. In a letter to the United Nations, Syria's foreign minister called on the UN Security Council to "condemn these blatant Israeli aggressions... and to adopt firm and immediate measures to put an end to them," official news agency SANA reported. Israel seized 1,200 square kilometres (460 square miles) of the Golan Heights from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the international community. Syria and Israel remain technically at war, and the Jewish state fought a devastating war against Hezbollah in 2006. Israeli officials worry that Hezbollah and Syrian regime ally Iran are gaining a strategic foothold in Syria alongside the government's key backer, Russia. In December, Israeli fighter jets bombed areas near Damascus including a scientific research centre and warehouses where weapons and ammunition of the regime and its allies were stocked, the Observatory said. Story continues In September, Israeli strikes hit a weapons depot by Damascus airport, targeting a warehouse belonging to Hezbollah, the monitor said. Israel rarely confirms these raids, but has admitted to carrying out strikes against convoys of weapons intended for Hezbollah. In November, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would take military action in Syria when it saw fit as it sought to ensure Iran-backed forces stay away from its territory. On Tuesday he reiterated his warning. "We have a longstanding policy to prevent the transfer of game-changing weapons to Hezbollah from Syrian territory," he told journalists. "This policy has not changed. We back it up as necessary with action." Israel has long accused Iran, its main enemy, of taking advantage of Syria's civil war to send its Revolutionary Guard and its ally Hezbollah into southern Syria, close to the Israeli border. Syria's war has killed 340,000 people and displaced millions since it started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests. TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese officials on Tuesday called on the United States to take thorough measures to protect Japanese citizens a day after a U.S. helicopter made an emergency landing on the grounds of a hotel on the southern island of Okinawa. The emergency landing, coming just days after a similar mishap, was the latest in a series of incidents involving U.S. military aircraft in Okinawa that have further fueled public opposition to the U.S. presence there. Japanese Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera told a news conference that in a morning telephone call with U.S. counterpart James Mattis he had called on the United States to prevent any recurrences. "We are asking the United States to take thorough measures," he said, adding that he intended to repeat the message when he meets U.S. Pacific Commander Harry Harris later this week. Japanese media reported that Mattis had apologized for the latest incident, but Onodera made no reference to this, although he said he felt Mattis is "thoroughly aware" of the issue. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga echoed Onodera's concerns, telling a news conference that while U.S.-Japanese deterrence was important in an increasingly fraught regional security situation, the understanding and cooperation of Japanese locals was essential for the U.S. military to carry out its duties well. "These accidents, which create fear on the part of local residents, must not happen," he added. Resentment has simmered among residents of the southern Japanese island who bemoan what they see as an unfair burden in supporting the U.S. military presence in Japan. Among recent incidents, a USMC transport helicopter made an emergency landing on an Okinawan beach on Saturday because of a faulty rotor. Earlier, a window fell from a military aircraft onto a school playground. Located strategically at the edge of the East China Sea, Okinawa, which was under U.S. occupation until 1972, hosts some 30,000 military personnel living and working on bases that cover a fifth of the island. (Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Michael Perry) TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono said on Tuesday that Tokyo could not accept South Korea's demands for additional measures regarding a 2015 bilateral agreement on the touchy matter of Korean women forced to work in Japanese wartime brothels. Kono made the remarks to reporters after South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said Seoul was not seeking to renegotiate the agreement but that Tokyo needed to make further efforts to help the victims "regain honour and dignity and heal wounds in their hearts." Under the agreement, Japan apologised to victims and provided 1 billion yen ($8.8 million) to a fund to support them. (Reporting by Linda Sieg and Nobuhiro Kubo; Editing by Chris Gallagher) Moving with unusual speed, the Supreme Court indicated on Monday that it will take its first look just 11 days from now at the Trump Administrations new appeal seeking to defend the Presidents third immigration order. That will no doubt force an earlier reply by the orders challengers, and an earlier decision by the Justices on whether to grant full review which seems all but certain. The Justices acted on the first day they were at work after the Administration filed its appeal papers last Friday. If an ordinary schedule were going to be followed, a reply would not even have been due until February 5 and the Court might not have considered granting review until later that month too late, ordinarily, for a decision before the term ends in late June. That normal timing was shortened abruptly on Monday when the case, formally titled Trump v. Hawaii, was distributed to the Justices to be considered at the private conference on January 19. If review is granted at that time, and it would be a great surprise if review were denied, the case could be heard and decided in this term. The Courts staff almost surely has been in discussions with lawyers from both sides about a filing schedule in order to have the necessary briefs in before January 19. One possible plan is for the Hawaii challengers to file their answering brief on Friday, with the Administration sending in a reply by Tuesday. If that is the plan, it will be announced shortly. It is now apparent that the Justices have no plans to hold up action on the case from Hawaii to see what happens on another case, from the state of Maryland, which is now awaiting a ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. That appeals court heard a government appeal on December 8, and its decision could come at any time. If that happens soon, whoever loses in the Fourth Circuit Court could quickly take the case to the Justices, and seek to have it folded into the review of the Hawaii case (which reached the Justices in the government appeal from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit). Story continues Potentially, there could be one significant differences between the Hawaii and Maryland cases should both wind up together before the Supreme Court. The Hawaii case, as decided by the Ninth Circuit and as appealed by the Administration, focuses on whether President Trumps third version of immigration restrictions is legal under federal immigration and federal court procedure laws. The Maryland case includes some of those same legal issues, but also has a constitutional question does the Trump order amount to a ban on Muslims and thus violates the Constitutions ban on government discrimination based on religion? But even if the Court does grant review of only the Hawaii case, with or without an appeal before it in the Maryland case, it could add the religious discrimination issue to its review as a matter of its own choice or at the urging of lawyers for the Hawaii challengers. That was an issue raised by the Hawaii challengers, but it was not decided by the Ninth Circuit Court. It is a central question in the Maryland case as it reached the Fourth Circuit Court. Although the Justices have been drawn into preliminary disputes involving both the second and third versions of President Trumps moves to strictly limit entry to the U.S. by foreign nationals from Mideast nations with Muslim-majority populations, the Court has never expressed its own opinion over whether such action is legal or illegal, constitutional or unconstitutional. That is a the heart of the Administrations new appeal. If the Court does grant review, the controversy could be set for a hearing at the April session, the final sitting for oral arguments this term. The Court had previously indicated that it wanted the dispute to move rapidly up to the Court, telling both Circuit Courts that is expected them to complete their reviews with dispatch. The review in the Fourth Circuit Court probably has been slowed somewhat by the mere fact that all 13 of its judges eligible to hear the case did participate in it, and divisions no doubt arose among them, thus leading to the writing of several opinions. With the Justices now set to take up the Hawaii case at their last scheduled conference of this month, the Fourth Circuit Court may well feel pressure to get its ruling completed promptly. Legendary journalist Lyle Denniston has written for us as a contributor since June 2011 and has covered the Supreme Court since 1958. His work also appears on lyldenlawnews.com. Lenovo today announced the worlds first self-contained virtual reality headset powered by Googles Daydream VR platform. The headset, called the Lenovo Mirage Solo, will be available in the second quarter of 2018 and cost less than $400 when it hits the market. But unless that price is as low as Facebooks (FB) upcoming standalone headset, the Oculus Go, priced at $199 and scheduled for release in early 2018, Lenovo could have serious trouble moving units. I tried out the Mirage Solo and the most impressive aspect of it was just how comfortable it was to wear. Seeing through the Mirage The Mirage Solo features a 5.5-inch LCD display with a resolution of 2,560 pixels x 1,440 pixels. Thats about 1,280 pixels x 1,440 pixels per eye. Facebooks Oculus Rift and HTC Vive, both of which need to be connected to computers, offer resolutions of 1,200 pixels x 1,080 pixels. Dont expect the Mirage Solos visuals to look crystal clear, though. Images were relatively sharp, but fine details still looked pixelated as they do on every other headset on the market. Lenovos Mirage takes advantage of Googles WorldSense inside-out tracking software, which translates your movements in the real world into the digital. Microsoft (MSFT) also offers a similar technology in its Windows Mixed Reality headsets. Both forms of tracking eliminate the need for the kind of clunky sensors and cameras used by the likes of the Rift, Vive and Sonys (SNE) Playstation VR headsets. What struck me the most about Lenovos hardware, though, was how comfortable it felt. I truly feel like I could wear it for long periods of time without issue, which isnt something I can say about its competitors. The Mirage Solos visor portion was more than roomy enough to fit my glasses, a frequent issue I run into with other VR headsets, and the cushioning was fantastic. The Mirages lenses fogged up after I wore it for a bit, but thats a problem I run into with every headset Ive used, and doesnt seem to be an issue for other people Ive spoken to who use VR headgear. Story continues Daydream VR Googles (GOOGL, GOOG) Daydream VR platform is already available on a number of Android smartphones, though to use it you have to strap your handset into a Daydream View headset, which costs an additional $99. Samsung uses a similar model with its $129 Gear VR headset, though that uses Facebooks Oculus software. The idea behind Lenovos Mirage is to provide you with a better overall experience thanks to its high-resolution display, as well as its use of the Googles WorldSense tracking software, something not available on smartphones. Outside of that it appears as though the standalone and phone-based versions of Daydream VR will run the same software. That means youll get access to services like Netflix (NFLX) VR, YouTube VR, Hulu, HBO GO VR and a number of other VR games and experiences. The problem, though, is that, like other VR headsets, there still isnt a killer app for Daydream VR. Sure, being able to watch Netflix in VR is interesting, but thats not going to move units, especially with the Mirages expected sub-$400 price tag. Until we get a real VR app or game that grabs the attention of mainstream consumers, VR wont move the needle much for Lenovo or Google. More from Dan: Email Daniel at dhowley@yahoo-inc.com; follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley. A Louisiana teacher was asked to leave and was then forcibly removed from a Vermilion Parish School Board meeting before being arrested outside the building on January 8 after questioning the board and its superintendent about his raise. This video shows Deyshia Hargrave a teacher at Rene Rost Middle School according to local reports and her Facebook profile expressing frustration that Vermilion Parish Superintendent Jerome Puyau would get a raise and access to a vehicle when, as she says, classes are growing and teachers are bearing the brunt of rising costs. When I first started teaching ELA there were 20, 21 kids in a class, and now theres 29 kids in a class that we are now having and we have not gotten raises, she says. An Abbeville police officer then approaches Hargrave as she is being addressed by Puyau and demands that she leave. The video shows Hargrave leaving of her own accord before being forcibly escorted through the hallway of the building and placed in handcuffs outside. Credit: Chris Rosa, Vermilion Today via Storyful Middle school teacher escorted out of the building by a town marshal after voicing concerns about contract including a raise to districts top administrator A Louisiana teacher who was forcibly removed from a school board hearing was booked on two crimes and bonded out of jail on Tuesday morning, court documents show. Deyshia Hargrave, a middle school English teacher in the Vermilion Parish School District was handcuffed and dragged out of the meeting by a town marshal on Monday night after voicing her concerns about a contract that would give a raise to the districts top administrator. During the public comments period, Hargrave was asked to stop asking questions, and she obeyed. Then when she was called on again by the board, the marshal stepped up and asked her to leave. The exchange was captured in video footage that has since gone viral. Hargrave exited the room on her own, but once she reached the hallway, the officer took her to the ground and handcuffed her, leaving onlookers shocked. Court documents suggest she spent several hours in police custody before paying a bond to be released. What are you doing, can you explain! Hargrave yelled as the officer picked her up from the floor and pushed her towards an exit, commanding her to stop resisting. Hargrave responded: I am not, you just pushed me to the floor! School superintendent Jerome Puyau, the man whose potential pay raise was being discussed in the meeting, said that no charges were filed by him or the board against Hargrave. She was, however, charged with remaining after being forbidden and resisting an officer, both of which can be brought by a marshal, and do not require the school boards cooperation. It is unclear if the marshal was acting on his own accord or on the orders of board members or the superintendent. Deyshia Hargraves expulsion from a public meeting and subsequent arrest are unacceptable and raise serious constitutional concerns, said Bruce Hamilton of the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana. The constitution prohibits the government from punishing or retaliating against people for expressing their views, and the fact that a schoolteacher was arrested at a public meeting of the school board is especially troubling. Story continues The Abbeville town marshals office, which made the arrest, the superintendents office and the school board president all declined further comment on the incident. After Hargrave was removed, the board ultimately voted to approve Puyaus new contract. (Reuters) - Magellan Midstream Partners LP on Monday said an estimated 500 barrels of gasoline leaked from its 12-inch pipeline system that hauls fuel from Rosemount, Minnesota, to Minneapolis The leak occurred in Eagan, Minnesota, and was caused by third-party excavation equipment, the company said. Magellan had initially estimated the amount of spill at 300 barrels. Emergency responders, regulators and environmental specialists were on site, and a few business operations in the immediate area have been evacuated, Magellan said. Several roads have been temporarily closed, it added. Magellan did not give a timeline for the repairs to be complete, but does not anticipate any interruptions in supply at its Minneapolis area facilities. (Reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar in New York and Nallur Sethuraman in Bengaluru; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Leslie Adler) Photo credit: Getty From ELLE UK There's nothing worse than having to buy a present for in-laws. Okay, yes there's loads of things way worse than that but following our recent Christmas outings (cue prams, understandably grumpy sales staff and the words 'stock unavailable' ruining the majority of our online Christmas orders), you might forgive us for the OTT comparison. But, if you thought your recent festive shopping trip was bad, spare a second for Meghan Markle who not only had to spend the Yuletide period with the British Royal Family for the first time, but gift them all presents. Photo credit: Getty While Kate Middleton reportedly gave the Queen her grandmother's recipe of chutney one Christmas, the Suits star decided to take a gamble and buy her famous future in-law a toy you most certainly played with as a kid. Yes, that's right, Meghan bought the Queen a singing toy hamster. The Daily Star Online reports Markle gave the rather amusing gift to her fiance Prince Harry's grandmother during her first Christmas at Sandringham, leaving the monarch in 'hysterics'. Photo credit: Getty 'It was so funny, especially when the corgis tried to take hold of the toy,' a source told the publication. '[The Queen] laughed and said "they can keep my dogs company!".' For her future brother-in-law, Prince William, the Californian star reportedly gave him a Tam O Shanter hat, complete with fake ginger hair attached, following several comments the Duke of Cambridge has made over the years about his thinning hair. Photo credit: Getty The choice of amusing gifts comes several years after Prince Harry reportedly revealed the Royals exchange 'cheap joke gifts' to each other, with the 33-year-old once gifting his grandma a shower cap with the words 'ain't life a b*tch' emblazoned on the front. It sounds like Markle's gift went down a treat. You Might Also Like Photo credit: Getty From Prima For her second royal engagement ever and first of 2018 Meghan Markle joined her fiance Prince Harry at Reprezent 107.3FM in the Brixton, south London wearing a surprisingly affordable sweater from Marks & Spencer. In a departure from Markle's famously expensive outfit that she wore to Christmas Day services in Sandringham, the wool-blend sweater she wore to the event today comes straight off the rack from Marks and Spencer's Autograph line of sweaters and cardigans. It has a round neck and bell sleeves and is currently on sale for 45 at M&S in most sizes. In the On Air studio, Prince Harry and Ms. Markle meet presenter Glory as she records her show for @ReprezentRadio. pic.twitter.com/72HjEQpAjv - Kensington Palace (@KensingtonRoyal) January 9, 2018 BUY NOW Autograph Wool Blend Round Neck Bell Sleeve Jumper, 45 Markle also wore a Smythe coat, Burberry trousers, and a light gray scarf, which some are reporting is from Jigsaw, and others from Sentaler. You Might Also Like The #MeToo movement forced a top Norwegian politician to step down from his job as the deputy leader of the countrys biggest opposition party after allegations of misconduct. Trond Giske, 51, said late on Sunday that he will step down as deputy leader of the Labor Party and as its economic policy spokesman. Giske has been an influential figure in Norwegian politics for more than 20 years, and has held several ministerial posts, serving most recently as trade and industry minister in 2013. His resignation comes after a wave of allegations against Giske of inappropriate behavior toward women from mostly anonymous whistle blowers. Giske has apologized for his actions, which span several years, but has also said that some of the allegations arent true. I will answer questions that are asked and confront the claims that I think are wrong, he said in a Facebook post late Sunday. At the same time, I again apologize for the things that Ive done that have caused discomfort to others. I havent always been aware of my own role in all situations, especially in informal and private situations. Im sorry for that. Jonas Gahr Store, the Labor Partys leader, said on Monday that he was in agreement with Giskes resignation. While the party is still going through the allegations, Store said at a press conference in Oslo that what has been revealed so far is not compatible with our rules and values. The scandal has shaken the party, which is still reeling from a loss in Septembers general election. French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe - AFP The nephew of French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe was among three tourists repeatedly stabbed in the Israeli seaside resort of Eilat, it emerged Monday night. The wounded holidaymakers, who have not been named, were found lying on the promenade last Wednesday after being targeted by a gang of Israeli men. It comes at a time of heightened tension between France and Israel, as President Emmanuel Macron and Mr Philippe refuse to accept Jerusalem as Israels capital city. This has greatly angered many in Israel, and especially those who do not want East Jerusalem to be set aside as the capital of a Palestinian state. Mr Philippe has also controversially backed the publication of anti-Semitic essays by the author Louis-Ferdinand Destouches, better known as Celine, despite fury from Frances sizeable Jewish community. UN vote to condemn Trump recognising Jerusalem as capital of Israel By Monday night, Israeli news outlets were reporting the shocking Eilat crime, while French media ones generally remained silent. According to the Israeli i24 news channel: The French consul in Tel Aviv was rushed to the spot urgently. Three French tourists, including the nephew of the French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, who was on holiday in the seaside resort of Eilat in Israel, were attacked last Wednesday by a group of Israelis. The municipal police found three young tourists lying on the Eilat Promenade with stab wounds on the lower part of their bodies. Two of them were slightly hurt, and the third more seriously. All were taken to a local hospital, where they were later joined by the French consul, who is thought to have contacted Mr Philippe immediately. Two of those hurt were released from hospital on Thursday, while the third remained in a ward. It is not known if he is Mr Philippes nephew. A criminal enquiry into the attack has been launched in Israel, with police attempting to bring the perpetrators to justice. They are all believed to be Israeli men, according to detectives. Story continues There was no comment on the incident from Frances Ambassador to Israel, or from the French foreign ministry. On Monday, President Macron reaffirmed his countrys commitment to a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict. Leaders on both sides must continue calling for calm and dialogue, Mr Macron said during a meeting with members of the Palestinian Central Council. It follows American President Donald Trump plunging the area into renewed chaos by recognising Jerusalem as solely being the capital of Israel, and not Palestine too. This shocked Western allies including France and Britain as much as it did Arab leaders, who insist that East Jerusalem must become the capital of Palestine. On Sunday Mr Philippe said he was fine about the publication of Celines anti-Semitic essays. Referring to Celine, Mr Philippe said: There are very good reasons to detest the man himself, but you cannot deny the writers central position in French literature. But CRIF, Frances main Jewish umbrella group, said in a statement that it opposed the publication of the three racist, anti-Semitic and pro-Hitler essays. Last year the Jewish Agency of Israel claimed that 5000 Jews emigrated to Israel from France in 2016, partly because of security fears, and an atmosphere of anti-Semitism condoned by those in power. Kano (Nigeria) (AFP) - Four west African states have launched a major offensive against the Boko Haram jihadist group in Nigeria, the military said on Tuesday. Soldiers from Nigeria and the neighbouring countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger are targeting a Boko Haram faction led by Abubakar Shekau in the Sambisa Forest, and another led by Mamman Nur, on and around Lake Chad. Both locations are in Borno state, northeast Nigeria. According to the Nigerian military, scores of jihadists have been killed and hundreds of others have been forced to surrender in recent days. Top brass in Abuja have claimed that Nur had been injured and one of his wives killed in an aerial bombardment. Shekau was "a spent horse, waiting for his Waterloo," army spokesman Brigadier General Sani Usman said on Monday. On Tuesday, he said the operation -- codenamed "Deep Punch 2" -- had been making "tremendous progress". But he said four soldiers had "paid the supreme price" and nine others were wounded by a suicide car bomb attack against a military vehicle near Shekau's camp on Monday. Separate senior military and civilian militia sources spoken to by AFP gave a higher death toll of 10. Two Cameroon security sources meanwhile said two of its troops had been killed in the Sambisa Forest, although it was not clear if they were among those mentioned by Usman. - Repeated attacks - Boko Haram has been fighting to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria since 2009. The violence has killed at least 20,000 and displaced more than 2.6 million. In 2015, the four neighbours joined forces with Nigeria's tiny western neighbour, Benin, to set up a Multi-National Joint Task Force, designed seize back territory lost to the jihadists. Nigeria's president, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military general who is expected to seek a second term next year, was elected in 2015 on a promise to defeat the insurgents. He and military commanders have repeatedly insisted the Islamic State group affiliate is a spent force but regular attacks still occur in the remote region. Story continues The Nur faction, which goes by the name Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), last Friday claimed a late December raid on a Nigerian military base that killed nine soldiers. Shekau appeared in a new video message last Tuesday and claimed a series of recent attacks in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri and the border towns of Gamboru and Damboa. - Heavily fortified - Shekau, Boko Haram's leader since 2009, pledged allegiance to IS in 2015, just as the military counter-insurgency began to make gains. But he was enraged in August 2016 when IS gave its backing to the faction led by Abu Mus'ab Al-Barnawi, the son of Boko Haram founder Mohammed Yusuf. Nur -- Shekau's former right-hand man and the mastermind of the 2011 UN office bombing in Abuja -- is seen as the faction's de-facto leader and Al-Barnawi the figurehead. The operations against Shekau are concentrated on his hideout in the Parisu area of Borno, according to military and civilian militia sources. One militia leader said the suicide car bomb attack that killed the troops happened at Lagara village, where soldiers had been forced to stop because of Boko Haram landmines. "There are mines all over the marshland leading to the Shekau camp, which makes it difficult for troops to get to the camp," he said. "Once the soldiers cross the river, they are in Parisu. Shekau is within their grasp this time because he is holed up." - Previous escape - Shekau, whom the authorities have claimed to have killed on a number of occasions, has been surrounded and managed to escape before. In December 2016, he evaded troops who overran his Camp Zairo enclave in the Sambisa Forest. The military claims to have liberated the former game reserve but Boko Haram is now said to be back in the camp. Nur, who is believed to have links with Al-Qaeda affiliates in north Africa, was said to have been injured in an air raid on a militant camp on Tumbin Kare island, on Lake Chad. He had moved there from his headquarters in Tumbin Gini last week, according to the militia leader. "Mamman Nur never stayed in one particular location. He moved around the islands under his control to avoid detection," he added. "He was not lucky this time." Security agencies have warned the public about Barnawi/Nur fighters "attempting to melt into other communities" in the northern states of Kano, Yobe and Jigawa. "The concern is that the terrorists would take cover among the civilian population to wreak havoc," they said. ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's president on Tuesday blamed clashes between Muslim cattle herders and Christian farmers on the clamor for land in the face of a population rapidly approaching 200 million people. At least 83 people have been killed in the communal violence since Dec. 31. Muhammadu Buhari, who called for calm, has already ordered a heightened police presence in the central state of Benue, where most of the killings took place in the last few weeks, including the relocation of the country's police chief. Muslim herdsmen, mainly of the Fulani ethnic group, and Christian farmers often clash over the use of land in parts of central Nigeria, known as the Middle Belt. "President Buhari holds the view, as do many experts, that these conflicts are more often than not, as a result of major demographic changes in Nigeria," said an emailed statement issued by the presidency. "While the land size has not changed and will not change, urban sprawl and development have simply reduced land area both for peasant farming and cattle grazing," said the statement, urging people to remain calm and cooperate with security agencies. It said Nigeria's population was around 63 million when the west African country gained independence in 1960, compared with a population now "estimated at close to 200 million". The United Nations estimates that Africa's most populous country is set to become the country with the world's third largest population, behind India and China, by 2050. The presidency said a conference would be set up in an attempt to identify short and long term solutions to the problem of clashes between the semi-nomadic farmers and the mostly settled farmers. The Middle Belt region is a diverse region in which differing religious, ancestral and cultural differences have frequently kindled conflict in the last few decades. Despite the most recent outbreaks of violence, Nigerians, split roughly equally between Christians and Muslims from around 250 different ethnic groups, mostly live peacefully together. (Reporting by Felix Onuah; Writing by Alexis Akwagyiram) SEOUL (Reuters) - North and South Korea agreed to hold military talks, a joint statement said after the two Koreas engaged in formal dialogue on Tuesday for the first time in more than two years. North Korea also decided to send a high-ranking delegation and a cheering squad to the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics in South Korea next month, but the head of its delegation in the talks on Tuesday expressed negative sentiment over the mention of denuclearisation during Tuesday's discussions, the South Korean government said in a statement. (Reporting by Christine Kim and Hyonhee Shin; Editing by) Stockholm (AFP) - One person died and another was slightly hurt Sunday in a blast outside a metro station in a Stockholm suburb, which police said did not appear to be a terrorist attack. A man in his 60s died in hospital after "he picked up an object off the ground which promptly exploded," police spokesman Sven-Erik Olsson told AFP. A woman aged 45 was also hurt, suffering facial injuries, police said. The blast occurred mid-morning at the Varby gard station in Huddinge, a southern suburb of the Swedish capital. Police cordoned off the station and the square where the blast happened as the bomb squad moved in to investigate. The Expressen and Aftonbladet newspapers said the device was a hand grenade. "It is too early to say. Technicians are still working on it. Nothing indicates that the (injured) couple were targeted," said Olsson, adding there was nothing to suggest an act of terrorism. Local resident Milorad Jencic told AFP he was shocked as witnesses and onlookers gathered around the police cordon. "We had incidents in the 1990s and early 2000s. There were very violent gangs" at the time, he said, adding he was "surprised" by this blast because he thought those groups had since disappeared. According to a Swedish police report published last year, Sweden is the European country where criminal gangs use the most grenades, often from stocks from the former Yugoslavia. In August 2016, an eight-year-old boy was killed by a grenade thrown into a flat in a working-class area of Gothenburg. Oprah for president? Social media approves. (Photo: Getty Images) Oprah Winfreys epic Golden Globes speech made her a trending topic on Twitter and a potential presidential candidate, per the hashtag #Oprah2020. But what does it take to score the most powerful job in the land? And could Winfrey actually win? On Sunday, Oprah became the first black woman recipient of the Cecil B. DeMille award. As she delivered her acceptance speech, honoring civil rights activists Recy Taylor and Rosa Parks and the women behind Times Up, a new initiative to support sexual harassment victims, Twitter held an unofficial election. If @Oprah ran for president in 2020, she is every person. She has been poor & now rich. She is also a self made Billionaire. She has a grasp of the issues as she used to cover local politics. She can articulate any issue and she has mass appeal beyond race & gender. AprilDRyan (@AprilDRyan) January 8, 2018 Oprah: Sounder on economics than Bernie Sanders, understands Middle America better than Elizabeth Warren, less touchy-feely than Joe Biden, more pleasant than Andrew Cuomo, more charismatic than John Hickenlooper.#ImWithHer Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) January 8, 2018 Why this massive #Oprah2020 moment? Because Oprah is the antithesis of Trump: A well-spoken, incredibly smart & confident black woman, who energizes people not with hatred & anger, but with hope & vision. When we hear her speak, it reminds us of who we can be as a country. Like, Totally Stable Genius (@dvorakoelling) January 8, 2018 This is the first day in a long time I went to bed and woke up to a bigger news story than Trump. #Oprah2020 #YESSHECAN april (@adwill123) January 9, 2018 Run, Oprah, run! An army of women would fight for you in #2020election #2020prah Jackie Speier (@RepSpeier) January 8, 2018 On Monday, the chatter grew so loud that the White House responded. We welcome the challenge, whether it be Oprah Winfrey or anybody else, White House spokesman Hogan Gidley said aboard Air Force One, as reported by the New York Daily News. (Even Ivanka Trump tweeted praise of Winfreys speech, for what its worth, in a move that many found ironic.) Story continues Winfreys bestie, Gayle King, addressed the speculation on Tuesday morning from her post as a co-host of CBS This Morning. I dont think shes actively considering it at this time, she said. I do think shes intrigued by the idea, I do think that. I also know that after years of watching the Oprah show, you also always have the right to change your mind. The idea of Winfrey, 63, as president, isnt new on Sunday, Golden Globes host Seth Meyers remarked, In 2011, I told some jokes about our current president at the White House Correspondents Dinner, jokes about how he was unqualified to be president. And some have said that night convinced him to run. And if thats true, I would just like to say, Oprah, you will never be president! Sunday night, Stedman Graham endorsed his partner of 31 years. Its up to the people, he told the Los Angeles Times after the show. She would absolutely do it. Meryl Streep expressed her support for a Winfrey presidency to the Washington Post. I dont think she had any intention [of declaring]. But now she doesnt have a choice. Fueling speculation are two sources identified as Winfreys friends who told CNN that she is actively thinking about running. In 2013, President Barack Obama awarded Oprah the Presidential Medal of Freedom for her philanthropy. (Photo: Getty Images) However, Winfrey has at times flat-out rejected the idea. In October 2017, during an interview on CBS This Morning, when King said, People ask it all the time. Even I am now starting to think the rules have changed about running for president, Winfrey replied that her friend had lost her mind now, and added, There will be no running for office of any kind for me. And in June 2017, Winfrey told the Hollywood Reporter, I will never run for public office. Thats a pretty definitive thing. Other times, Winfrey has been vague. On Sunday night, when the Los Angeles Times asked the mogul if shed make a run, she answered, Okaay. And in December 2016, while discussing President Trumps win, Bloomberg TVs David Rubenstein asked Oprah if shed run, saying, Its clear you dont need government experience to be elected president of the United States. Oprah replied, Thats what I thought. I thought, Oh gee, I dont have the experience, I dont know enough. And now Im thinking, Oh. Winfrey and Hillary Clinton in 2005. (Photo: Getty Images) If Winfrey were to run, shed have to meet three requirements, according to USA.gov: be a natural-born citizen (check), at least 35 years old (check), and a U.S. resident for 14 years (check). She would then have to raise $5,000 in contributions and register a Statement of Candidacy with the Federal Election Commission before kicking off her campaign. Historically, presidents and presidential candidates build resumes fit for the White House. Barack Obama was a law professor, a state senator, and a U.S. senator from Illinois. George W. Bush served in the Air National Guard and as governor of Texas, and Bill Clinton was an attorney general and the governor of Arkansas. There are exceptions, of course: Before becoming governor of California, President Ronald Reagan was a famous Hollywood actor, even serving as the president of the Screen Actors Guild; and President Jimmy Carter was a peanut farmer before becoming governor of Georgia. The best example of an unconventional path, though, is President Trump, who went from real estate mogul/socialite to reality star to POTUS. So the idea of Oprah Winfrey running for the nations highest office isnt that crazy. As the Biography site summarizes her life, she was the first black woman to host a national talk show, which ran for 25 seasons; she was the countrys first black billionaire; and she was named the Greatest Black Philanthropist in American History by Business Week in 2005. Winfrey has also dabbled in policy, proposing a database for convicted child abusers, which President Clinton signed into law in 1994, and joining Obamas presidential campaign in 2007. When Hillary Clinton ran for president in 2016, she had Winfreys endorsement. Oprahs potential as a presidential candidate was high, well before her Golden Globes speech, Ron Sachs, a media consultant and CEO of Sachs Media Group, a communications agency, tells Yahoo Lifestyle. Shes a respected figure with crossover appeal to either party because shes demonstrated a humanitarian heart, thought leadership, and the ability to be a game-changer. And proper political chops may not be necessary. As a successful businessperson, she has experience in problem-solving and how to give and take counsel, he says. That said, its easier to predict Oprahs odds of success when shes not actually running for office. One has to compromise to advance certain issues, says Sachs. Right now she doesnt have to do that. While candidates often choose their running mates to present a more balanced ticket and attract a wider audience, the media mogul is a one-woman show. A running-mate value wouldnt help Oprah get elected, adds Sachs. Her singular appeal is more than adequate to be a viable candidate. If Winfrey did run for president, Trump would be hard-pressed to campaign for reelection. Back in 1999, when MSNBC asked who hed pick for his theoretical running mate, he name-checked Oprah. Well, I would consider, and as Chris [Matthews] can tell you, I threw out the name of a friend of mine, who I think the world of. Shes great. And some people thought it was an incredible idea, some people didnt, but Oprah. I said, Oprah Winfrey, whos really great. And I think we would be a very formidable team. Read more from Yahoo Lifestyle: Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day. Oprah Winfreys close friend Gayle King says the billionaire television icon is not actively considering a presidential bid but hasnt ruled one out. I dont think shes actively considering it at this time, King, co-host of CBS This Morning, said on the morning show Tuesday. I do think shes intrigued by the idea, I do think that. I also know that after years of watching the Oprah show you also always have the right to change your mind. Winfreys stirring, 9-minute speech during Sundays Golden Globes has led to intense speculation that the former daytime talk show host could challenge President Trump in 2020. But King dismissed the idea that Winfrey had intended to use the speech as a precursor to a future political campaign. People said, Oh yeah, she wrote that speech as a launching pad for what she wants to do. Thats absolutely not true, King said. Oprah Winfrey accepts the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the 75th Annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Sunday. (Paul Drinkwater/NBC via AP) King said that Winfrey wanted to empower the so-called #MeToo movement in the fight against sexual harassment and inequality. She wanted that moment to be more than women wearing black dresses of solidarity, King explained. She really did want to speak to young girls around the country. She really did want to say, Enough already. During the awards show, Winfreys longtime partner, Stedman Graham, was asked by a Los Angeles Times reporter if she would run for president. Its up to the people. She would absolutely do it, Graham said. King, who was seated next to Winfrey at the awards show, said that he misheard the question. Stedman says that he thought the reporter asked, Would she make a good president? King said. Gayle King, Oprah Winfrey and director Ava DuVernay pose for a photo at the Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Sunday. (Michael Kovac/Getty Images for Moet & Chandon) On Air Force One Monday afternoon, White House deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley was asked what the administration thought about Winfreys speech. Regardless of whos on the ballot, regardless who decides to run against this president, they are going to have to face a president who has record-setting achievements in record-setting time, Gidley said, whether its an economy that is booming, job creation, historic tax cuts and tax reform when that hadnt been touched in 30 years, an increase in wages, an absolute decimation of ISIS in Iraq and Syria. Story continues He added: We welcome the challenge, whether it be Oprah Winfrey or anybody else. Meanwhile, Ivanka Trump, the presidents daughter, raised a few eyebrows with a tweet Monday night praising Winfrey. At the White House on Tuesday, President Trump was asked about the possibility of running against her. Id beat Oprah. Oprah would be a lot of fun, Trump said, adding: I like Oprah. I dont think shes going to run. Read more from Yahoo News: Manila (AFP) - The Philippines will lodge a diplomatic protest with China after Manila questioned if Beijing had reneged on a pledge not to militarise a disputed South China Sea reef. Beijing claims nearly all of the sea and has been turning reefs in the Spratly and Paracel chains into islands, installing military facilities and equipment on them. Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana Tuesday said Manila was investigating reports of recent Chinese activity on Fiery Cross Reef, an outcrop that Beijing turned into an artificial island and which now appears to house a military base. Lorenzana spoke out despite recent moves by President Rodrigo Duterte to ease tensions with China. "According to them they are not militarising (the reefs) and it was for peaceful purposes only like tourism," Lorenzana said. "But if it is true and we can prove that they have been putting soldiers and any weapons, defensive (or) otherwise, that would be a violation of what they said". Lorenzana said he had also received reports Philippine fishermen had been "harassed" by Chinese coastguards. Asked about the Philippine complaints, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China "is conducting peaceful construction in our own territory", and that Beijing "has the need to build necessary territorial defence equipment". He added: "It's not targeted at any country. I need to point out that China and the Philippines are friendly, neighbours." Last month, a US think tank released new satellite images showing deployment of radar and other equipment in disputed South China Sea islands. The Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI) said the buildup continued despite rival claims across the sea from Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan. Over 2017, China installed infrastructure to support air and naval bases, such as "large radar and sensor arrays", the Washington-based think tank said. Story continues Fiery Cross Reef saw the most construction last year, with building work spanning 27 acres, or about 110,000 square metres, AMTI said its analysis of satellite images showed. The Philippines had previously been one of the most outspoken countries in standing up to China's claim to most of the South China Sea. This culminated in Manila's complaint to a United Nations-backed tribunal that ruled in July 2016 that China's territorial claims in the sea were without legal basis. But since Duterte took office in mid-2016, he has decided not to use the ruling to pressure China but has instead chosen to build closer ties in return for billions of dollars in investment and aid. PARIS (Reuters) - Drivers caught swapping texts or chatting on their phones at the wheel risk having their licenses suspended under new road safety rules in France, where the government is under pressure to halt a rise in road deaths. The crackdown, defended on the grounds that drivers are four times more likely to crash if toying with hand-held devices, was one of several measures announced by the government on Tuesday, along with a lowering of speed limits. The rise in smartphone use is fuelling concern that digital dabbling will become as deadly as drunk-driving, especially if the punished only by fines. President Emmanuel Macron's government is under pressure to combat resurgent road accident numbers. The number of road accident deaths has been on the rise since 2014, with most accidents still attributed to excess speed, use of alcohol and drug-consumption. In Europe, bans on hand-held device usage are widespread but offences are generally limited to fines that vary from less than 50 euros in Ireland to several hundred in the Netherlands. (Reporting by Brian Love; Editing by Angus MacSwan) The Pi Delta Psi national fraternity has been banned from operating in Pennsylvania for 10 years, a judge ruled Monday, over the 2013 hazing death of a 19-year-old Baruch College student. Chun Michael Deng, a fraternity pledge, died in December 2013 after a hazing ritual called the glass ceiling in which he was blindfolded and forced to carry a heavy backpack while pushing through a line of fraternity members, who tackled him to the ground, according to a grand jury report. Deng suffered a traumatic brain injury during the incident, which took place at a fraternity retreat in the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania. The fraternity was also ordered to pay a more than $110,000 fine, and four fraternity members who pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter were sentenced to jail time. Kenny Kwan was sentenced to 12 to 24 months in county jail, while Raymond Lam and Sheldon Wong were sentenced to 10 to 24 months, the Associated Press reported. A fourth defendant, Charles Lai, was sentenced to time served after spending 342 days in jail because he was unable to make bail. Thirty-seven people were initially charged in connection with Dengs death, which defense attorneys have described as tragic but unintentional. Not one person out of 37 picked up a telephone and called an ambulance. I cannot wrap my head around it, Monroe County President Judge Margherita Patti-Worthington said Monday, according to the AP. So theres something greater going on here, and I think its probably really prevalent. We see across the country these issues in fraternities. The national Pi Delta Psi fraternity described itself as a victim of the actions of rogue fraternity members, and attorney Wes Niemoczynski has said the organization will appeal its conviction, according to the AP. But a prosecutor faulted the fraternity for enabling hazing prior to Dengs death. Its the epitome of a lack of acceptance of responsibility. Its their rituals and functions that led us here today, Monroe County Assistant District Attorney Kim Metzger said in court on Monday, the AP reported. Four students died in alleged hazing incidents at other universities in the past year, prompting several schools to suspend Greek life. Twenty six fraternity members are currently facing charges in the alleged hazing death of Penn State fraternity pledge Tim Piazza, whose parents have become vocal anti-hazing advocates. I feel like theres a cat clawing and scratching at my heart, hurting me persistently and relentlessly, Dengs mother, Mary, wrote in a statement delivered in court on Monday, according to the AP. I wake up and I pray for deliverance. By Pawel Sobczak and Lidia Kelly WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland's new prime minister, Mateusz Morawiecki, will reshuffle the two-year-old conservative government on Tuesday before flying to Brussels to discuss controversial judicial reforms. The long-expected shake-up will probably involve naming a new finance, foreign, environment and health minister, several sources close to the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party have told Reuters. "The swearing-in should take place around noon," Morawiecki's spokeswoman Joanna Kopcinska said on Monday. Teresa Czerwinska, a deputy finance minister responsible for budget affairs, is the most likely to succeed Morawiecki himself as finance minister, two sources said. Two other sources said that either President Andrzej Duda's top foreign policy adviser, Krzysztof Szczerski, or Adam Bielan, a deputy speaker of the upper house of parliament, would replace Witold Waszczykowski as foreign minister. "Szczerski has long been the top candidate but Bielan's candidacy is also strong," a government source said. Morawiecki stepped up from finance minister to replace Beata Szydlo as premier last month, at the midpoint of the parliamentary term, as PiS gears up for local elections in late 2018 and parliamentary and presidential elections in 2019 and 2020. Czerwinska is seen as loyal to Morawiecki and likely to continue his economic policy with little change of emphasis. But it remains to be seen whether Morawiecki will improve Warsaw's relations with Brussels. Poland, once a champion of democratic changes after the fall of Communism, is now at loggerheads with the European Union over sweeping changes to state institutions that critics say have undermined democracy and the rule of law. Morawiecki is due to meet European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker in Brussels on Tuesday. The EU executive launched an unprecedented action against Poland in December, calling on other member states to prepare sanctions if Warsaw fails to reverse a series of judicial reforms. The PiS government says the reforms will speed up slow and inefficient courts and sweep away a lingering communist era-mentality. Brussels says they politicize the judiciary, and are at odds with core EU values. (Writing by Lidia Kelly; Editing by Kevin Liffey) Its official: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are just as cute in 2018 as they were in 2017. The royal couple stopped by Reprezent Radio in Londons Brixton neighborhood for their first official appearance of the year. Harry and Meghan visited the station to see Reprezents work training young people in radio and broadcasting, according to Kensington Palace. Markle sported a camel coat by Smythe, a sweater by Marks & Spencer, Burberry slacks and a scarf from Jigsaw the brand her soon-to-be sister-in-law worked for after university. Prince Harry wore a Club Monaco wool topcoat. (Photo: Chris Jackson via Getty Images) (Photo: Chris Jackson via Getty Images) Fans cheered for Harry and Meghan as they stopped to chat outside Reprezents studio in Pop Brixton. Harry prodded his fiancee to wave to the crowd, which greeted her with roaring enthusiasm. Once inside the studio, Harry and Meghan chatted with youth about their work with Reprezent and met with hosts at the station. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle chat to young people on the @ReprezentRadio programme about their experiences, and how Reprezent has helped them to develop important skills. pic.twitter.com/zKtJTEZ7g4 Kensington Palace (@KensingtonRoyal) January 9, 2018 In the On Air studio, Prince Harry and Ms. Markle meet presenter Glory as she records her show for @ReprezentRadio. pic.twitter.com/72HjEQpAjv Kensington Palace (@KensingtonRoyal) January 9, 2018 The appearance comes on the heels of the couples romantic New Years getaway to the French Riviera. But its back to work for the pair, who said in an interview following their engagement that they look forward to doing charity work together. In these beginning few months and now being boots on the ground in the U.K., Im excited to just really get to know more about the different communities here, Markle said in November. [And] smaller organizations who are working on the same causes that Ive always been passionate about. Theres a lot to do, Harry said. If that means we can expect more adorable appearances from these two, well take it. Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today. Also on HuffPost This article originally appeared on HuffPost. Record rain and mudslides hit California Rescue workers scour through cars for missing persons after a mudslide in Montecito, Calif., Jan. 12, 2018. (Photo: Kyle Grillot/Reuters) The number of people missing from last weeks deadly Southern California mudslides fell to three on Monday as hundreds of rescue workers searched for survivors from the rain-driven slides that killed 20 people. Emergency officials said hopes were diminishing that they would pull more survivors from the ravaged landscape of hardened muck, boulders and twisted debris left behind by the Tuesday mudslides that scoured a landscape already barren from last years record-setting wildfires. The mudslides that scoured the affluent community of Montecito, 85 miles (137 km) northwest of Los Angeles, caused the greatest loss of life from a California mudslide in at least 13 years. (Reuters) See more news-related photo galleries and follow us on Yahoo News Photo Twitter and Tumblr. It started like any other Lyft pickup: After entering my destination in the app, a car appeared at my location several minutes later. But as I stepped inside the vehicle and shut the door, I was required to confirm my trip details on a tablet mounted near the center console facing the backseat. A driver sat in the front seat, but he took his hands off the wheel just a few moments into our drive. Suddenly, a disembodied voice announced that the car would be entering autonomous driving mode. My ride was the result of a partnership between Lyft and automotive technology company Aptiv, which are proving self-driving taxi rides during this years CES in Las Vegas. The cars are capable of navigating to specific locations on the Las Vegas strip, including Caesars Palace, my destination after starting off from the Las Vegas Convention Center. Its the second time Lyft is bringing its self-driving cabs to public roads, after first doing so in Boston last year. Lyft and Aptivs self-driving car looks almost identical to a standard vehicle, save for one noticeably unique characteristic: The demo car I rode in had a dashboard display providing a visualization of what the cars sensors saw as it navigated around Vegas. A car representing the vehicle I was been riding in occupied the center of the video feed. To the cars left was a digital portrayal of the next lane of traffic, which included similar car-shaped graphics to indicate vehicles driving nearby. To the right was a wave of pulsating blue dots representing trees and other objects located on the sidewalk. These visuals are a simplification of what the car really sees for demo purposes; the vehicle actually processes this information in raw distances and numbers, says Serge Lambermont, Aptivs technical director of automated driving, who accompanied me on the trip. Get the latest deals, reviews and recommendations from the editors of TIME: sign up for The Goods newsletter here Story continues This screen shows what a self-driving Lyft sees as it navigates In the middle of our conversation, the car announced that it was preparing to change lanes. Once we reached a traffic light, it seamlessly made a left turn as we continued toward our destination. The steering wheel automatically rotated on its own while the driver sat with his hands planted on his knees. The sensors artificial intelligence software analyzed how vehicles in neighboring lanes were behaving: if a driver accelerated in order to merge, the autonomous Lyft knew to decelerate in response. Transmitters in traffic lights on the Las Vegas strip are sending data to the self-driving Lyfts to communicate exactly when reds will change to greens. Aptivs technology can also distinguish between people, animals, trees, and billboards, and is capable of tracking up to 60 objects around the vehicle, Lambermont says. As promising as the technology seemed during my demonstration, were still a ways off from self-driving taxis becoming commonplace affairs. There are several important obstacles to overcome, the biggest of which is ensuring the technology will always work safely, even when theres a technical glitch. Cities, meanwhile, will have to optimize their roads, bridges and tunnels for autonomous cars. Certain road elements, like roundabouts with double or triple lanes and streets without clearly visible lane markings, are still challenging for autonomous vehicles, according to Lambermont. Read more: Your Future Smart Car Could Use AI To Help You Drive Still, Lyft, Aptiv, and many other technology giants are working toward an automotive future in which drivers may not be necessary even as a precaution. At its exhibit outside of the Las Vegas Convention Center, Lyft commissioned an artist to sketch personalized mockups of how future autonomous cars might look if they were tailored to an owners needs. The interior of a car mostly used for daily commuting, for example, could look more like an office or a living room than a traditional backseat. Pictured below is my custom sketch, which represents what a vehicle made to seat four passengers with a table in the middle could look like. A concept sketch of what a self-driving car could look like Self-driving car companies have long argued that freeing us up from our daily drives could boost our productivity while moving about. Indeed, during his companys press conference on Jan. 7, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang lamented the amount of time wasted commuting each day, reiterating that autonomous cars could enable passengers to get more out of their day since they wont have to focus on driving (Nvidia, once better known as a graphics company, is now one of the foremost companies working on driverless car tech). In the near term, its much more likely that electric, self-driving shuttles designed to travel along designated routes will become prominent before were all buying autonomous vehicles for our personal use such preplanned trips are far easier to program and carry out. But Raj Kapoor, Lyfts chief strategy officer, insists that the transition to autonomous driving will be similar to the evolution from horse-drawn buggies to the first automotive vehicles thats to say there will be a few here and there in the beginning before theyre suddenly everywhere, he says. It could very well be, then, that your children, or your childrens children, will look at human-driven vehicles the same way we look at those horse-drawn buggies today outdated, unsafe, and justifiably retired from use. HMS Westminster escorted Russian ships through the English Channel - FRPU (E) Royal Navy A Royal Navy frigate is escorting four Russian naval ships through the English Channel. HMS Westminster is accompanying two Russian frigates and two support ships as they head north returning from the Mediterranean. Naval sources said the contact was routine, but it comes amid an estimated 10-fold increase of Russian naval activity in waters around Britain and in the North Atlantic this decade. Commander Simon Kelly, the Commanding Officer of HMS Westminster, said: "HMS Westminster's role as the Royal Navy's Fleet Ready Escort is to be at very high readiness to respond to anything the British government requires. "While today most people are returning to work for the first time in the New Year, HMS Westminster's ship's company has been at sea and at readiness as part of the Royal Navy's commitment to keep Britain safe at all times. "The English Channel is an absolute lifeline for the UK, and it is very important HMS Westminster and the Royal Navy maintains a watchful eye on this key strategic link." HMS Westminster escorted five Russian ships through the English Channel Credit: Louise George Activity has risen in recent years with warships passing Britain on their way to join Russia's military campaign to prop up Bashar al-Assad in Syria. On Christmas Day, the frigate HMS St Albans was dispatched to track the Russian vessel Admiral Gorshkov as it made its way through the North Sea close to Britain. And on Christmas Eve, HMS Tyne was dispatched to escort a Russian intelligence-gathering ship through the North Sea and the England Channel. A Wildcat helicopter was then also dispatched to monitor two further Russian vessels. Royal Navy's HMS Westminster Giving a strong statement last month, Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson, said: "I will not hesitate in defending our waters or tolerate any form of aggression. "Britain will never be intimidated when it comes to protecting our country, our people, and our national interests." Meghan Markle's bizarre Christmas gift to future grandmother-in-law Queen Elizabeth II has been revealed, and it's a real squeaker. The soon-to-be bride of Prince Harry gave the queen a singing hamster, which follows tradition of the royal family giving each other gag gifts for Christmas. The queen reportedly approved, and burst out laughing when she opened it. The news of Markles gift comes as Kensington Palace released photos of Princess Charlotte as she headed off to her first day of preschool. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are very pleased to share two photographs of Princess Charlotte at Kensington Palace this morning. pic.twitter.com/dDIOZdA7aM Kensington Palace (@KensingtonRoyal) January 8, 2018 The images were posted on Twitter Monday afternoon. They showed the 2-year-old dressed in a red coat, matching red shoes and a pink scarf. The photos were taken by her proud mom. RELATED STORIES How a Young Meghan Markle Shook the Advertising World by Challenging Gender Roles Prince Harry Dishes on Meghan Markle's Fantastic First Christmas With Royal Family Meghan Markle's Half-Sister Slams Harry's Family Comments Related Articles: "You like me because I'm a scoundrel," interstellar smuggler Han Solo confidently told Princess Leia Organa in the 1981 film "The Empire Strikes Back." And scientists recently discovered a similar preference in bonobos, the great apes that are close relatives of chimpanzees. Bonobos (Pan paniscus) are helpful sweethearts compared with their more aggressive chimp cousins (Pan troglogytes). But a new study found that these generally peaceful primates were also more likely to respond positively to individuals that were selfish, bullying or downright mean. In other words, they're drawn to jerks. [8 Humanlike Behaviors of Primates] Of course, Han Solo ultimately proved that he was quite a bit nicer than his self-serving manner initially suggested. But bonobos demonstrated in a series of trials that they were more likely to favor individuals that treated others poorly. Prior research has shown that bonobos go out of their way to help others, even when their assistance hasn't been requested and they receive no reward for lending a hand. But when scientists showed bonobos videos in which some characters prevented others from reaching a goal, the bonobo subjects unexpectedly preferred the harmful individuals to the helpful ones. In three experiments, bonobos watched animated and live-action videos that displayed characters attempting to complete a task; some characters helped, while other characters interfered. After viewing the videos, the bonobos were given a choice of accepting a food reward from either the helpful character or the pest, and the majority of the bonobos chose the troublemaker for their treat. A fourth video experiment showed the bonobos a competition between two characters, with one dominant character succeeding by displacing its rival. When the bonobos were later offered a choice between the two individuals, they selected the one that had behaved more forcefully, the researchers discovered. Story continues Bonobos' liking for those that mistreat others may stem from a bias toward dominant individuals; forging a bond with a more aggressive bonobo could provide benefits within social groups, the study authors reported. Humans, on the other hand, typically respond more positively toward acts of altruism than of selfishness, according to previous studies. This suggests that consistently gravitating toward helpers and shunning antisocial acts is likely a unique human preference that emerged as we developed survival strategies involving cooperation among many individuals, the researchers concluded. The findings were published online Jan. 4 in the journal Current Biology. Original article on Live Science. Editor's Recommendations People around President Donald Trump think that if the Russia investigation touches the president's finances, it could take him down, the author of an explosive tell-all book told CNBC on Tuesday. Michael Wolff, author of "Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House," said administration officials and Trump confidantes he spoke to do not think the president colluded with Moscow to win the 2016 election. However, they think if special counsel Robert Mueller looks into Trump's finances, it could be perilous for the president, Wolff claimed. "People don't think in the White House don't think that he colluded with Russia. They do think that if the investigation goes near his finances, he's sunk. Everybody, again, to a man," Wolff said in a "Squawk Box" interview. The president has repeatedly denied any cooperation with Moscow as an investigation into Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election continues. Last year, Trump told The New York Times that a Mueller probe of his finances as part of the investigation would cross a red line. Trump's legal team and a White House spokeswoman did not immediately respond to requests to comment. Wolff's book, released on Friday, sent shockwaves through the Trump administration with fiery quotes about the Trump family and numerous claims about the president's intelligence and competence . Trump has called the book "untruthful" and Wolff a "total loser," while some reporters have called out apparent factual inaccuracies . Trump tweet Wolff defended against criticism of its content on Tuesday, calling the project "really solid." "I am confident in everything that is in this book," he said. Wolff said he has recordings to back up quotes in the book, including some that were disputed. He added that, "people who are denying they spoke to me, I do have them on tape, but I made a deal with them there." WATCH: 'Fire and Fury' author Michael Wolff vehemently defends controversial Trump book More From CNBC The drones appear to be made partly of wood and held together by masking tape - Russian Ministry of Defence The Russian military says it has fought an attack by a swarm of drones launched by jihadists against its bases in Syria. Thirteen attack drones were launched against the Khmeimim air base and a naval facility in the city of Tartus on Syrias western coast, the Russian defence ministry said. Russian forces shot down seven of the drones with anti-aircraft missiles while the other six were hacked by a cyberware unit and taken under Russian control, the ministry said. No damage or casualties at the two military bases were reported. The attack appears to be the largest example to date of insurgents using a mass of primitive drones in combat and Russia said it had never before faced such an attack. It was the first time when terrorists applied a massed drone aircraft attack launched at a range of more than 50 km using modern GPS guidance systems, a defence ministry spokesman said. Explosives Russia says it recovered from the drones Credit: Russian Ministry of Defence Defence experts have long predicted that drones will become an increasingly common feature of the modern battlefield, employed by both sophisticated nation state militaries and by low-tech rebel groups. Three of the drones were recovered by Russian forces, the ministry said, and photographs showed a small aircraft made partly of wood and held together with masking tape. Another picture showed a row of small explosive. The Russian defence ministry said that countries with high-technological capabilities might have supplied materials for the armed drones but did not accuse a specific country. Russia has in the past accused Western and Arab states of deliberately arming jihadist groups in Syria to fight against the Assad regime. Suspicion for the attack, which occurred the night of January 5, immediately fell on Syrian rebel and jihadist groups based in Idlib, an opposition controlled province next to Latakia where both Russian military facilities are located. Ahrar al-Sham, an Islamist rebel coalition, and Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a jihadist group with links to al-Qaeda, are both based in Idlib and fighting against the Assad regime and their Russian allies. Story continues Russia said it shot down seven drones and hacked six more using cyberwarfare technology Credit: Russian Ministry of Defence However, neither group claimed responsibility for the attack and in a social media post a previously unknown group called the Free Alawites Movement said it was behind the drone swarm. The Alawites are a small sect of Shia Islam, and Bashar al-Assad and his family are Alawites - making it surprising that an Alawite group would attack Assads Russian allies. In the post, the Free Alawites Movement said the Russians will not be able to stay [in Syria] for more than six months and warned Assad not to rely on the Russians for help. The days are coming when it will be more painful for the Russians especially before the election of Putin, the statement said. The Free Alawites said they had attacked with drones armed with grenades and with rockets and succeeded in destroying a Russian S-400 missile launcher - contradicting the Russian claims that they suffered no damage. The Khmeimim airbase came mortar attack on New Years Eve and seven aircraft were destroyed and two Russian troops were killed, according to Russias Kommersant newspaper. It was reportedly the single largest loss of Russian military equipment since Vladimir Putin ordered Russian forces into Syria in September 2015. While the bases in northwest Syria are of significant strategic value to Russia, they are also tempting targets for jihadist and rebel groups trying to inflict damage on Assads biggest military backers. The Kremlin said Tuesday that it had enough forces in Syria to withstand any attacks on the bases. Sen. Lindsey Graham cracked wise about President Donald Trumps very stable genius comment on The View Monday but then proceeded to compliment Trumps electoral accomplishments and leadership in the White House. If he doesnt call himself a genius, nobody else will, the South Carolina Republican told the hosts. WATCH: @LindseyGrahamSC reacts to Pres. Trump calling himself a "a very stable genius": "If he doesn't call himself a genius, nobody else will." pic.twitter.com/WdORYCOGvJ The View (@TheView) January 8, 2018 On Saturday morning, Trump tweeted that the mainstream media was attempting to discredit him by questioning his mental stability. Throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been mental stability and being, like, really smart. Crooked Hillary Clinton also played these cards very hard and, as everyone knows, went down in flames. I went from VERY successful businessman, to top T.V. Star.to President of the United States (on my first try). I think that would qualify as not smart, but genius.and a very stable genius at that! Trump tweeted. Now that Russian collusion, after one year of intense study, has proven to be a total hoax on the American public, the Democrats and their lapdogs, the Fake News Mainstream Media, are taking out the old Ronald Reagan playbook and screaming mental stability and intelligence..... Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 6, 2018 ....Actually, throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been mental stability and being, like, really smart. Crooked Hillary Clinton also played these cards very hard and, as everyone knows, went down in flames. I went from VERY successful businessman, to top T.V. Star..... Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 6, 2018 He beat me like a drum, Graham said Monday about the presidential primary. You can say anything you want about the guy. I said he was a race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot. I ran out of things to say. He won. Guess what. Hes our President now. When the hosts of the View asked Graham if he had retained those characterizations of Trump, Graham initially changed the subject, but ultimately said he did not display those characteristics as president. In my view, hes my president, and hes doing a really good job on multiple fronts, he replied. Grahams praise of the president marks a turnaround for him. As Trump noted Monday, Graham repeatedly disparaged him during his candidacy. But, the two have since developed somewhat of a surprising rapport. Lindsey. Used to be a great enemy of mine, now hes a great friend of mine. I really like Lindsey. Can you believe that? I never thought Id say that but I do like him a lot, Trump said in a meeting with Republican Senators about immigration. Thank you, Graham responded. I like me too, so we have something in common. Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon is out at far-right Breitbart News, the outlet confirmed Tuesday. Im proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplished in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform, he said in a statement. Bannon was a founding member of the board and took over as executive chairman of Breitbart News following founder Andrew Breitbarts death in 2012. In a statement Tuesday, Breitbart CEO Larry Solov commemorated Bannons role in establishing the site. Steve is a valued part of our legacy, and we will always be grateful for his contributions, and what he has helped us to accomplish, he said. Bannon is also out as the host of Breitbart News Daily on SiriusXM radio, the station confirmed. Rumors of Bannons ouster from the conservative news outlet began Thursday, when The Wall Street Journal reported that the owners of the publication were debating Bannons future. During a press briefing Thursday, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Breitbart should consider firing Bannon. I certainly think that its something they should look at and consider, she said. Bannons exit comes after he feuded with President Donald Trump last week. The former executive was quoted saying that a 2016 meeting between Donald Trump Jr., other Trump associates and a Russian lawyer in Trump Tower was treasonous. The three senior guys in the campaign thought it was a good idea to meet with a foreign government inside Trump Tower in the conference room on the 25th floor with no lawyers, Bannon told Michael Wolff in an excerpt from Wolffs new book, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House. Even if you thought that this was not treasonous, or unpatriotic, or bad shit, and I happen to think its all of that, you should have called the FBI immediately, Bannon added. The fallout from Bannons comments was almost immediate. On Wednesday, Trumps lawyer sent Bannon a cease-and-desist letter claiming the former aide had breached the Agreement by, among other things, communicating with author Michael Wolff about Mr. Trump, his family members, and the Company [the campaign], disclosing Confidential Information to Mr. Wolff, and making disparaging statements and in some cases outright defamatory statements to Mr. Wolff about Mr. Trump, his family members. Story continues Trump said Wednesday that Bannon has nothing to do with me or my Presidency. When he was fired, he not only lost his job, he lost his mind. And on Thursday, Trump said he doesnt speak to Bannon. Rebekah Mercer, a financial backer of Breitbart, distanced herself from Bannon in an interview with The Washington Post. I support President Trump and the platform upon which he was elected, Mercer told the publication. My family and I have not communicated with Steve Bannon in many months and have provided no financial support to his political agenda, nor do we support his recent actions and statements. Bannon left his job as White House strategist in August, telling Bloomberg Businessweek that he would fight for Trump against his opponents on Capitol Hill, in the media, and in corporate America. If theres any confusion out there, let me clear it up: Im leaving the White House and going to war, he told the outlet at the time. Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. /9WASHINGTON) Steve Bannon is trying to make amends. President Donald Trumps former chief strategist released a statement Sunday reaffirming his support for the commander in chief and praising Trumps eldest son as both a patriot and a good man. Bannon infuriated Trump with comments to author Michael Wolff describing a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower in New York between Donald Trump Jr., Trump campaign aides and a Russian lawyer as treasonous and unpatriotic. Bannon said his description was aimed at former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, who also attended the meeting, and not Trumps son. I regret that my delay in responding to the inaccurate reporting regarding Don Jr has diverted attention from the presidents historical accomplishments in the first year of his presidency, according to the statement, first obtained by the news site Axios. Bannon said his support for Trump and his agenda was unwavering. Hours before the statement came out, administration officials used appearances on the Sunday news shows to rally behind Trump and try to undermine Wolffs Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House which portrays the 45th president as a leader who doesnt understand the weight of his office and whose competence is questioned by aides. Chief policy adviser Stephen Miller, in a combative appearance on CNN, described the book as nothing but a pile of trash through and through. He also criticized Bannon, who is quoted at length by Wolff, saying it was tragic and unfortunate that Bannon would make these grotesque comments so out of touch with reality and obviously so vindictive. CIA Director Mike Pompeo, who said Trump was completely fit to lead the country, said he paused before answering because it was such a ludicrous question. These are from people who just have not accepted the fact that President Trump is the United States president and Im sorry for them in that, Pompeo told Fox News Sunday. He gives Trump his regular intelligence briefings. Story continues Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said that she is at the White House once a week, and no one questions the stability of the president. Im always amazed at the lengths people will go to, to lie for money and for power. This is like taking it to a whole new low, she told ABCs This Week. To Miller, the portrayal of the president in the book is so contrary to reality, to the experience of those who work with him. Millers interview on CNNs State of the Union quickly grew heated, with Miller criticizing CNNs coverage and moderator Jake Tapper pressing Miller to answer his questions. Tapper abruptly ended the interview, saying: I think Ive wasted enough of my viewers time. Soon after, Trump tweeted: Jake Tapper of Fake News CNN just got destroyed in his interview with Stephen Miller of the Trump Administration. Watch the hatred and unfairness of this CNN flunky! Trump took to Twitter on Saturday to defend his fitness for office, insisting he is like, really smart and, indeed, a very stable genius. He pressed the case again on Sunday as he prepared to depart Camp David for the White House. Ive had to put up with the Fake News from the first day I announced that I would be running for President. Now I have to put up with a Fake Book, written by a totally discredited author, he tweeted. Wolffs book draws a derogatory portrait of Trump as an undisciplined man-child who didnt actually want to win the White House and who spends his evenings eating cheeseburgers in bed, watching television and talking on the telephone to old friends. The book also quotes Bannon and other prominent advisers as questioning the presidents competence. Chatter about Trumps mental fitness for office has intensified in recent months on cable news shows and among Democrats in Congress. White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders this past week called such suggestions disgraceful and laughable. If he was unfit, he probably wouldnt be sitting there and wouldnt have defeated the most qualified group of candidates the Republican Party has ever seen, she said, calling him an incredibly strong and good leader. Trump and some aides have attacked Wolffs credibility, pointing to the fact that the book includes a number of factual errors and denying that the author had as much access as he claimed. He said he interviewed me for three hours in the White House. It didnt exist, OK? Its in his imagination, Trump said Saturday. Wolff told NBC on Sunday that I truly do not want to say the president is a liar, but that he had indeed spoken with Trump for about three hours during and since the campaign. Trump has repeatedly invoked Ronald Reagan, tweeting Sunday that the former president had the same problem and handled it well. So will I! Reagan died in 2004, at age 93, from pneumonia complicated by the Alzheimers disease that had progressively clouded his mind. At times when he was president, Reagan seemed forgetful and would lose his train of thought while talking. Doctors, however, said Alzheimers was not to blame, noting the disease was diagnosed years after he left office. Reagan announced his diagnosis in a letter to the American people in 1994, more than five years after leaving the White House. Donald Trump is going to Davos. Why? To say that most attendees dont see eye-to-eye with him would be an understatement. Well, there is Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. After that, not so much. Davos, you see, is the epicenter of globalism think. It is populated, for the most, part by rich, elite, liberalto a great degree Europeanlooking to make the world a better place. Davos Man is an archetype oft-ridiculed by Trump supporters. How do America First and MAGA fit in with Davos? They dont. President Donald Trump boards Air Force One Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Monday, Jan. 8, 2018. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik) One reason why Trump may feel compelled to go is as a counterpoint to last years top headliner, Chinese President Xi Jinping, whose keynote speech basically laid out the case for China being the leader of the new world order. Without naming names, Xi suggested that myopic nationalism was a flawed strategy and that China was open for business. Trump may use the Winter Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland (what we call Davos) as an opportunity to fire back. Or not. Right now, we dont even know if Trump is speaking. Bet the WEF folks will be working hard to get him to. And theres the question of who goes with Trump. We dont know whom on Team Trump will accompany the president, but POTUSs Goldman Sachs posse is a likely bet. The presidents chief economic advisor Gary Cohn, for instance, has attended before. Ditto for Dina Powell, whos stepping down from her role as deputy national security adviser soon. On the other hand, if Steve Bannon was still around, youd imagine hed pass, unless he wanted to thumb his nose at the proceedings. Guess well never know about that one. Trumps presence will make it that much more difficult to get around Davos, a tiny, freezing-cold ski town tucked high in the Alps that is already bristling with security. There are already lots of guys with guns. Now there will be more. And who knows what this will cost taxpayers. And sadly for the president, the towns only McDonalds apparently closed a number of years ago, and no wonder. According to the New York Times: In 2000, a group of more than 1,000 demonstrators carrying signs that said Against the New World Order smashed the windows of a McDonalds franchise here in Davos just down the road from the conference, protesting open trade policies espoused by then-President Bill Clinton, who was speaking at the event. Story continues Better bring food. And maybe friends too. Andy Serwer is Yahoo Finance Editor-in-Chief. Read more: Cliven Bundy and sons cleared in case of 2014 armed standoff, a major defeat for the federal government that critics fear will empower far-right militia groups Ammon Bundy hugs is aunt Lillie Spencer outside a federal courthouse in Las Vegas on 20 December. All charges were dismissed on Monday. Photograph: John Locher/AP A judge has dismissed conspiracy charges against rancher Cliven Bundy and his sons, marking an extraordinary failure by US prosecutors and a decisive victory for the Nevada family who ignited a land rights movement in the American west. The Bundys, who led armed standoffs against the government in Nevada and Oregon, galvanizing far-right militia groups, saw all charges dismissed in Las Vegas on Monday. It was the second major court win for the ranchers in their decades-long battle to oppose federal land regulations. Cliven Bundy, 71, and his sons Ammon and Ryan were accused of assault, threats against the government, firearms offenses and obstruction, stemming from the familys refusal to pay grazing fees for their cattle in Nevada, which escalated into an armed conflict at their ranch in 2014. The judge declared a mistrial in December and ruled on Monday that prosecutors could not retry the case, arguing that the US attorneys office had willfully withheld evidence and engaged in misconduct. Angie Bundy, Ryans wife, said she hoped the ruling would boost states rights and encourage federal regulators to leave ranchers alone. The federal government is overstepping so many bounds. Im hoping they will let states and counties do their jobs and stay out of our land, she told the Guardian by phone from court. I hear from ranchers all the time about the horrible abuses they are enduring. Im hoping this will give some people relief. From left to right outside the courthouse: Ammon Bundy, Ryan Payne, Jeanette Finicum, widow of Robert LaVoy Finicum, Ryan Bundy, Angela Bundy (wife of Ryan Bundy) and Jamie Bundy (daughter of Ryan Bundy). Photograph: John Locher/AP The stunning defeat for the government which has also been accused of lying and deceptive tactics in their prosecution of the Bundys outraged environmental groups that have advocated the punishment of ranchers who defy land-use laws and have supported tighter regulations to protect public lands. Its just a horrific outcome, said Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity. This is going to empower both the militia and the politicians who want to steal Americas public lands. Its an absolute disaster. Story continues The Bundys first made international headlines in 2014 when the government attempted to seize their cattle, but retreated in the face of hundreds of supporters at the family ranch in Bunkerville, some heavily armed. Emboldened by the victory, Ammon and Ryan helped lead a takeover of the Malheur national wildlife refuge in eastern Oregon in January 2016 to protest against the imprisonment of two local ranchers. That standoff ended after police killed one of the leaders and arrested the Bundys and their followers. US prosecutors subsequently charged the family and dozens of other men with conspiracy and other charges for both the Nevada and Oregon cases. A jury found the Bundys not guilty in Oregon in 2016, a surprise verdict that increased pressure on the federal government to secure a conviction in Nevada. But the case unraveled after defense attorneys argued that prosecutors failed to disclose evidence relating to government surveillance cameras and snipers at the ranch during the 2014 dispute. Last month, the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, directed a US justice department expert to assist in the case. Rancher Cliven Bundy, who was released from jail on Monday, pictured near Bunkerville, Nevada. Photograph: John Locher/AP Suckling pointed out that Bundys cattle continue to graze on federal lands in violation of the law and argued that the decision could encourage supporters to launch new conflicts to fight for unregulated grazing, mining and logging on public lands. Im really distraught and outraged at the prosecution and the FBI for their incompetence. Cliven Bundy, who became a hero to some rightwing activists in the west and has been in jail for nearly two years, emerged from court on Monday wearing a cowboy hat, telling reporters: Im feeling pretty good Im not used to being free. Ive been a political prisoner. Angie said she was grateful to hear the judge Gloria Navarro reprimand prosecutors. Her words today gave me some hope in the justice system, she said, adding, We are so excited to get grandpa home and get our family back together. Washington (AFP) - The US Supreme Court ruled Monday ordered a re-examination of the case of a black death row inmate after one of the jurors at his trial questioned whether black people have souls. The high court in September halted the execution of Keith Tharpe, who was hours away from receiving a lethal injection, after his lawyers argued that racism had played a "pivotal role" in his death sentence. Tharpe was found guilty of the 1990 murder of his sister-in-law Jaquelin Freeman, which took place as she drove to work with his estranged wife in the southern US state of Georgia. In 1998, a group that provides free legal assistance to inmates interviewed members of the jury that imposed the death sentence. One of them was a white man named Barney Gattie, who according to court records said that: "There are two types of black people: 1. Black folks and 2. Niggers." "Because I knew the victim and her husband's family and knew them all to be good black folks, I felt Tharpe, who wasn't in the 'good' black folks category in my book, should get the electric chair," Gattie said. The juror also said that study of the Bible had led him to wonder "if black people even have souls." "Gattie's remarkable affidavit -- which he never retracted -- presents a strong factual basis for the argument that Tharpe's race affected Gattie's vote for a death verdict," the high court wrote in its 6-3 unsigned opinion instructing a lower court to re-examinee the case. Defense attorney Brian Kammer said in a statement that there was "clear evidence of racial animus on the part of one of the jurors." Three conservative justices of the court -- Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch -- dissented. Thomas, the sole African-American Supreme Court justice, called the majority opinion "ceremonial handwringing" that would ultimately delay justice for Freeman. Story continues In several cases in recent years, the US Supreme Court has established that racial prejudice has no place in the American legal system. Last February, the high court suspended the execution of a Texan who had been cast during his trial as being potentially more dangerous because he was black. The Supreme Court also ruled in favor of a black man in May 2016 who was sentenced to death by a jury of 12 white people from which black jurors were excluded. Beirut (AFP) - Regime forces upped the pressure on two of the last rebel bastions in Syria on Monday, pounding the Eastern Ghouta enclave near Damascus and the northern province of Idlib. Shelling and air strikes on Ghouta, which government forces have besieged for four years, killed at least 20 civilians, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. The semi-rural area east of the Syrian capital is home to around 400,000 inhabitants and is targeted almost daily by regime forces trying to flush out rebel groups. On Monday, a woman and her three children were killed in regime strikes on Douma, which is the main town in Eastern Ghouta, Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the Britain-based Observatory, said. In the town's morgue, medics were wrapping the children's shredded bodies in shrouds amid the shrieks of bereaved parents, an AFP correspondent reported. Chaos engulfed the rudimentary facility as rescuers kept rushing in more wounded, some of whom died before they could receive life-saving treatment. "I was at the market with my father, selling mint, parsley and onions. The next thing I knew, my foot was bleeding and my dad had a head injury," said Ahmed Hatem, an 11-year-old boy, as he sat on the floor wincing in pain. A child and two other civilians were also killed in strikes on the small town of Madira, the Observatory said. The violence also left another 13 civilians dead across Eastern Ghouta. The area, which had been designated as a "de-escalation zone" as part of an international deal last year to bring down violence levels, has witnessed major bloodshed in recent weeks. Syrian forces also managed overnight to pin back rebels who had surrounded a regime base there. - Idlib violence - Rebels led by the Jaish al-Islam group had in recent days surrounded the army's only military base in the area but the state news agency SANA said Monday the siege had been broken. "Units from the Syrian Arab Army have brought an end to the encirclement of the Armoured Vehicles Base in Harasta," it said, adding that operations were ongoing to fully secure the base. Story continues According to the Observatory, the fighting in Harasta since the base was surrounded in late December left 72 regime fighters and 87 rebels dead. Syrian and Russian aircraft also pounded targets in the northwestern region of Idlib, pressing a week-old operation targeting the last province in the country to escape government control. Raids Sunday left "at least 21 dead, including eight children and 11 members of the same family" west of the town of Sinjar in the southeast of the province, the Observatory said. "Regime and Russian strikes are continuing today on several parts of Idlib" province, Abdel Rahman said. Russian-backed regime forces launched an operation on the edge of Idlib province in the last days of 2017 and have retaken villages every day since. After the collapse of the Islamic State jihadist group in both Syria and Iraq late last year, President Bashar al-Assad's regime is bent on restoring its grip over the country. Idlib province, which borders Turkey, is almost entirely controlled by anti-government forces that are dominated by a jihadist outfit known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) consisting mostly of fighters from a former Al-Qaeda affiliate. Among the other groups present in the province are thousands of jihadists from Central Asian states and members of the Muslim Uighur ethnic minority of China's Xinjiang province. An explosion on Sunday in the city of Idlib at a base for the group Ajnad al-Qawqaz, made up of men from the Caucasus wo fight alongside HTS, left at least 43 dead, including 28 civilians, the Observatory said. The toll went up from 23 after rescuers found more bodies in the wreckage and the most critically injured died of their wounds. It was not immediately clear whether the blast was caused by air strikes or was the result of the kind of internal clashes that sometimes break out between jihadist and rebel factions. After shrinking to barely a sixth of the country at the height of the nearly seven-year-old conflict, the areas under government control now cover more than 50 percent of Syrian territory. More than 340,000 people have been killed and millions have been driven from their homes since Syria's conflict erupted with anti-government protests in 2011. BEIRUT (Reuters) - Israeli jets and ground-to-ground missiles struck Syria early on Tuesday, Syria's army said, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated he would do what was needed to stop Hezbollah gaining "game-changing" Iranian weapons. The Syrian army said in a statement carried by state television that Israeli jets fired missiles at the al-Qutaifa area near Damascus from inside Lebanese airspace at 2:40 a.m. (0040 GMT) and Syrian air defenses hit one of the planes. Israel then fired rockets from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, but the Syrian defenses brought them down, the army said, adding that Israeli jets fired a final barrage of four rockets from inside Israel, one of which was intercepted by Syrian air defenses while the others caused material damage. Israel has pledged to prevent Syrian territory being used for Iran to set up bases or transfer high-quality weaponry to Lebanon's Hezbollah group, which has been helping Damascus beat back a six-year-old rebellion. The Israeli military declined to comment. Although the Israeli air force chief last August disclosed that his corps had struck in Syria around 100 times, Israel's policy is generally not to confirm or deny such operations. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in answer to a reporter's question about the strikes that Israel's policy was to stop Hezbollah moving "game-changing weapons" out of Syria. "We back it up as necessary with action," he said, without explicitly confirming Israel carried out Tuesday's strikes. In its statement, the Syrian army repeated previous warnings of serious repercussions for the strikes and repeated its past accusation that Israel was using attacks to support militant groups in Syria. A European diplomat speaking earlier this week said there was an understanding between the United States and Russia that Hezbollah and other foreign fighters would be removed from the area in Syria close to the Israeli border. "I don't think that has happened very much up till now and that is a source of concern," the diplomat said. (Reporting By Angus McDowall; Additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem and Dominic Evans in Istanbul; Editing by Paul Tait and Robin Pomeroy) Nothing can be known about this weeks talks between North and South Korea other than their likely outcome. As in every previous encounter, South Korea will almost certainly reward North Koreas outrageous misconduct by handing over substantial sums of money, thus negating long-overdue sanctions recently imposed by the United Nations Security Council. Meanwhile, the North will continue to make progress toward its goal of deploying several nuclear-armed, mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles, having already tested nuclear-explosive devices in October 2006, May 2009, February 2013, January 2016, September 2016, and September 2017 Each test would have been an excellent occasion for the United States to finally decide to do to North Korea what Israel did to Iraq in 1981, and to Syria in 2007 namely, use well-aimed conventional weapons to deny nuclear weapons to regimes that shouldnt have firearms, let alone weapons of mass destruction. Fortunately, there is still time for Washington to launch such an attack to destroy North Koreas nuclear arsenal. It should be earnestly considered rather than rejected out of hand. Of course, there are reasons not to act against North Korea. But the most commonly cited ones are far weaker than generally acknowledged. One mistaken reason to avoid attacking North Korea is the fear of direct retaliation. The U.S. intelligence community has reportedly claimed that North Korea already has ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads that can reach as far as the United States. But this is almost certainly an exaggeration, or rather an anticipation of a future that could still be averted by prompt action. The first North Korean nuclear device that could potentially be miniaturized into a warhead for a long-range ballistic missile was tested on September 3, 2017, while its first full-scale ICBM was only tested on November 28, 2017. If the North Koreans have managed to complete the full-scale engineering development and initial production of operational ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads in the short time since then and on their tiny total budget then their mastery of science and engineering would be entirely unprecedented and utterly phenomenal. It is altogether more likely that they have yet to match warheads and missiles into an operational weapon. Its true that North Korea could retaliate for any attack by using its conventional rocket artillery against the South Korean capital of Seoul and its surroundings, where almost 20 million inhabitants live within 35 miles of the armistice line. U.S. military officers have cited the fear of a sea of fire to justify inaction. But this vulnerability should not paralyze U.S. policy for one simple reason: It is very largely self-inflicted. When then-U.S. President Jimmy Carter decided to withdraw all U.S. Army troops from South Korea 40 years ago (ultimately a division was left behind), the defense advisors brought in to help including myself urged the Korean government to move its ministries and bureaucrats well away from the countrys northern border and to give strong relocation incentives to private companies. South Korea was also told to mandate proper shelters, as in Zurich for example, where every new building must have its own (under bombardment, casualties increase dramatically if people leave their homes to seek shelter). In recent years, moreover, South Korea has had the option of importing, at moderate cost, Iron Dome batteries, which are produced by both Israel and the United States, that would be capable of intercepting 95 percent of North Korean rockets headed to inhabited structures. But over these past four decades, South Korean governments have done practically nothing along these lines. The 3,257 officially listed shelters in the Seoul area are nothing more than underground shopping malls, subway stations, and hotel parking lots without any stocks of food or water, medical kits or gas masks. As for importing Iron Dome batteries, the South Koreans have preferred to spend their money on developing a bomber aimed at Japan. Even now, casualties could still be drastically reduced by a crash resilience program. This should involve clearing out and hardening with jacks, props, and steel beams the basements of buildings of all sizes; promptly stocking necessities in the 3,257 official shelters and sign-posting them more visibly; and, of course, evacuating as many as possible beforehand (most of the 20 million or so at risk would be quite safe even just 20 miles further to the south). The United States, for its part, should consider adding vigorous counterbattery attacks to any airstrike on North Korea. Nonetheless, given South Koreas deliberate inaction over many years, any damage ultimately done to Seoul cannot be allowed to paralyze the United States in the face of immense danger to its own national interests, and to those of its other allies elsewhere in the world. North Korea is already unique in selling its ballistic missiles, to Iran most notably; its not difficult to imagine it selling nuclear weapons, too. Another frequently cited reason for the United States to abstain from an attack that it would be very difficult to pull off is even less convincing. The claim is that destroying North Korean nuclear facilities would require many thousands of bombing sorties. But all North Korean nuclear facilities the known, the probable, and the possible almost certainly add up to less than three dozen installations, most of them quite small. Under no reasonable military plan would destroying those facilities demand thousands of airstrikes. Unfortunately, this would not be the first time that U.S. military planning proved unreasonable. The United States Air Force habitually rejects one-time strikes, insisting instead on the total Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses. This is a peculiar conceit whereby every single air-defense radar, surface-to-air missile, airstrip, and combat aircraft in a given country must be bombed to destruction to safeguard U.S. pilots from any danger, instead of just bombing the targets that actually matter. Given that North Koreas radars, missiles, and aircraft are badly outdated, with their antique electronics long since countermeasured, the Air Forces requirements are nothing but an excuse for inaction. Yes, a more limited air attack might miss a wheelbarrow or two, but North Korea has no nuclear-warhead mobile missile launchers to miss not yet. Perhaps the only good reason to hesitate before ordering an attack on North Korea is China. But thats not because Beijing would intervene against the United States. The notion that China is North Koreas all-around protector is badly out of date. Yes, the Chinese do not want to see North Korea disappear with U.S. troops moving up to the Yalu River and Chinas border. But President Xi Jinpings support for maximum economic sanctions, including a de facto blockade of oil imports a classic act of war amounts to a change of sides when it comes to North Korean nuclear weapons. Anybody who believes China would act on North Koreas behalf in the event of an American attack against its nuclear installations has not been paying attention. But Chinas shift has surfaced a quite different reason for the United States not to bomb: While North Koreas acquisition of nuclear weapons is of course very dangerous, it does ensure its independence from Chinese influence. In a post-strike scenario, the Pyongyang regime might well crumble, with the country becoming a Chinese ward. That could give Beijing dominant influence over South Korea as well, given the preference of some South Koreans including President Moon Jae-in, according to reports for Chinese as opposed to American patronage. A China-dominated Korean Peninsula would make Japan less secure and the United States much less of a Pacific power. In theory, a post-attack North Korea in chaos could be rescued by the political unification of the peninsula, with the United States assuaging Chinese concerns by promptly moving its troops further south, instead of moving them north. In practice, however, this would be a difficult plan to carry out, not least because South Koreas government and its population are generally unwilling to share their prosperity with the miserably poor northerners, as the West Germans once did with their East German compatriots. For now, it seems clear that U.S. military authorities have foreclosed a pre-emptive military option. But the United States could still spare the world the vast dangers of a North Korea with nuclear-armed long-range missiles if it acts in the remaining months before they become operational. Its true that India, Israel, and Pakistan all have those weapons, with no catastrophic consequences so far. But each has proven its reliability in ways that North Korea has not. Their embassies, for instance, dont sell hard drugs or traffic in forged banknotes. More pertinently, those other countries have gone through severe crises, and even fought wars, without ever mentioning nuclear weapons, let alone threatening their use as Kim Jong Un already has. North Korea is different, and U.S. policy should recognize that reality before it is too late. Related: For more news videos visit Yahoo View. Pope Francis on Nov. 26, 2014, in Vatican City. (Photo: Getty Images) While some folks have been known to use religious modesty as an excuse to shame women who choose to breastfeed their babies in public, one spiritual leader has been a strong and consistent supporter of the nurturing practice: Pope Francis. His latest encouragement to mothers came on Sunday, during an annual baptism ceremony held at the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City. There were 34 babies in attendance, prompting the pope to address moms about the possibility of crying infants. We will now continue the ceremony; and if they start doing the concert, its because theyre not comfortable: Either theyre too hot, or theyre not comfortable, or theyre hungry, Francis said. If theyre hungry, breastfeed them, without fear, feed them, because thats a language of love. Past papal comments on breastfeeding that have grabbed headlines over the past several years have also been loving and supportive. Consider the following timeline: In Dec. 2013, eight years after the unfazed-looking pope was photographed kissing a baby at a Mass for newborns, just inches from a mother breastfeeding her infant, he shared the following with Italian newspaper La Stampa: There are so many children that cry because they are hungry. At the Wednesday General Audience the other day there was a young mother behind one of the barriers with a baby that was just a few months old. The child was crying its eyes out as I came past. The mother was caressing it. I said to her, Madam, I think the childs hungry. Yes, its probably time, she replied. Please give it something to eat! I said. She was shy and didnt want to breast-feed in public, while the pope was passing. I wish to say the same to humanity: Give people something to eat! That woman had milk to give to her child; we have enough food in the world to feed everyone. The then-archbishop of Buenos Aires, Jorge Bergoglio (who later became Pope Francis), performs a foot-bath ceremony in Buenos Aires in 2005, inches from a mother breastfeeding her infant. (Photo: Daniel Vides/AFP/Getty Images) At the Jan. 2014 baptism ceremony at the Sistine Chapel, Pope Francis had the following to say to the 30-plus moms in attendance about their babies: Some will cry because they are uncomfortable or because they are hungry. If they are hungry, mothers, let them eat, no worries, because here, they are the main focus. That prompted one breastfeeding mother there, Vatican Radio journalist Emer McCarthy, to tell Catholic News Service, Who would have thought the pope would be this great proponent? Story continues In 2015, also at the baptism ceremony, the pope had a similar message, saying, You mothers give your children milk, and even now, if they cry because they are hungry, breastfeed them dont worry. In 2016, he tweaked the message just a bit, invoking the Virgin Mary: If your children are crying because they are hungry, the pope told the moms at the group baptism, then go ahead and feed them, just as Mary breastfed Jesus. So in a day and age when nursing moms are being kicked out of places from malls and gyms to city council chambers and churches, what gives with the popes chill attitude? According to Bucknell University religious studies professor John Penniman, author of Raised on Christian Milk: Food and the Formation of the Soul in Early Christianity, the popes statements are notable, not because theyre not in line with Christian thinking, but because, in spite of that, the sentiments are rare. This kind of recognition and open affirmation has not been the experience for many mothers in a variety of Christian denominations, Penniman tells Yahoo Lifestyle. On the other hand, there is a long history within Christianity of viewing the maternal body as an object of piety and reverence. There is a long artistic and iconographic tradition of depicting scenes of nurturance as moments of profound piety (most famously, perhaps, in The Lactation of St. Bernard, where the saint is struck by milk from a statue of the Virgin Mary while kneeling in prayer). In Catholicism, this piety toward breastfeeding is amplified by the particular status of Mary, the mother of Jesus. The Lactation of St. Bernard, c. 1650, by Alonzo Cano, is one interpretation of the lactation miracle. (Photo: Photo 12/UIG via Getty Images) Still, he notes, while Catholic leaders can feel well within their religious tenets to articulate positive approaches to breastfeeding, the result is sometimes that maternity and reproduction are fetishized as the primary way for a woman to live out her faith. So theres a delicate balance needed here from Christian leaders: How to support and recognize women who are mothers in the church without making motherhood the touchstone of the religion for all Christian women? The Catholic Church indeed the Christian tradition in general has not always been good at this. Further, Penniman points to Pope Franciss acknowledged respect for the Franciscan order of the Catholic Church as a reason for his down-to-earth support; although he is Jesuit, he chose his moniker from Francis of Assisi. For me, the new pope explained a few days after his election, he is the man of poverty, the man of peace, the man who loves and protects creation. The Franciscan tradition, Penniman notes, does emphasize creation, bodies, and the natural world as worthy of admiration and respect rather than suspicion and scorn. That is, Franciscans dont always have the same emphasis on the sinfulness of the body and the world as other religious orders in Christianity might. Because of that, he says, acknowledging and addressing the basic facts of embodied life, simple as it may seem, may be one of the hallmarks of this popes public persona. Read more from Yahoo Lifestyle: Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day. Toby Young has announced he is standing down from the universities regulator saying his appointment has become a distraction. The journalist turned educationalist apologised unreservedly for a string of controversial comments he had made on social media in recent years. His announcement comes after ministers were forced defend his appointment in the Commons on Monday following backlash from MPs, including prominent Tories. Writing in The Spectator, Mr Young said: The caricature drawn of me in the last seven days, particularly on social media, has been unrecognisable to anyone who knows me. I am a passionate supporter of inclusion and helping the most disadvantaged, as I hope my track record of setting up and supporting new schools demonstrates. Most popular on Yahoo News UK Ferrari driver wrecks 200,000 supercar by ploughing into trees after accelerator gets stuck Upsurge in Russian activity in UK waters as Royal Navy scrambles to escorts vessels through Channel Nigel Farage says EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier doesnt know why UK voted Brexit Mother of Brit who died in Raqqa says she has no moral problem with him killing Isis fighters New mother thanks lorry driver for carrying her car over flooded road while she was in labour But some of the things I said before I got involved in education, when I was a journalistic provocateur, were either ill-judged or just plain wrong and I unreservedly apologise. The Toby Young saga has cast great doubt on the judgment of the PM who failed to sack him in the first place. Then yesterday we had the spectacle of government universities minister defending his appointment in parliament, he had to go. Tory cronyism could not save his job Angela Rayner (@AngelaRayner) January 9, 2018 A petition calling for Mr Young to be sacked from the board of the Office for Students (OfS) has gathered more than 219,000 signatures. Story continues Toby Young has stepped down from the universities regulator (Picture: PA) Theresa May was forced in an interview on Sunday to address criticism about the appointment and said she had been unaware of his history of crude and sexist comments. Education select committee chairman and Conservative MP Robert Halfon, who has cerebral palsy, attacked the dark and dangerous articles written by Mr Young in the past during an urgent debate in the Commons on the issue. Extraordinary that the Prime Minister wouldnt sack him but Toby Young has finally done the right thing and resigned to spend more time with his tweets . . . Labour Whips (@labourwhips) January 9, 2018 He said: What Im more concerned about is some quite dark articles where he talks about the disabled, where he talks about the working classes, and much more significantly in 2015 and I have the article here on what he calls progressive eugenics. Now, I find this incredibly dark and very dangerous stuff. Tory Sarah Wollaston called for Mr Youngs appointment to be reviewed, telling MPs: Im afraid I feel Mr Youngs comments do cross a line and are therein indicative of an underlying character and the kind of person that would tweet comments to a woman that talk about masturbating over images of refugees. Mr Youngs resignation from the newly-created post of universities regulator much like his appointment quickly provoked debate among senior politicians. Mr Halfon said Mr Young had done the honourable thing in quitting. Mr Young announced his resignation in The Spectator magazine (Picture: Rex) But shadow education secretary Angela Rayner said: The Toby Young saga has cast great doubt on the judgment of the PM, who failed to sack him in the first place. So Toby Young has stepped down. Good. He should never have been appointed in the first place #toadmeltdown pic.twitter.com/uzx4fiWkBS Diane Abbott (@HackneyAbbott) January 9, 2018 Universities minister Jo Johnson, who was forced to defend him in the Commons on Monday night, stood firm in his support of Mr Young, who is a champion of free schools, which were introduced by David Camerons administration. Mr Johnson, who is Foreign Secretary Boris Johnsons brother, dismissed Mr Youngs detractors as armchair critics. He wrote on Twitter: Toby Youngs track record setting up & supporting free schools speaks for itself. His decision to stand down from the OfS board and repeat unreserved apologies for inappropriate past remarks reflects his character better than the one-sided caricature from his armchair critics. Liberal Democrat leader Sir Vince Cable said Mr Youngs resignation showed Mrs May had shown poor judgment. He said: Toby Youngs appointment was a serious mistake, but at least the man himself has realised as much and resigned. Toby Youngs appointment was a serious mistake even the man himself even has eventually realised as much and resigned. The Conservatives must get their basic due diligence right getting a role in public office cannot be based solely on being a friend of Boris Johnson. Vince Cable (@vincecable) January 9, 2018 The Conservatives must get their basic due diligence right getting a role in public office cannot be based solely on being a friend of Boris Johnson. Theresa May stood by a misogynist and supporter of eugenics. She has shown poor judgment and, coupled with a troubled reshuffle, has made a bad start to the year. Off-the-cuff comments and thoughtless remarks online have a permanency which has haunted celebrities, politicians and journalists alike in recent months. In November last year, a seminal moment for Gay Times magazine the appointment of its first black editor ended in ignominy when his ugly Twitter history reared its head. Josh Rivers was dismissed from the top job at the publication after a series anti-Semitic tweets, posted between 2010 and 2015, were exposed. A similar controversy hung over Westminster in October 2017 when Labour MP Jared OMara had his internet presence dredged up in public. Like Mr Rivers, the Sheffield Hallam MP had found himself suddenly thrust into the spotlight when he ousted former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg at last years general election. Posts made on a website years before showed Mr OMara joking about having an orgy with members of Girls Aloud, claiming Michelle McManus only won Pop Idol because she was fat and suggesting it would be funny if jazz star Jamie Cullum was sodomised with his own piano. Jared OMara, left, and Jack Maynard, have both been haunted by their online pasts (Picture: PA/Getty) The 36-year-old was suspended from Labour over the comments, which were made more than a decade before he became an MP. ITVs hit reality show Im A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! had the launch of its latest series engulfed in drama due to the digital life of one contestant. Jack Maynard, the YouTube star, left the Australian jungle-based competition when offensive posts and an inappropriate exchange with a teenage girl were picked up by the press. In a subsequent video blog posted online, he warned his audience: All I can do is just beg and encourage that you guys dont make the same mistake as well, dont put anything online that you wouldnt say to your mum. (Main picture: Rex) By Jeff Mason and Richard Cowan WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he would back a two-step immigration approach that initially protects young "Dreamer" immigrants from deportation if it includes immigration restrictions and provisions for a border wall with Mexico that Democrats have opposed. At a White House meeting of Republican and Democratic lawmakers, Trump said after the first phase was complete he wanted to move quickly to even more contentious issues including a possible pathway to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants that is opposed by many Republicans. "If you want to take it that further step, I'll take the heat, I don't care," Trump told lawmakers of a broad immigration bill. "You are not that far away from comprehensive immigration reform." Trump said he would sign any bill that gives legal status to undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children as long as it had the border security protections he has sought, including funding for a border wall. "If you don't have the wall, you don't have security," Trump told the lawmakers. Trump and his fellow Republicans, who control the U.S. Congress, have been unable to reach agreement with Democrats on a deal to resolve the status of an estimated 700,000 young immigrants whose protection from potential deportation under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program ends in early March. MIDTERM ELECTIONS Under pressure from immigrant groups ahead of midterm congressional elections in November, Democrats are reluctant to give ground to Trump on the issue of the wall - his central promise from the 2016 presidential campaign. But after the meeting, lawmaker from both parties said they would meet as early as Wednesday to continue negotiations on a deal covering DACA and border security, as well as a visa lottery program and "chain migration," which could address the status of relatives of Dreamers who are still in the United States illegally. "From that standpoint it was a very productive meeting," said U.S. Senator David Perdue, a Republican. "We have a scope now." Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who also was at the meeting, said negotiators in Congress still faced difficulties but it was important that Trump had shown he had "no animosity toward the Dream Act kids" and the wall is not going to be 2,220 miles wide." The U.S. Congress has been trying and failing to pass a comprehensive immigration bill for more than a decade, most recently when the Senate passed one in 2013 that later died in the House of Representatives. White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told reporters the broader bill with a path to citizenship was not a focus for now. "Our focus is on the four things that I laid out. That's where our negotiation is and that's phase one," she said at a regular White House briefing. "We're certainly open to talking about a number of other issues when it comes to immigration, but right now this administration is focused on those four things and that negotiation, and not a lot else at this front." The immigration negotiations are part of a broader series of talks over issues ranging from funding the federal government through next September to renewing a childrens health insurance program and giving U.S. territories and states additional aid for rebuilding following last years hurricanes and wildfires. Top congressional leaders did not attend the hour-long meeting. Instead, the guest list included lawmakers from both parties involved in the immigration debate, such as Republican Graham and Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois, a Democrat. Many of the Dreamers are from Mexico and Central America and have spent most of their lives in the United States, attending school and participating in society. Trump put their fate in doubt in early September when he announced he was ending former President Barack Obama's DACA program, which allowed them to legally live and work in the United States temporarily. Steny Hoyer, the No. 2 Democrat in the House of Representatives, said a DACA bill could win support for passage even though there are differences between the parties over constitutes necessary border security. "Democrats are for security at the border," Hoyer told Trump during the meeting. "There are obviously differences, however, Mr. President, on how you affect that." On Monday, Trump announced that he was ending immigration protections for about 200,000 El Salvadorans who are living legally in the United States under the Temporary Protection Status program. Haitians and other groups have faced similar actions. A congressional aide told Reuters that negotiators in Congress also have been talking about legislation that would expand TPS in return for ending a visa lottery program that Republicans want to terminate. These discussions are part of broader talks on protecting Dreamers and enacting additional immigration law changes, including beefed up border security. (Reporting by Steve Holland and Richard Cowan; Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, Susan Heavey and Amanda Becker; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Alistair Bell) Senator Feinstein releases testimony from Fusion GPS boss Glenn Simpson Fusion GPS compiled explosive dossier on Trump campaign and Russians Dianne Feinstein serves on the Senate judiciary committee that heard testimony from the founder of the research firm that compiled a dossier on Donald Trumps alleged links with Russia. Photograph: Andrew Harnik/AP A source within the Trump campaign reported concerns to the FBI, according to the man behind a controversial dossier on Donald Trump, a new transcript suggests. Senator Dianne Feinstein on Tuesday unilaterally released the transcript of a congressional interview with Glenn Simpson, whose research firm, Fusion GPS, was behind the dossier on alleged contacts between Donald Trumps campaign and the Russian government. The dossier compiled by former British spy Christopher Steele makes an allegation that there was a conspiracy of cooperation between Russian agents and the Trump campaign, and the president has frequently scorned it since its publication last January. According to the transcript, Simpson told Congress that Steele, the former British spy, stopped sharing information with the FBI just one week before the US election because of concerns that the law enforcement agency was being manipulated by Trump insiders. According to Simpson, Steele severed his relationship with the FBI after the New York Times published a story in late October 2016 that said agents had not found any conclusive or direct link between Mr Trump and the Russian government. Steele was concerned that the FBI was being manipulated for political ends by the Trump people and that we didnt really understand what was going on. Feinsteins decision to make the transcript public renews a fierce debate about transparency surrounding the whole Russia-collusion investigation. Elsewhere in his 312-page testimony, Simpson told the senators that an internal Trump campaign source or a human source from inside the Trump organization had reported his or her concerns to the FBI. Simpson said that this information was drawn from Steele after the FBI had debriefed him that fall. However, a person close to the matter suggested Simpson had got some details wrong about the human source during his evidence session in August and was actually alluding to the role of George Papadopoulos, the Trump campaign foreign policy adviser, who shared knowledge of the Russian hacking of Democratic party emails with an Australian diplomat. Story continues Papadopoulos is cooperating with the ongoing federal investigation into the Trump campaign as a part of a plea deal that he reached with prosecutors after admitting he lied in his first interview with the FBI. Steele had been compiling the dossier during the 2016 presidential campaign and approached the FBI, according to Simpson, because he thought from his perspective there was an issue a security issue about whether a presidential candidate was being blackmailed. He honed [sic] in on this issue of blackmail as being a significant national security issue, Simpson said. Simpson cautioned that he was paraphrasing Steeles account, and added: we did not have the detailed conversations where he would debrief me on his discussions with the FBI. He added: I think it was a voluntary source, someone who was concerned about the same concerns we had. It was someone who decided to pick up the phone and report something. He said that Steele did not rely on this source for his work with the firm. Beyond Mueller Three separate congressional committees are investigating Russian tampering in the 2016 presidential election and possible collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign: the Senate judiciary and intelligence committees, and the House intelligence committee. The committees have the power to subpoena witnesses and documents. The list of witnesses to have been interviewed so far is long, and includes Donald Trump Jr and Jared Kushner, as well as lesser figures such as former adviser Carter Page; Glenn Simpson, the co-founder of Fusion GPS, which commissioned the Steele dossier; and Ben Rhodes, the former Obama adviser. Senate intelligence committee The most aggressive of the three committees so far, with a reasonable appearance of bipartisanship. Republican chairman Richard Burr of North Carolina said in October that the question of potential collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian operatives remained open. But Burr has also said the committee was not focused on criminal acts but a larger picture. The committee notably heard testimony from James Comey after the former FBI director was fired. Senate judiciary committee Hampered early on by partisan disagreement about the scope of its investigation, the committee has interviewed top witnesses including Donald Trump Jr and has taken a particular focus on the firing of James Comey. But the committee has deferred to Mueller in the investigation of Paul Manafort and has interviewed fewer witnesses than others. House intelligence committee Riven by partisan conflict, the committee appears to be on track to produce two reports one from each party. Chairman Devin Nunes recused himself from the inquiry in March after Trump tweeted that Barack Obama had "tapp[ed] my phones" and Nunes, in an apparent attempt to defend the president, revealed that some communications involving Trump aides had been intercepted by US surveillance programs. Feinstein, the ranking Democrat on the Senate judiciary committee, said she released the transcript because the American people deserve the opportunity to see what he said and judge for themselves. The innuendo and misinformation circulating about the transcript are part of a deeply troubling effort to undermine the investigation into potential collusion and obstruction of justice, Feinstein said in a statement. The only way to set the record straight is to make the transcript public. The Senate and House intelligence committees have also interviewed Simpson, but have not released any transcripts. Last week Simpson, a former journalist, requested in an op-ed in the New York Times that the committee release the transcript. The Republican head of the Senate judiciary committee, Chuck Grassley, declined to release the document and instead asked Simpson to testify in public. In his 10-hour 22 August interview with the Senate committee, Simpson said that the firms research into Trumps past began as a kind of holistic examination of his business record. It evolved somewhat quickly into issues of his relationships to organized crime figures, but you know, really the gamut of Donald Trump, Simpson said. Simpson also defended Steele, saying that the well-respected former intelligence officer has a sterling reputation as a person who doesnt exaggerate, doesnt make things up, doesnt sell baloney. By late September 2016, Simpson said, he had asked Steele about contacts with the FBI, with whom the British researcher had spoken. By then it was obvious there was a crime in progress, Simpson said. So I was curious whether hed heard back. Pressed about this claim, Simpson said: Espionage. They were hacking into the computers of Democrats and thinktanks. Thats a computer crime. Steele has said he reported his concerns to the FBI in the summer of 2016. Simpson said that it was Steeles decision to take what he had discovered to the FBI in early July, explaining that the former MI6 officer felt a sense of responsibility. Chris said he was very concerned about whether this represented a national security threat and he said he thought we were obligated to tell someone in government, in our government about this information, Simpson said. He thought from his perspective there was an issue a security issue about whether a presidential candidate was being blackmailed. In his testimony, Simpson repeatedly praised Steele, his skills and his reliability, pointing out that the former British intelligence officer was the lead Russianist at MI6 who was extremely well regarded. He described Steele, who he said he hired in May or June of 2016, as basically a boy scout. He worked for the government for a very long time. He lives a very modest, quiet life, and this is his specialty, Simpson said. We got along very well because my speciality is public information. So he was comfortable working with me and I was comfortable working with him and, you know, weve both been around a lot of criminal investigations and national security stuff. Simpson said that while he and his colleagues at Fusion focused on the analysis of documents, Steeles strength was his personal contacts to sources in Moscow and the Trump camp, drawing on his intelligence background. He said that at the time Steele was hired, the alleged Trump links to the Kremlin were an open secret in Moscow. The thing that people forget about what was going on in June of 2016 was that no one was really focused on sort of this question of whether Donald Trump had a relationship with the Kremlin. So, you know, when Chris started asking around in Moscow about this the information was sitting there. It wasnt a giant secret, Simpson said. People were talking about it freely. It was only later that it became a subject of great controversy and people clammed up, and at that time the whole issue of the hacking was also, you know, not really focused on Russia. So these things eventually converged into, you know, a major issue, but at the time it wasnt one. In a statement, Grassleys office excoriated Feinstein for the release, saying she had not consulted with him. Her decision undermines the integrity of the investigation, he said, and jeopardizes its ability to secure candid voluntary testimony, including from the presidents son-in-law, Jared Kushner. WASHINGTON President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he is open to a deal that would pair protections for undocumented young people with border security, and would be willing to address comprehensive immigration reform later. But he reiterated that he would not approve any deal with congressional leaders without his signature border wall or restrictions on legal immigration. Id love not to build the wall, but you need the wall, he told reporters at the White House. If you dont have the wall, you cant have security. Trumps meeting with about 25 members of Congress on Tuesday was part of negotiations over how to protect young undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children nearly 700,000 of whom the president put at risk of losing deportation relief when he ended the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in September. One of the sticking points in discussing a deal has been how much it should include. Democrats and many Republicans have argued against piling on so many issues that a bill dies under its own weight, but it has been unclear whether Trump feels the same way. During Tuesdays meeting, however, Trump narrowed the scope of the current negotiations to four issues: protections for Dreamers, border security, an end to so-called chain migration a term for family-based visas and elimination of the diversity visa lottery program. (In an unusual move, Trump allowed reporters to attend the meeting in its entirety, instead of just the prefatory remarks.) I think a clean DACA bill, to me, is a DACA bill, but we take care of the 800,000 people, Trump said. But I think, to me, a clean bill is a bill of DACA, we take care of them, and we also take care of security. After handling those matters, he said, we can certainly start comprehensive immigration reform the following afternoon. He didnt say exactly what he believes that should entail. In the past, comprehensive immigration reform has referred to bills that include legal status for more of the undocumented population, but Trump may have been referring to other immigration matters. Story continues Tuesdays meeting is unlikely to produce a quick compromise. It included members of a bipartisan group working on protections for Dreamers, but also Republican lawmakers who have put more of a priority on slashing legal immigration. Even if lawmakers now have instructions on what to address as part of a deal, there are plenty of potential sticking points that could doom both a DACA deal and government spending talks. Democrats want Dreamer protections approved as part of a government spending bill that must pass by Jan. 19 to avoid a shutdown. Experts say its necessary to leave time to implement a new policy before Dreamers begin to lose DACA protections in larger numbers after March 5, as thousands already have as a result of Trumps decision. Republican leaders in Congress have said Dreamers should be dealt with separately from government spending, and many have argued that immediate action is unnecessary since the deadline is March 5. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), who attended Tuesdays meeting, said Democrats are willing to negotiate on the topics Trump laid out, but it will depend on how they are defined. If the diversity visa lottery is eliminated but those visas are open to other individuals, such as holders of temporary protected status, that could be a solution, Menendez said. Democrats have long said they support border security measures, but not a 2,000-mile wall something that Trump, White House officials and other Republicans have acknowledged isnt possible anyway. There are ways to accomplish the goal in which the interest of both sides can be achieved, Menendez told reporters. The question is if theres the right spirit. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who did not attend Tuesdays meeting, criticized Trump earlier that day over a report that the administration wants to cut funding for other border security measures including ones that have been proven to work, such as surveillance and radar technology in order to fund an $18 billion border wall. Schumer said Democrats were open to border measures that would help, and even fencing where it was deemed necessary. But he said it was wrong to take away the things that are needed to protect the border for a symbolic and ineffective political gesture. Theres nothing to this but politics, Schumer said. President Trump is fighting for an empty symbol rather than smart policy that will actually produce better security at our borders. After lawmakers reach a deal to help Dreamers, Democrats would be eager to work on comprehensive immigration reform, Menendez said. But its early in the process to assume knowledge of what Trump would agree to. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), who attended the meeting and supports cutting legal immigration in half, told reporters afterward that he still opposes a comprehensive approach and believes Trump agrees that immigration matters should be handled in a step-by-step process. President Trump has always said that he wants to solve all of the issues of our immigration system, but he also said he knows that Congress has failed three times in 12 years to do that, so its better to do a phased approach, Cotton said. He added later: But if we get this negotiation right, if we get a solution that is satisfactory to Democrats and Republicans, that will help give confidence for the next round of immigration. This article has been updated with additional comments from Cotton and Menendez. Also on HuffPost April 2015 At an event hosted by Texas Patriots PAC: Everythings coming across the border: the illegals, the cars, the whole thing. Its like a big mess. Blah. Its like vomit. June 2015 At a speech announcing his campaign: "When Mexico sends its people, theyre not sending their best. Theyre not sending you. Theyre not sending you. Theyre sending people that have lots of problems, and theyre bringing those problems with us. Theyre bringing drugs. Theyre bringing crime. Theyre rapists. And some, I assume, are good people." August 2015 On NBC's "Meet the Press": Were going to keep the families together, we have to keep the families together, but they have to go." September 2015 On CBS's "60 Minutes": Were rounding em up in a very humane way, in a very nice way. And theyre going to be happy because they want to be legalized. And, by the way, I know it doesnt sound nice. But not everything is nice. November 2015 On MSNBC's "Morning Joe": You are going to have a deportation force, and you are going to do it humanely." February 2016 At a GOP primary debate: We have at least 11 million people in this country that came in illegally. They will go out. They will come back some will come back, the best, through a process. March 2016 At a press conference when asked if he would consider allowing undocumented immigrants to stay: "We either have a country or we dont. We either have a country or we dont. We have borders or we dont have borders. And at this moment, the answer is absolutely not. April 2016 At an event hosted by NBC's "Today Show": Theyre going to go, and were going to create a path where we can get them into this country legally, OK? But it has to be done legally. ... Theyre going to go, and then come back and come back legally. July 2016 At the Republican National Convention: "Tonight, I want every American whose demands for immigration security have been denied and every politician who has denied them to listen very closely to the words I am about to say. On January 21st of 2017, the day after I take the oath of office, Americans will finally wake up in a country where the laws of the United States are enforced." September 2016 At a rally: Anyone who has entered the United States illegally is subject to deportation. That is what it means to have laws and to have a country. Otherwise we dont have a country. September 2016 On "The Dr. Oz Show": Well, under my plan the undocumented or, as you would say, illegal immigrant wouldnt be in the country. They only come in the country legally. Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. President hosts meeting with Republican and Democratic lawmakers Trump offers to take the heat on comprehensive reform Donald Trump: I really do believe Democrats and Republicans, the people sitting in this room, really want to get something done. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Donald Trump said legislation to shield young undocumented immigrants from deportation should be a bill of love and expressed a desire to enact comprehensive immigration reform, a legislative achievement that has eluded Congress for decades. His comments appeared to endorse a plan that would offer millions of undocumented immigrants an eventual pathway to citizenship, telling Republican lawmakers that he would be willing to take the heat and shield them against the political backlash likely to emanate from hardline, conservative supporters who have viewed this approach as unacceptable. Who are the Dreamers? Dreamers are young immigrants who would qualify for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (Daca) program, enacted under Barack Obama in 2012. Most people in the program entered the US as children and have lived in the US for years undocumented. Daca gave them temporary protection from deportation and work permits. Daca was only available to people younger than 31 on 15 June 2012, who arrived in the US before turning 16 and lived there continuously since June 2007. Most Dreamers are from Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras and the largest numbers live in California, Texas, Florida and New York. Donald Trump cancelled the program in September but has also said repeatedly he wants Congress to develop a program to help the population. What will happen to the Dreamers? Under the Trump administration, new applications under Daca will no longer be accepted. For those currently in the program, their legal status and other Daca-related permits (such as to work and attend college) will begin expiring in March 2018 unless Congress passes legislation allowing a new channel for temporary or permanent legal immigration status and Dreamers will all lose their status by March 2020. Technically, as their statuses lapse they could be deported and sent back to countries many have no familiarity with. It is still unclear whether this would happen. Fear had been rising in the run-up to last weeks announcement. Those with work permits expiring between 5 September 2017 and 5 March 2018 will be allowed to apply for renewal by 5 October. Story continues Read a full guide to Daca here Trumps support for comprehensive immigration reform during a White House meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers amid tense negotiations over a budget deal and the fate of Dreamers, the nearly 700,000 beneficiaries of an Obama-era program known as Daca that protects immigrants brought to the US as children from deportation. Trump rescinded the program and gave Congress until March to find a legislative fix. I really do believe Democrats and Republicans, the people sitting in this room, really want to get something done, Trump told the assembled lawmakers, a group that holds a wide range of opinions on immigration. Trump has repeatedly stated that any deal that would enshrine the Daca program into law must include funding for a border wall, which was a central promise of his presidential campaign. During the meeting, he repeated those conditions, and said that a compromise must include an end to the family-based immigration policy, which he refers to as chain migration, and the elimination of the visa lottery program, which he mischaracterized as an initiative that allows countries to give you the people they dont want. In order to secure it, we need a wall. We need closing enforcement we have to close enforcement loopholes, he said. But Trump on Tuesday went further than endorsing a solution to Daca, and suggested lawmakers tackle the far broader problem the status of the 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the country. You created an opportunity here, Mr President, and you need to close the deal, said Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, urging the president to tackle comprehensive immigration reform. If you want to take it that further step, Ill take the heat, Trump replied, adding: You are not that far away from comprehensive immigration reform. Later in the conversation, which Trump allowed press cameras to record, he returned to the subject, appearing to endorse a two-phase approach that would include a deal on Daca and border security followed by comprehensive immigration reform the next afternoon. During the closed-door portion of the meeting, lawmakers and the White House agreed to narrow negotiations to four key issues: border security, so-called chain migration, the visa diversity lottery and the Dreamers. Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, said the meeting boded well for a compromise but cautioned that there are still a number of sticking points and the devil lies in the details. Among the list of outstanding questions is the timeline. Republicans want action on Daca to proceed separately from budget negotiations but Democrats are hoping to tie the two in a rare moment of leverage for the minority party. Congress must pass a federal budget by 19 January to avert a partial government shutdown, and the vote will require Democratic support. Democrats believe this is their best, and perhaps only, opportunity to demand action on Daca before the program ends on 5 March. During the discussion, Trump also backed off his demand for a 2,000-mile barrier along the full length of the US-Mexico border. Republican lawmakers said the concession was a breakthrough in negotiations with Democrats, who have drawn a hard line on funding the construction of a physical barrier. The president today has backed off any kind of description that hes looking for a sea-to-shining-sea fence or wall, said senator James Lankford, a Republican from Oklahoma who was at the meeting. He backed up and said Im not looking for that, Lankford continued. Thats not what were trying to do. Were going to do technology in some areas. Thats one of things Democrats have pushed very hard on to say technology needs to be the lead not wall in some areas. he consented to that today. Almost immediately after Trumps remarks on immigration, he came under attack from far-right conservatives who advocate for lower immigration and have derided comprehensive immigration reform as amnesty. Conservative commentator Ann Coulter, for instance, accused Trump of wavering in his views on immigration and denounced his willingness to negotiate with Democrats. But don't worry! There will be "border security"! (Political euphemism for: You're not getting wall.) https://t.co/5paiyn2iZv Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) January 9, 2018 Graham argued that the president would shield Republicans from these attacks, making immigration reform achievable this time around. President Trump has the loudest voice Ive seen. I think the people on the right are going to defer to him, Graham said. If we listen to the Ann Coulters of the world, were going nowhere. If we listen to the resist movement, were going nowhere, he added, alluding to liberals who oppose Trumps agenda. Heres the good news: Ann Coulter and the resist movement are the outliers. Three people have sustained non-life threatening injuries after a fire was reported in Trump Tower, the New York residence of President Donald Trump. Mr Trump was in Washington at the time of the fire, which was quickly extinguished. Footage of the incident showed around a dozen firefighters on the roof of the tower, as white smoke billowed from one corner of the top of the building. A blaze was reported from the top floor of the building at 7am local time, the New York Fire Department said. Secret Service agents had first noticed the fire, and had informed building management about the issue. About 84 firefighters attended the scene and brought the blaze under control in about an hour, the fire service said. A spokesman with the Fire Department of New York called it a quick, easy, and routine situation. The fire wasnt in the building, it was on top of the building, the fire department wrote on Twitter. We had flames coming out of the vents, no smoke condition or fire was on the inside. Eric Trump, one of the presidents sons, said on Twitter that it was a small electrical fire in the cooling tower on the buildings roof. The New York Fire Department was here within minutes and did an incredible job, he said. The men and women of the #FDNY are true heroes and deserve our most sincere thanks and praise! The tower houses businesses and luxury apartments, including Mr Trumps penthouse, which reportedly occupies the top three floors. No evacuations were reported in the building Just hours after the fire was reported, the streets below had calmed down, and just one fire truck remained nearby with its siren lights still spinning. Tourists passed by in the frigid New York weather, snapping photos of the building, unaware that a plume of smoke could have been seen earlier in the day. Some said that they had stumbled across the shining, black tower as they walked around Midtown Manhattan, but didnt initially intend on visiting the famed metropolitan home. Story continues No, no, no, Hilda Bandiera, who was visiting New York with her husband, Alfred, from Australia, said when asked if she had ventured down Fifth Avenue specifically to see Mr Trumps building. Were not adding to his economy. The area around the tower had a notably smaller security footprint than is seen when members of the first family are staying at the skyscraper. Metal barricades remained at the site, their bases covered in snow, but foot traffic hardly warranted even that. Traffic on Fifth Avenue which was a tangled mess during the presidential transition period last year, and while First Lady Melania Trump still lived at the tower appeared to run smoothly, even with the lingering presence of the New York Fire Department. Matt Mahoney, a construction worker in the area, stood catty-cornered from the tower with a cigarette, and recalled the commotion of the morning. Mr Mahoney said he lives in Staten Island -- one of the few hotspots of Trump supporters in New York City and that theres generally congestion near the tower now that Mr Trump is president. Fire or no, theres always a little bit more congestion than there was before. As for Mr Trump, who Mr Mahoney says he voted for, the fiery rhetoric of the campaign - fuelled by frequent tweets and big promises hasnt cooled down to something more statesman like, as Mr Mahoney said hed like to see. The way he acts, the tweets... Hes a little bit of a loose cannon than youd like, Mr Mahoney said, indicating that it has been an accumulation of questionable behaviour over the past year that has soured him a bit on Mr Trump. Overall, the conduct has been non-presidential, Mr Mahoney said. But, theres still time for the President to contain the blaze that has been his presidency, he said. Istanbul (AFP) - Turkey's foreign ministry on Tuesday summoned the Russian and Iranian ambassadors to Ankara after accusing the Syrian regime of stepping up its offensive on key rebel-held areas, according to Turkish diplomatic sources. The strikes targeted moderate opposition forces in Idlib province near the Turkish border, according to Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who warned it could torpedo talks aimed at ending the war. "Regime forces are striking moderate opposition with the pretext of fighting against Al-Nusra (Front)," Cavusoglu was quoted as saying by the official Anadolu news agency, referring to the former Al-Qaeda affiliate. Idlib province is almost entirely controlled by anti-government forces that are dominated by a jihadist outfit known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) consisting mostly of former Nusra fighters. "This attitude would scupper the political solution process," Cavusoglu said. "The parties that will come together in Sochi should refrain from" any action that could threaten the talks, he warned. Russia is hoping to hold a Syria peace congress in its Black Sea resort of Sochi on January 29-30. Ankara conveyed "uneasiness" to the Russian and Iranian ambassadors, stating it considered the strikes a "violation of the borders of the Idlib de-escalation zone" established by Turkey, Iran and Russia, according sources at the foreign ministry. The Russian ambassador was asked to speak to Moscow to tell the Syrian government in Damascus to end the assault, added the sources. Meanwhile, US-brokered talks based in Geneva between the regime and the opposition are also going forward, albeit at a stuttering pace. A previous attempt in November to convene talks in Sochi failed due to disagreements between the prospective participants. Turkey says it will oppose any talks involving the Kurdish militia of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), which Ankara views as a terror group. Story continues In 2016, Ankara and Moscow brokered a fragile ceasefire in certain areas -- which has been bolstered by the negotiations in the Kazakh capital of Astana. Both Damascus and the rebel factions regularly accuse each other of violating the ceasefire in the de-escalation zones, including in Idlib. A likely future sticking point between Russia and Turkey is the fate of Syrian President Bachar al-Assad, who Ankara has vehemently opposed throughout the conflict. Last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said it was impossible to advance with Assad in power, describing him as a "terrorist". Syrian regime forces on Monday pounded Idlib as well as the Eastern Ghouta enclave near Damascus, the two last rebel bastions in Syria. By Jonathan Stempel (Reuters) - A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld the validity of a 2014 Tennessee ballot measure that removed the right to an abortion from the state constitution. By a 3-0 vote, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a challenge by eight voters to how the state counted ballots in the election, one of Tennessee's costliest. The measure, known as Amendment 1, won 53 percent of the vote. Tuesday's decision by the Cincinnati-based appeals court overturned a April 2016 lower court ruling ordering a recount. That ruling had been put on hold pending the appeal. The decision may also encourage the adoption in Tennessee of tighter abortion restrictions, such as a 48-hour waiting period that Republican Governor Bill Haslam signed into law in 2015. Republicans have big majorities in both houses of Tennessee's legislature. Bill Harbison, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, in a statement said his clients were weighing their options. "We continue to believe in the bedrock principle of one person, one vote, and believe that the state's ratification scheme coupled with certain actors' unprecedented effort to manipulate a result violated that principle," Harbison said. Circuit Judge David McKeague said opponents of Amendment 1 failed to show how Tennessee harmed their due process and equal protection rights, or diluted their votes relative to votes of abortion opponents. "This is not the 'exceptional case' that warrants federal intervention in a lawful state election process," McKeague wrote. "Although the subject of abortion rights will continue to be controversial in Tennessee and across our nation, it is time for uncertainty surrounding the people's 2014 approval and ratification of Amendment 1 to be put to rest," he added. Amendment 1 said, "Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion." It also said elected officials may "enact, amend, or repeal statutes regarding abortion." Story continues The office of Tennessee Republican Attorney General Herbert Slatery said it was gratified that the court found the vote-counting "reasonable and true to the meaning of the Tennessee Constitution." In ordering a recount, then-Chief Judge Kevin Sharp of the federal court in Nashville called Tennessee's vote-counting "fundamentally unfair." He also said it did not comply with a state constitutional provision that it take into account the number of votes cast for governor. McKeague was appointed to the appeals court by President George W. Bush. The other panel members, Richard Suhrheinrich and Ronald Gilman, were appointed by Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, respectively. The case is George et al v Hargett et al, 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 16-5563. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Leslie Adler) By Babak Dehghanpisheh BEIRUT (Reuters) - Iran has foiled attempts by its foreign enemies to turn legitimate protests into an insurgency to overthrow the Islamic Republic, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Tuesday. Comments on his Twitter feed and in Iranian media underscored the establishment's confidence that it has extinguished the unrest that spread to more than 80 cities in which at least 22 people died since late December. "Once again, the nation tells the U.S., Britain, and those who seek to overthrow the Islamic Republic of Iran from abroad that 'you've failed, and you will fail in the future, too'," Khamenei tweeted. The Revolutionary Guards, the military force loyal to Khamenei, said on Sunday security forces had put an end to the unrest that it also said had been whipped up by foreign enemies. At least 1,000 people have been arrested in the biggest anti-government protests for nearly a decade, with the judiciary saying ringleaders could face the death penalty. A judiciary official said on Tuesday that a detainee in Arak, a town about 200 km (124 miles) south of Tehran, committed suicide, according to Mizan, the website of the Iranian judiciary. On Monday, a separate judiciary official announced that a detainee had committed suicide in Tehran's Evin prison. The reports have raised concerns among human rights activists and some Iranian politicians that detainees may have been killed by security forces while in custody. "I warn the president and security and judiciary officials to prevent the occurrence of a second Kahrizak," Mahmoud Sadeghi, a parliamentarian, tweeted on Monday. The Kahrizak prison gained notoriety when a handful of detainees were tortured and killed at the site after unrest in 2009. GRANDSTANDING Khamenei said U.S. President Donald Trump was grandstanding when he tweeted that protesters were trying "to take back their corrupt government", promising "great support from the United States at the appropriate time!" The Iranian leader tweeted: "... this man who sits at the head of the White House - although, he seems to be a very unstable man - he must realize that these extreme and psychotic episodes won't be left without a response." The U.S. House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly, by 415-2, on Wednesday for a resolution supporting the peaceful protests in Iran, criticizing the Iranian government's response and urging targeted sanctions in response to what lawmakers termed Tehran's crackdown. As well as Washington and London, Khamenei blamed the violence on Israel, exiled dissident group People's Mujahedin of Iran and "a wealthy government" in the Gulf, a probable reference to Iran's regional rival, Saudi Arabia. In a rare public appearance, the head of Israeli intelligence agency Mossad said the protests were due to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's failure to improve people's economic or social circumstances, but he said they were unlikely to overthrow the establishment. "In Iran too, we have eyes and ears," Yossi Cohen told a Finance Ministry conference in Jerusalem. "One shouldn't develop high hopes, though I would be happy to see a meaningful revolution," he added. Khamenei has called the protests - which were initially about the economy but soon turned political - "playing with fireworks", but he said citizens had a right to air legitimate concerns, a rare concession by a leader who usually voices clear support for security crackdowns. "These concerns must be addressed. We must listen, we must hear. We must provide answers within our means," Khamenei was quoted as saying, hinting that not only the government of Rouhani, but his own clerical leadership must also respond. "I am also responsible. All of us must follow up," Khamenei said. (Reporting by Babak Dehghanpisheh and additional reporting by Maayan Lubell and Patricia Zengerle in Washington; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Susan Thomas) By Matt Spetalnick WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. investigators are looking at a range of theories, including the possibility of a "viral" attack, to explain what may have sickened some American diplomats who were stationed in Havana, the State Department said on Tuesday. U.S. experts have yet to determine who or what was behind the mysterious illnesses that began occurring in late 2016 and heightened tensions between the old Cold War foes. They have seen no evidence it was "an episode of mass hysteria" among the 24 affected U.S. personnel and family members, a senior State Department medical officer told a Senate hearing. State Department officials testified that it was "incomprehensible" Cuba's Communist government would not have been aware of what happened or who was responsible, though they stopped short of assigning direct blame to Havana. Cuban officials, who are conducting their own investigation, have denied any involvement or any knowledge of what was behind it, and have raised doubts that any kind of attacks took place against U.S. diplomats. The administration of President Donald Trump, which has partly rolled back a detente with Cuba, responded last year by sharply drawing down U.S. embassy staff in Havana and in October expelled 15 Cuban diplomats. Todd Brown, diplomatic security assistant director at the State Department, said that as well as the possibility of an acoustic or sonic attack, U.S investigators were considering whether people might have been deliberately exposed to a virus. But he offered no details or evidence. "I do know other type of attacks are being considered in a connection with this," he said. "There's viral, there is ultrasound, there's a range of things that the technical experts are looking at." Some experts have argued that an acoustic attack seems implausible, given that it likely would have caused an extremely loud noise in the area, which was not the case. Cuban officials have dismissed as "science fiction" the notion that some kind of sonic weapon was used and have accused the Trump administration of politicizing the matter. Johana Tablada, deputy director for North America at the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said in a message on Twitter it was regrettable to see officials of the State Department using the word attacks with ZERO evidence to prove it happened. Lawmakers also asked whether rogue elements of the Cuban government or security services or a third party such as Russia might have been involved. The State Department officials said they could not address or speculate on such matters in a public hearing. 'TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY' Symptoms suffered by the diplomats have included hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo, headaches and fatigue, a pattern consistent with "mild traumatic brain injury," said Charles Rosenfarb, director of the State Department's Bureau of Medical Services. A U.S. official told Reuters the government will not send staff back to the U.S. Embassy in Havana yet. The United States pulled out more than half of its personnel there in September. "I don't think we can say categorically that we can guarantee that they would be safe from this (if staffers return)," Brown told the hearing, chaired by Republican Senator Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American and strong critic of Cuba. Francisco Palmieri, acting assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs, said Cuba was responsible for the security of U.S. diplomats on the island "and they have failed to live up to that responsibility." Asked whether it was possible that the Cuban government would have been unaware of any attacks, he said: "I find it very difficult to believe that. Cuba is a security state, the Cuban government in general has a very tight lid on anything and everything that happens in that country." The Cuban government has accused the Trump administration of slander for saying Havana was holding back information. Senator Robert Menendez, a Cuban-American and ranking Democrat on the Western Hemisphere subcommittee, said Cuba had failed to meet its international obligations but also that the State Department response had been "inadequate and troubling." Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will open a new high-level investigation into the matter, convening an accountability review board, Palmieri said. It will be in addition to other U.S. probes, including one by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Canada has said several Canadians reported symptoms similar to the U.S. diplomats but it has not publicly ordered any evacuation of embassy staff in Havana. After decades of hostility between the United States and Cuba, the U.S. Embassy reopened in 2015 as part of moves by former President Barack Obama and his Cuban counterpart, Raul Castro, to mend ties. Relations have been strained since Trump took office, saying Obama made too many concessions and reversing parts of the rapprochement. (Additional reporting by Sarah Marsh in Havana and Arshad Mohammed and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Tom Brown) (ROME) As many as 64 migrants, including a mother whose 3-year-old child desperately clung to her, are feared dead after a traffickers overcrowded rubber dinghy from Libya started sinking in the Mediterranean Sea, officials said Monday. The Italian coast guard rescued 86 people from the boat hours after it started sinking Saturday morning due to a puncture. Specially trained rescue divers leapt into the water to pull dozens to safety, including those who managed to stay aboard the half-submerged dinghy as well as others already flailing in the cool waters around it. The bodies of eight dead women were also recovered. Since trafficking dinghies are often crammed with far more than 100 migrants, fears quickly arose that dozens more could be missing in the sinking. U.N. officials said Monday that accounts from survivors bore out those fears. An Italian coast guard search that went through the night didnt find any more survivors or corpses. Flavio Di Giacomo of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in tweet Monday that survivors interviewed by the agency in Catania, Sicily, after they arrived on a rescue ship said 150 people had been aboard the dinghy when it set out from the coast of Libya. Sixty-four migrants lost their life in the shipwreck (which) occurred last Saturday, Di Giacomo said, adding that probably 56 missing migrants were lost at sea. Catania Mayor Enzo Bianco told Italian Radio Radicale that among the survivors was a child who lost her mother. I watched a 3-year-old girl while she was starting to play at the port here. She was saved, grabbed at the last second by the coast guard in the sea, the mayor said. She was clinging to her mother and she saw her drown. Bianco said the child is now with her aunt, who was among the survivors. The dinghy, half-submerged, had been spotted by an aircraft from a European naval mission combatting migrant trafficking. Hundreds of thousands of migrants have been rescued at sea and taken to southern Italian ports in the last few years, including nearly 119,000 last year. Another 3,100 drowned along the way in 2017, the IOM says. They include refugees fleeing wars or persecution who hope to receive asylum as well as economic migrants, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa, who arent eligible to be granted permission to live in Europe. Di Giacomo couldnt immediately be reached for further details on the weekend survivors. Washington (AFP) - Police officers shot and killed nearly 1,000 people in the United States in 2017, slightly more than the previous year, according to a tally published on Monday by The Washington Post. A total of 987 people were fatally shot by US police last year, up from 963 in 2016 and down from 995 in 2015, the Post said. The newspaper has been logging details of shootings by police in the United States since 2015, tracking local news reports, public records and social media. The use of deadly force by US police has attracted increased attention in recent years, highlighted by the high-profile slayings of a number of unarmed black men. Nineteen unarmed African-American men were killed by US police in 2017, up from 17 in 2016 but down from 36 in 2015, according to the Post. Black males nevertheless continue to be shot at disproportionately high rates, the newspaper said. Black men, both armed and unarmed, accounted for 22 percent of all people shot and killed by US police last year but make up just six percent of the total US population. Overall, police shot and killed 68 unarmed people in 2017, up from 51 in 2016 but down from 94 in 2015. "The national spotlight on this issue has made officers more cautious in unarmed situations," Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, told the newspaper. According to the Post database, 735 of the people shot and killed by police last year were armed with knives or guns, up from 693 in 2016. Forty-six police officers were killed in the line of duty in the United States in 2017, down from 66 the previous year, according to FBI figures. Deadly shootings by police in the United States are far more prevalent than in other developed countries. According to the British group Inquest, police fatally shot four people in the United Kingdom in 2016. Thirteen people were killed by police bullets in Germany in 2016, according to a study by Berlin's Tageszeitung newspaper. Versace, the luxury fashion company founded by slain designer Gianni Versace, distanced itself Monday from the upcoming installment of FXs popular television series, American Crime Story, which focuses on the fashion icons murder two decades ago. The company said the Versace family including Donatella Versace, who took over the brand after her brothers death in 1997 did not authorize or have any involvement in The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story. Since Versace did not authorize the book on which it is partly based nor has it taken part in the writing of the screenplay, this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction, Versace said in a statement obtained by TIME. Gianni Versace was shot and killed in front of his Miami Beach mansion on July 15, 1997, after returning home from a morning trip to a local cafe, authorities said. About a week later, his suspected killer, Andrew Cunanan, shot himself to death on a boat house, about two miles away from Versaces home. In response to Versaces statement, FX said its second season is based off author Maureen Orths book about Cunanans crime spree, Vulgar Favors. We stand by the meticulous reporting of Ms. Orth, the network said. The latest American Crime Story series premieres Jan. 17 and stars Darren Criss, Penelope Cruz and Ricky Martin. Washington (AFP) - US Vice President Mike Pence will leave next week on a high-stakes trip to Egypt, Jordan and Israel, a US official said Monday, moving ahead with a Middle East tour delayed amid anger over Washington's policy shift on Jerusalem. Initially set for late December, the trip was pushed back as the region reeled from deadly protests triggered by President Donald Trump's controversial decision to declare the Holy City as Israel's capital -- in a break with decades of US policy. Pence will arrive in Cairo on January 20 for a meeting with President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, heading the following day to Amman for a one-on-one with King Abdullah II. His trip will conclude on January 22-23 with a two-day visit to Israel, where he will meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin, deliver a speech to the Knesset, visit the Western Wall and the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial. Israel occupied east Jerusalem and the West Bank in 1967 and later annexed east Jerusalem in a move never recognized by the international community. The city's status is among the most contentious issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: Israel claims all of Jerusalem as its united capital, while the Palestinians see the eastern sector as the capital of their future state. Trump's controversial decision sparked protests in Arab and Muslim countries and was rejected in a non-binding UN General Assembly resolution. Tensions ratcheted up a notch this month after Trump threatened to cut hundreds of millions of dollars of aid to the Palestinians -- whose leaders responded by saying they will not be "blackmailed" and that Jerusalem "is not for sale." Trump came to office boasting that he could achieve the "ultimate deal" that secures peace in the Middle East, something that has eluded US presidents for decades. But efforts to harness improved Arab-Israel relations to push a peace deal have been at least temporarily derailed by Trump's Jerusalem recognition, with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas warning last month he would "no longer accept" any peace plan proposed by the United States. You know what they say: When it rains, it pours and when it snows in Florida, it hails frozen iguanas. As a so-called bomb cyclone continues lashing the U.S. East Coast with historic cold temperatures, weird weather abounds. In south Florida, temperatures dipped below 40 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius) on Jan. 3, giving Tallahassee its first measurable snowfall in 28 years. Yesterday (Jan. 4), Floridians reported an even stranger sight: frozen iguana bodies falling out of trees and littering the ground around the suburbs. Photos posted on social media show the green reptiles lying belly-up and stock-still on lawns, seemingly dead. The good news: Most of them likely aren't dead they're just really, really cold. [See The World's Most Bizarre Lizards] The iguanas have a good chance of thawing out if you move them in the sun. Just be careful @CBS12 pic.twitter.com/Qn2w6NFedD Maxine Bentzel (@MaxineBentzel) January 4, 2018 "When the temperature goes down, [iguanas] literally shut down, and they can no longer hold on to the trees," Ron Magill, wildlife expert and communications director for Zoo Miami, told The New York Times. "Which is why you get this phenomenon in south Florida that it's raining iguanas." (This isn't even Florida's first iguana rain a similar event occurred in 2008.) Iguanas, like other reptiles, are ectotherms (also known as being "cold-blooded"), meaning the temperature outside strongly influences their body temperatures. When the outside temperature drops, preservation of an ectotherm's body temperature becomes the No. 1 priority. Creatures like iguanas and turtles thus conserve energy by slowing their metabolisms and almost entirely stopping moving; this can lead to the sort of self-imposed paralysis (known as torpor) seen in Florida. Story continues "If it's just for a day or two, they'll just get to where they're completely frozen in time. They're still able to breathe. They're still able to do bodily functions, just very slow," Emily Maple, the reptile keeper at the Palm Beach County Zoo in Florida, told CNN affiliate WPEC. As temperatures warm, the iguanas will thaw and eventually start moving again, Kristen Sommers, who oversees the nonnative fish and wildlife program for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, told the Associated Press. For this reason, it's recommended that people don't move or touch the critters. In other ectotherm news, hundreds of sea turtles spotted near the Padre Island National Seashore near Corpus Christi, Texas, suffered a similar cold-paralysis outbreak earlier in the week. National Park Service researchers removed the turtles form the frigid water and placed them in a holding area (with some plastic kiddie pools) to revive. Originally published on Live Science. Editor's Recommendations Photo credit: Hearst Communications, Inc. All rights reserved From Esquire UK If you were of the opinion that Donald Trump's less-than-thinly-veiled attempts to start global conflict through Twitter (plus all the other nonsense) would be enough for some sort of justified ban or restriction on his account, then boy do you not know Twitter. He isn't going anywhere. And it isn't because he's, "like, really smart". Now that Russian collusion, after one year of intense study, has proven to be a total hoax on the American public, the Democrats and their lapdogs, the Fake News Mainstream Media, are taking out the old Ronald Reagan playbook and screaming mental stability and intelligence..... - Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 6, 2018 ....Actually, throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been mental stability and being, like, really smart. Crooked Hillary Clinton also played these cards very hard and, as everyone knows, went down in flames. I went from VERY successful businessman, to top T.V. Star..... - Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 6, 2018 ....to President of the United States (on my first try). I think that would qualify as not smart, but genius....and a very stable genius at that! - Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 6, 2018 Following The Donald's recent 280 character outburst aimed at North Korea and a certain "button", protesters demonstrated outside Twitters headquarters demanding to know why Trump was still able to unload his ramblings on the app. Taking to its official blog, Twitter released the following statement titled: World Leader on Twitter. Story continues North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un just stated that the Nuclear Button is on his desk at all times. Will someone from his depleted and food starved regime please inform him that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works! - Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 3, 2018 "Theres been a lot of discussion about political figures and world leaders on Twitter, and we want to share our stance. Twitter is here to serve and help advance the global, public conversation. Elected world leaders play a critical role in that conversation because of their outsized impact on our society. Blocking a world leader from Twitter or removing their controversial Tweets, would hide important information people should see and debate. We review Tweets by leaders within the political context that defines them, and enforce our rules accordingly." So, basically, he's Donald Trump and you can all just deal with it. Ok? You Might Also Like Willem Dafoe, who was nominated for a Golden Globe for his performance in The Florida Project, did not win the award for Best Supporting Actor Sunday night. He did, however, achieve top honors in the category of highly meme-able moments. During Seth Meyers opening monologue, the host performed a bit about Dafoe. For the male nominees in the room tonight, this is the first time in three months it wont be terrifying to hear your name read out loud. He then feigned a conversation between two people: Did you hear about Willem Dafoe? Oh, God, no! He was nominated. Dont do that! Dont do that.' Cut to Dafoe making a face that wordlessly communicated intense feelings of anxiety before erupting in laughter. Suffice it to say, the Internet loved his work. Many social media users are pairing the screen capture of Dafoe with captions about their various moods and moments when we let our faces do the talking. Whats more, this is not the first time the actors facial expression has catapulted him into viral meme status. See how the Internet did the most with Willem Dafoes audience reaction at the 2018 Golden Globe Awards below. When you're watching your favorite movie with someone you like and you're gauging their reaction to a really good scene. pic.twitter.com/VJr8EWOMUp Thr (@Desambaius) January 8, 2018 Willem Dafoe deserves a special Golden Globe just for this face. #GoldenGlobes pic.twitter.com/olpligQ0z1 Devan Coggan (@devancoggan) January 8, 2018 This shot of Willem Dafoe might be hard to top for reaction of the night. #GoldenGlobes pic.twitter.com/6DIZ1nyJRC Talk Film Society (@TalkFilmSoc) January 8, 2018 Yeah this is definitely about to be our next big meme #GoldenGlobes #WillemDafoe pic.twitter.com/agCCCDAk8K Will Mavity (@mavericksmovies) January 8, 2018 Willem Dafoes face is my spirit animal https://t.co/bIpeyNjrOX Ellie Schwartz (@EllieInTheStars) January 8, 2018 A young woman from Harrisburg, Penn., brought a family painting to Antiques Roadshow and left utterly shocked and much, much richer. The painting, which she received after her grandmother died, Always hung right above her bed, the owner told the evaluator. She continued, saying, Her dad, Im guessing, wouldve given it to her after she spent the summer at a dude ranch when she was 19, in, like, the 40s. She went on to say that, originally, she wasnt sure if the piece of art was a print or a painting. However, when she got it, there was a mosquito underneath the glass. I took it out to the front yard and I opened it up to get the mosquito out, so I could take it with me to college, and then it kind of scared me a little. I closed it back up immediately because it looked like it might be real. Thank god for that mosquito, said no one ever. Until now. The evaluator asked the woman if she had ever had the painting appraised before, to which the owner responded, In 1998, it was appraised as a print at $200 and, in 2004, it was appraised at $250. Fortunately for this young owner, it was a real painting by a French artist named Henry Francois Farny, who became friends with the Seneca and Sioux Indians while living in Pennsylvania in the late 1800s. The evaluator explained that Farny represented Native Americans in a very kind of peaceful, tranquil way, which was visible in the painting. And when it was revealed to the owner that her painting was worth $200,000 to $300,000, she, understandably, freaked out. In fact, the young woman was brought to tears and was at a loss for words. Antiques Roadshow airs Mondays at 8 p.m. on PBS. Watch this shocked The Wall contestant let $1.3 million slip through his fingers: Read more from Yahoo! Entertainment: Tell us what you think! Hit us up on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram, or leave your comments below. And check out our host, Kylie Mar, on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram. A young woman from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania brought a family painting to Antiques Roadshow, and left utterly shocked and much, much richer. The painting, which she received after her grandmother passed away, "Always hung right above her bed," the owner explained to the evaluator. She continued, saying, "Her dad, I'm guessing, would've given it to her after she spent the summer at a dude ranch when she was 19, in, like, the '40s." She went on to explain that, originally, she wasn't sure if the piece of art was a print or a painting. However, when she got it, there was a mosquito underneath the glass. "I took it out to the front yard and I opened it up to get the mosquito out, so I could take it with me to college, and then it kind of scared me a little. I closed it back up immediately because it looked like it might be real." Thank god for that mosquito, said no one ever. Until now. The evaluator asked the woman if she had ever had the painting appraised before, to which the owner responded, "In 1998, it was appraised as a print at $200 and, in 2004, it was appraised at $250." Fortunately for this young owner, it was a real painting by a French artist named Henry Francois Farny, who became friends with the Seneca and Sioux Indians while living in Pennsylvania in the late 1800s. The evaluator explained that Farny "represented Native Americans in a very kind of peaceful, tranquil way," which was visible in the painting. And when it was revealed to the owner that her painting was worth $200,000 to $300,000, she, understandably, freaked out. In fact, the young woman was brought to tears and a loss for words. Photo credit: Getty From Prima Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's wedding has been scheduled for May 19, 2018. We're really happy for them and everything, but the only thing we're a bit disappointed about is that it's on a Saturday meaning we won't get an extra day off work to celebrate the occasion. Not that we're being selfish about this or anything. We just can't help thinking back to when Prince William married Kate Middleton in April 2011, and the whole country was treated to an extra bank holiday so we could have street parties and revel in jubilation at their love and the excitement of their future lives together. (And the fact we weren't at work). Photo credit: Getty But it turns out the government isn't being completely miserable this time round we might be getting a little something extra to celebrate the nuptials of Meghan and Harry. According to the BBC, the Home Office is about to begin a four-week public consultation to decide if pubs across the UK will have their licensing hours extended during the weekend of the wedding, meaning they can stay open later and we can all drink for a bit longer. The weekend of May 19 also happens to be the day of the FA Cup Final and Scottish Cup Final, meaning pubs will probably see a load of extra earnings if they are allowed to stay open until 1am. Chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Assocation, Brigid Simmons, forecasts that the extended serving hours could yield as much as 10 million extra for pubs. 'Visitors see the Great British pub as a cultural icon, almost as much as the Royal Family,' she said. Photo credit: Alexi Lubomirski via Getty Images Speaking about the possibility of extending licensing hours, Home Secretary Amber Rudd said: 'We want everyone to be able to make the most of such an historic occasion. 'I hope that this relaxation of the licensing hours will allow people to extend their festivities and come together to mark what will be a very special moment for the country.' Oh it will, Amber. Really, it will. You Might Also Like The trial for a Connell woman charged with taking a 69-year-old grandmother from her home and killing her later has been pushed back into 2018. BLISS After just a few weeks on Earth, premature Bliss baby Uriah Goff died early Saturday morning. Uriah died at 1:59 a.m., mother Alysen Springer wrote in an email to the Times-News. Uriah was born at 27 weeks gestation 13 weeks early on Dec. 11. He weighed 1 pound 7 ounces, and measured 12.4 inches. He was receiving care at St. Lukes Childrens Hospital Newborn Intensive Care Unit in Boise. His original due date was March 6. Uriahs great-grandfather, Danny Reed of Hollister, originally set up an online GoFundMe page to help the family with medical expenses. Now, hes encouraging community members to use that page to help cover the cost of a funeral. Uriah underwent surgery Wednesday, where he had 25 percent of his intestines removed, Reed said. The boy had a follow-up surgery Friday to check on it. There wasnt anything they could do, he said. Lots of family members were in Boise on Friday and Saturday to lend their support, Reed said. The babys father, Tyler Goff, has two other children from a prior relationship, but Uriah is the first child for the Bliss couple. Springer and Goff have been friends since they were students at Filer High School. During her pregnancy, Springer went to Boise to see a specialist Dec. 8, expecting to formulate a medical plan to help with her sons growth. But she found out her body wasnt coping well with the pregnancy. A doctor told her: Youre not leaving the hospital being pregnant, Springer told the Times-News last week. Her liver was in distress. She had an emergency C-section. It was a roller coaster ride after that. Uriah wasnt taking to feedings at first and needed a blood transfusion. But he was making progress. Now, the family is looking for help to ensure their baby boy is remembered. In the first Hasamba book (a series of children's adventure novels written by Israeli author Yigal Mossinson), when the enemy was still the British occupier, Menashe the Yemenite poured whitewash into Officer Thompsons milk jug. The hated, despised police officer drank the whitewash, and we won. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter I read the book as a child, and I admired the bravery of Menashe the Yemenite. I wasnt the only oneso did every child in Israel. I read the book again years later, and the operation lost some of its fame. I realized that bravery is sometimes relative, that one sides bravery could be another sides humiliation. In other words, if the book had been marketed in London, Im not sure the act would have been received with much enthusiasm by British children as it was received by the Israeli children. Palestinians protest for Ahed Tamimi (Photo: AFP) Which brings us to Ahed Tamimi and the emotional response she evoked on both sides of the Israeli street. Tamimi is a 17-year-old girl from Nabi Salih, a small village in the Ramallah Governorate. Despite her young age, she has a lot of experience fighting the occupation. During clashes with IDF soldiers in the village, she has a habit of provoking soldiers, shouting at them, pelting them with stones and kicking them. Each of her activities has been documented and distributed on Arab television channels and social media. There is something else that sets her apart from other Palestinian children: Shes blonde. The blonde hair elevates her fame. Last week, the Military Advocate General filed an indictment against Tamimi, focusing on the December 15 incident. She was filmed slapping a company commander and kicking him and another soldier. The incitement mentions five other incidents. The Military Advocate General asked the court once again to extend her remand. Its standard procedure. The court agreed. In the Arab world, and particularly on the Palestinian street, Tamimis behavior was received with great enthusiasm. Glorification songs were composed for her, she received marriage proposals, and her fathers work was praised (https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5062490,00.html). Thats understandable. We would likely react the same way if we were Palestinians. We would admire Tamimi just like we admired the children of Hasamba and rejoice at the occupation armys downfall just like we rejoiced at Officer Thompsons downfall. But we arent Palestinians. I mean, most of us arent. The enthusiasm among some left-wing Israelis in light of the Nabi Salih girls actions was somewhat pathetic. One person compared her to Joan of Arc, the leader of the French revolt against the English during the Hundred Years' War, while someone else compared her to Hannah Szenestwo women who sacrificed their lives for their people. The comparison they made is not just an insult to the memory of Hannah Szenes, its an insult to history. On the other hand, there are Israelis who wondered why the Givati soldiers failed to shoot the girl, her cousin and her mother on the spot. Not because there was an operational justification to do so, not because the circumstances matched the rules of engagement, but simply to avenge their bruised pride. Thats a dangerous state of mind. Even Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who raises the death penalty banner, understands that. Tamimi can be a hero on social media, but in court she has to be judged for her actions (Photo: AFP) The Tamimi affair should have been concluded in a matter of days. Everything in it is documented; everything is clear. Arrest, indict, quickly complete the Military Court discussion and let the judges decide. The Military Advocate General understood that: An indictment was filed as soon as the police investigation was completed. But then then the defense counsel, Gaby Lasky, asked for a week to prepare and then for another week. She has a right to do so. On Monday, Tamimi returned to the court for another remand extension. The military courts in the territories have never been a model of justice. Often, too often, the evidence isnt evidence, the witnesses arent witnesses, the punishment isnt uniform. I once wrote, after attending several trials, that military justice is similar to justice like military music is similar to music. Ahed Tamimi isnt innocent as a lamb, but she presents quite a difficult challenge to the system. Her case isnt unusual, but the unusual attention it has received exposes the distortions of the occupation. There are separate legal systems in the territories: The Arabs are prosecuted in military courts, the Jews in civil courts. Hebron resident Yifat Alkobi, who kicked and cursed a police officer, andlike Tamimihas a long list of previous offenses, was sentenced to three months of community service. Tamimi will remain in custody until the end of legal proceedings, and will likely be sentenced to several months in prison. The discrimination is outrageous. Tamimi can be a hero on social media, but in court she has to be judged for her actions. Just like Elor Azaria. It is not uncommon for an opera to be based on a play that long preceded itbut it is certainly rare for an opera to be composed after that play had been made into a motion picture. Yet that is exactly the case of the opera A Midsummer Night's Dream, by British composer Benjamin Britten, which debuted in England in 196025 years after a star-studded Warner Brothers production hit the silver screen. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter This point is driven home at the very opening of the current Tel Aviv production of A Midsummer Night's Dream by the Israel Opera: the first thing the audience sees is a newsreel of the red-carpet Hollywood premiere of the movie screened on the stages curtain. As the opera unfolds, it is told as if it is being shot as a feature film, with (Fairy King) Oberon as director. This particular conceit is not uniformly maintained throughout the operas three acts, however, which is probably a good thing, as the machinations of the camera are more of a distraction than anything else. (Photo: Yossi Zwecker) The opera itself opens with the lilting chorus "Over hill, over dale," sung by Fairy Queen Tytania's attendants, originally scripted for boy sopranos, but sung here delightfully by girls of the Moran Childrens Choir. We next hear from Oberon, sung by Israeli countertenor Yaniv DOr , who alternates in the role with Alon Harari. it is a rare thing in opera for the lead male role to be scored for a countertenor, but it is altogether appropriate for a Fairy King; and DOrs voice, which occasionally flirts with falsetto, is pleasing in its range. (Photo: Yossi Zwecker) Hila Baggio, in the role of Tytania, is the one female lead who does not share her role with an alternate; once againas she recently showed in her performance of Musetta in La Bohemeshe sings brilliantly. In fact, this can be said of all the soloists who appeared in the premiere: Joshua Bloom in the role of Bottom, Jason Bridges in the role of Lysander, Ross Rambogin in the role of Demetrius, Graeme Danby in the role of Peter Quinceall four making their Israel Opera debutsas well as Israeli sopranos Yael Levita and Anat Czarny, in the roles of Helena and Hermia, respectively. (Photo: Yossi Zwecker) In addition to the singing, there are a few scenes of rather sensuous dancing, as well as lithe solo movement on the part of Yossi Zabari in the role of Puck. More controversial are the scenes that hint of a homosexual relationship between Oberon and the Indian boyactually a young man, as played by Micha Amos. For the first time in recent memory, the Israel Operas splendid resident orchestrathe Israel Symphony Orchestra Rishon LeZionwas not conducted at the premiere by the indomitable Daniel Oren. Instead, the baton was in the capable hands of Daniel Cohen, who will conduct through January 13; the final two performances of this runon January 14 and 17will see Ethan Schmeisser at the podium. (Photo: Yossi Zwecker) It must be said that the first half of the opera drags a little bit, and quite a few people left during the intermission. Those who remained for the second half had their patience rewarded: the pace picked up considerably, and the play Pyramus and Thisbe is absolutely hilarious. Especially noteworthy is the standout acting performance by tenor Eitan Drori as Francis Flute/Thisbe, who is scheduled to play the role in every performance. (Photo: Yossi Zwecker) The Hollywood theme is maintained in Pyramus and Thisbe as well, with Thisbe dressed like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz and Quince/Prologue strutting around in the guise of Groucho Marx. It is hard to see what is gained by this extra wrinkle, although the mimicry of Yair Polishook as Robin Starveling/Moonshine/Charlie Chaplin is particularly amusing. (Note: There is a lot of information in the Hebrew section of the printed program that is not in the English section, including a page outlining the Hollywood characters evoked in this production. It should be noted that the opening newsreel from the 1930s contains footage from this 2018 production that has been spliced in, while the photo and accompanying headline Movie Mogul Marries Millionairess in the final act purporting to be from a 1930s American newspaper are Israel Opera fabrications). Israel attacked Syrian territory three times early on Tuesday with jets and ground-to-ground missiles, Syria's army said in a statement carried by state television. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter The army said Israeli jets fired missiles at the Al-Qutaifa area near Damascus from inside Lebanese airspace at 2:40 am, and that Syrian air defenses hit one of the planes. Israel then fired ground-to-ground rockets from theGolan Heights, but the Syrian defenses brought the missiles down, the Syrian army said. File photo (Photo: EPA) It said Israeli jets fired a final barrage of four rockets from inside Israel, and that the Syrian air defenses brought down one, but that the others caused material damage. "At around 2:40 am, the Israeli air force fired a number of missiles over Lebanese territory at the Al-Qutayfah in the suburbs of the capital of Damascus. Our air defense systems responded and hit one of the planes," the Syrian army said. The statement added that "two ground-to-ground missiles fired once again from the occupied Golan territory at 3:04 am were intercepted by our air defense system. At 4:15 am, the enemy fired four missiles from Tiberias, which were also intercepted by our air defense system. Some property was damaged as a result of the interception of one of the missiles near one of the military posts." "This aggression," the Syrian army added, "is further proof that Israel supports the armed terror organizations in Syria, in their desperate attempt to raise their morale in light of their defeats in Harasta and Ghouta al-Sharqiya in the Damascus suburbs, alongside the Syrian army's crushing victories in Idlib. "The Syrian army's general headquarters is warning Israel once again against the serious ramifications of such aggressive acts and sees Israel as fully responsible for its moves. We are prepared to deal with these attacks and we will continue our war against the terror organizations. We will cut off Israel's arms of terror and restore security and stability on all Syrian lands." Previous strike in Syria Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said the missile strike targeted a military base near Kesweh, south of Damascus. "An arms depot was destroyed," he said, adding that it was not immediately clear whether the warehouse was operated by the Syrian army, or its allies Iran or Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. Ynet commentator Ron Ben-Yishai says the target of the strike was likely Hezbollah-bound precision-guided ground-to-ground missiles, which were being stored in one of the logistic compound's camps in Al-Qutaifa. It's possible there were launchers and anti-ship missiles there too. Hezbollah has been making an effort to obtain Russian-made precision-guided Yakhont missiles, both to prevent an attack from the sea and to threaten the gas drilling rigs. Yakhont missiles are also capable of targeting ships docking at the Haifa Port from Lebanon. According to earlier reports from rebel and opposition groups on social media, the target of the attack was arms depots. In early December, regime-affiliated media in Syria reported that the Israeli Air Force attacked a military scientific research center in the Jamraya area on the outskirts of Damascus. According to Al Mayadeen, which is affiliated with Hezbollah, Israel fired six missiles, with three of them intercepted by Syria's aerial defense systems. Several days earlier, Arab media reported Israel had attacked an Iranian military base in the al-Kiswah area, 15 kilometers southwest of Syrian capital Damascus. The Knesset approved the contentious supermarkets bill early Tuesday morning in second and third reading, making it into law. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter The legislation, which will give the interior minister authority to strike down municipal bylawsincluding those permitting some businesses to open on Shabbatwas passed with a narrow majority of 58 in favor and 57 opposed. Yisrael Beytenu's MKs voted against the legislation , with the exception of Minister Sofa Landver, who had to skip the vote because ministers who vote against the coalition face immediate dismissal. (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) MK Sharren Haskel from the Likud Party, who announced she would not support the legislation and risked being ousted from her party , was also not present at the plenum during the vote. Kulanu MK Tali Ploskov also missed the vote. Government members (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, who sponsored the bill, wrote on Twitter on Tuesday that "The approval of the Supermarkets Law this morning is not a 'Haredi victory.' It is the protection of the status quo and the victory of the silent majority in the State of Israel that wishes to safeguard the country's Jewish character and to rest on the day of rest." Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Meretz leader Zehava Galon petitioned the High Court of Justice against the Supermarkets Law, claiming that "the law is unconstitutional as it disproportionally hurts the Israeli citizens' basic rights for freedom, freedom of religion and freedom from religion by allowing a religious minister to force his own lifestyle on the general public." Galon asked the High Court to issue an injunction to temporarily stop the law from coming into effect until the court rules on the petition. (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Defense Minister and Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Lieberman took to Twitter after the law's passing, writing: "Religious coercion has no place in Judaism or in Jewish tradition. This type of law distances, rather than bring closer, people to Judaism." The coalition faced an embarrassment overnight after the votes of Construction Minister Yoav Galant and Deputy Defense Minister Eli Ben-Dahan against a reservation raised by Zionist Union MK Itzik Shmuli did not register, allowing it to pass. Shmuli's reservation excluded stores that sell kitchenware from the Supermarkets Law. Education Minister Bennett and Public Security Minister Erdan during the late night vote (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Coalition chairman MK David Amsalem rushed to convene the Knessets Internal Affairs and Environment Committee to cancel the reservation. As a result, the vote had to be stopped, with the Knesset reconvening Tuesday morning. Coalition chairman David Amsalem and Likud MK Oren Hazan (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Meanwhile, United Torah Judaism MK Yisrael Eichler's voting terminal did not work, leading Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein to determine that as long as Eichler remained in his seat, he was voting with the coalition, even though the screens in the Knesset showed a 57-57 tie in most votes. Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Ahead of the vote, Amsalem turned to his partners in the coalition and reminded them that the majority's position was at risk, asking them to follow his instructions on every reservation raised. Coalition members during the vote (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Opposition members went up to the podium one after the other to argue against the law, with MK Revital Swid (Zionist Union) surprising MK Eichlerwho was presiding over the proceedingstelling him the opposition finished raising its reservations while the plenum was empty of coalition members. The Yesh Atid Party (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked then took the podium and responded to the reservations on behalf of the government for some 40 minutes, going as far as to read out parts of Israel's Declaration of Independence that deal with Israel's identity as a Jewish state. Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked (Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch) Several municipalities rushed to enact bylaws before the passing of the Supermarkets Law in an effort to bypass it, including Rishon LeZion, Givatayim and Modi'in. The 25-year-old nephew of French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe was attacked last Wednesday while hanging out with friends in the southern Israeli city of Eilat. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter A police cruiser driving near the boardwalk noticed three young French tourists lying on the ground, suffering from stab wounds in their upper bodies. Two sustained light wounds while the third's injuries were slightly more serious. French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe (Photo: AFP) An Eilat police spokespman said the tourists had been accosted by a group of men who hit and stabbed them before fleeing the site. The attackers are believed to be Israeli. The victims were immediately rushed to the Yoseftal Medical Center in the city. Two of them were released the next morning while the third remained at the hospital. The police launched an investigation into the incident. So far, no suspects have been arrested. The evidence provided by the victims is all the police have for now. Due to the family connection of one of the tourists, the French Consul in Eilat was called on to assist the victims. They returned home on Friday. The French Embassy issued no comment. Syria's army said in a statement carried by state media that Israel attacked Syrian territory with jets and ground-to-ground missiles early on Tuesday, causing damage. The army said its air defenses had hit an Israeli aircraft and had intercepted some rockets fired from Israeli territory. According to earlier reports from rebel and opposition groups, the target of the attack was arms depots. Chairwoman of the Meretz Party Zehava Gal-On petitioned the Supreme Court for an injunction against implementing the just-passed Supermarkets Law. In the petition, Gal-On asserts that that "The law disproportionately infringes on the basic rights of Israeli citizens to liberty, freedom of, and from, religion and allows for a religious minister to force his views on the nation as a whole." Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon surprised fellow government ministers on Sunday by proposing to annex the main Israeli settlement blocs in the West Bank in light of the freeze in the peace process. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter "I think it's time to annex the settlement blocs," Kahlon said during the weekly government meeting. Education Minister Naftali Bennett of the pro-settlement Bayit Yehudi party, who wasn't sure whether Kahlon was being serious or not, said in response: "Friends, I suggest we vote on Kahlon's proposal." Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon during a government meeting (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg) The government did not, however, discuss Kahlon's proposal as it was not on the meeting's agenda. The finance minister apparently views the move as a way to push for the resumption of peace talks by presenting a moderate position compared to a resolution recently adopted by the Likud Central Committee's resolution urging the government to fully annex the West Bank and the Jordan Valley. While the resolution is symbolic and non-binding, it still indicates the general mood in the movement. While Kahlon seeks to apply Israeli law to settlement blocs, he stressed he is not entirely against conceding land as part of a peace agreement. He believes annexing the settlement blocs will send out a message to the Palestinians that Israel is willing to negotiate for the rest of the West Bankmeaning, the possibility of evacuating isolated settlements. Kahlon's office confirmed the report. The hardships caused by the civil war in Yemen have affected the small Jewish community remaining in the country as well. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter Most Yemenite Jews fled the country after the establishment of the State of Israel, but reports indicate 67 Jews remain in the war-torn country, including 17 families. The Jews live in an enclosed compound in the capital Sana'a, under the protection of the Yemenite army. They recently received humanitarian aid by a local organization funded by a British charity. The organization says that the community received aid packages at least five times. In the past, the charity has assisted the Jewish community including when they faced floods in the Amran and Al Hudaydah regions in 2016. The civil war in Yemen began in 2014 when Shiite-affiliated Houthi rebels took over Sana'a. The situation has deteriorated in recent months. According to international aid organizations, the severe limitations on aid delivery are leading the poor country towards a catastrophic famine. The country's woes are compounded by the recent land-crossings and seaports closures imposed by Saudi Arabia after missiles were fired from Yemen at their country. Facing international pressure, the Saudis agreed to lift the sea and land blockade to allow delivery of humanitarian aid. Some 8.4 million Yemenis are in danger of starvation and more than a million have contracted cholera. The United Nations warns that the humanitarian crisis in Yemen is the most severe in the world. At least 10,000 citizens have been killed in the war. A 43-year-old man was arrested Tuesday morning on suspicion of vandalizing a sculpture of former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin , who was murdered by a Jewish assassin 22 years ago. Police say the suspect may have been intoxicated. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter A swastika and the words "Danke (thank you in German) 6,000,000" were scrawled on the sculpture at Tel Aviv's Rabin Square. The vandalized sculpture (Photo: Israel Police) Police received a report about a suspicious man spotted nearby with a knife in his hand, apparently under the influence of alcohol. Police forces dispatched to the scene found two knives, two markers and a book in his possession. The suspect was arrested and taken in for questioning. TWIN FALLS Detectives arrested a 47-year-old man on Monday, in connection with several recent burglaries that occurred in the Twin Falls area. Efrain M. Diaz of San Antonio, Texas, was arrested in the 300 block of Washington Street without incident. The Twin Falls Police Department encourages any victims of burglaries within the last month, who have not completed a police report, to do so as soon as possible. The Defense Ministry on Tuesday revealed how much money the Palestinian Authority pays terrorists serving prison sentences in Israel. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter In 2017, the Palestinian Authority paid prisoners and freed prisoners over NIS 550 million, while families of killed or wounded terrorists received some NIS 687 million. This constituted some seven percent of the PA's overall budget. According to the data from the PA, a terrorist sentenced to three to five years in prison gets NIS 2,000 a month, while one sentenced to 20-35 years will get NIS 10,000 a month for the rest of his life. A married terrorist gets an additional NIS 300 a month, and if he has children he gets an additional NIS 50 per child. Terrorists who are Jerusalem residents get an additional NIS 300, while terrorists with Israeli citizenship get an additional NIS 500 a month. For example, a terrorist who is an Israeli citizen, married with three children, and serving a life sentence, will receive NIS 10,950 ($3,172.65) every month. Meanwhile, the average wage in the West Bank is just a little over NIS 2,000 a month. Terrorists released in the Shalit deal (Photo: AP) The data was included in a memorandum attached to the Law to Prevent Payments to Terrorists and Their Families by the Palestinian Authority According to the memorandum, at the end of every year the defense minister would present a report concluding the annual payments made by the PA to terrorists to the Security Cabinet for approval. In accordance with that report, the sum will be deducted from the tax money Israel collects on behalf of the PA. "The Palestinian Authority pays over NIS 1 billion a year to terrorists and their families and thus encourages and perpetuates terrorism," Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said. "The moment the payments and their amounts are set in accordance with the gravity of the offense and the length of the prison sentence, this constitutes funding of terror attacks against Israeli citizens. There's nothing that illustrates the PA's support of terrorism more. It is our duty to put an end to it," he concluded. ANKARA - Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Tuesday the Syrian army was striking moderate opposition forces in Idlib province and this was undermining efforts to reach a political solution to the war in Syria. Turkey has been fiercely opposed to Syrian President Bashar Assad during his country's six-year-old civil war but has recently been working with his allies Russia and Iran for a political resolution to the conflict. The three countries agreed last year to establish a "de-escalation zone" in the opposition-held Idlib province and surrounding region, which borders Turkey, but Syrian forces have since launched an offensive in the area. "Regime forces are hitting the moderate opposition with the excuse that they are fighting Nusra (Islamist militants). This attitude scuppers the political solution process," state-run Anadolu news agency quoted Cavusoglu as telling reporters. "The groups who will come together in Sochi should not do this," he said, referring to the Russian city where a Syrian congress of national dialogue is set to be held at the end of this month. During 2017, a record 3.6 million tourists visited Israel, a 25% increase from 2016 according to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Likewise, 3.8 million (unique) Israelis travelled abroad in 7.6 million exits this past year. BERLIN - Prosecutors in Germany have formally charged a 37-year-old Syrian man on allegations of promoting the Islamic State group, obtaining bomb-making instructions and other crimes. The man, who wasn't identified, is alleged to have posted videos on social media in 2016 urging support and soliciting new recruits for ISIS. In a statement Tuesday, Frankfurt prosecutors said police also found manuals for making rifle silencers, explosives and detonators at the man's home and office at the Technical University of Darmstadt. Prosecutor Alexander Badle said the man later tried to recruit a fellow inmate to carry out a bomb attack, claiming funds would be provided from the Gulf state of Qatar. After learning the inmate was a Christian, the suspect is alleged to have threatened to kill him if he spoke to police. Senior Hamas official Imad al-Alami was shot to head and seriously injured in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter The circumstances behind the injury are still unclear. It is possible he tried to take his own life after being diagnosed with cancer a year ago, or that he was hurt in an assassination attempt. A third option is that his handgun accidentally discharged, hitting him. Imad al-Alami A Gaza source said al-Alami was likely dead, even though an official announcement has not yet been made. Al-Alami immigrated to the Gaza Strip from Syria after the civil war broke out. In Syria, he was responsible for organizing operations and instructing Hamas's military wing in the West Bank. During Operation Protective Edge in 2014, in an incident covered up by Hamas, unknown perpetrators broke al-Alami's legs, apparently by throwing him from a high place. He was apparently smuggled to Egypt, where he received treatment. Some believe the assault was the result of a feud al-Alami had with senior Hamas official Fathi Hamad. SEOUL - North and South Korea agreed to hold military talks, a joint statement said after the two Koreas engaged in formal dialogue on Tuesday for the first time in more than two years. North Korea also decided to send a high-ranking delegation and a cheering squad to the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics in South Korea next month, but the head of its delegation in the talks on Tuesday expressed negative sentiment over the mention of denuclearisation during Tuesday's discussions, the South Korean government said in a statement. Ibrahim Wadi and Razek Abu Rida were indicted Tuesday by the Samaria Military Court for their involvement in an attack on a group of hikers near the village of Qusra about two months ago. The prosecution asked the court to keep the two men in custody until the completion of legal proceedings. RIYADH, Saudi Arabia Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak met with Saudi King Salman in a visit to the kingdom on Tuesday that highlights their close and at times controversial ties. Najib, who faces elections later this year, has clung to power despite a corruption scandal that involved nearly $700 million. Malaysia's attorney general cleared Najib of wrongdoing, saying the millions transferred to his personal bank account were a donation from the Saudi royal family and that most of it was returned. Meanwhile, the state investment fund he established and once ran, 1MDB, is under investigation in the US and several other countries amid allegations of a global money-laundering scheme and embezzlement. The US Justice Department says people close to Najib stole billions of dollars, and the US government is working to seize $1.7 billion it says were taken from the fund to buy assets in the US. Syria warned the UN Tuesday that Israels aggressive attitude will lead to a regional conflagration and complicate matters in the Middle East by providing support for terror and perpetuating the occupation of Arab lands. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter President Bashar al-Assads regime sent the warning to the UN in a letter after his army issued a statement that Israel attacked Syrian territory three times early on Tuesday with jets and ground-to-ground missiles. Israels aggressive attitude will lead to a regional conflagration and further exacerbate the situation. This is in order to support terror and perpetuate the occupation of Arab lands, read the letter that was delivered to the UN secretary-general and the chairman of the Security Council. President Bashar al-Assad (Photo: AP) Echoing the claims that were made on state television, the missive accused Israel of launching Tuesdays strikes on Syrian turf. The repeated Israeli strikes on Syria will not succeed in protecting terror organizations of Israels that are used as its agents, with the heads being ISIS and the Al-Nusra Front, the letter continued. Moreover, it will not succeed in diverting the Syrian army from making achievements in the struggle against terror across the country, and recently in the Idlib and Quneitra localities, the ministry stated. The Syrian government will repeat its warning to Israel, the letter added, of the serious consequences of striking Syria and the continued support to armed terror movements, and it holds it responsible. The Security Council must condemn the Israeli strikes and take steps to stop its aggression. F-16 jet (Photo: EPA) The Syrian army said earlier that Israeli jets fired missiles at the Al-Qutaifa area near Damascus from inside Lebanese airspace at 2:40 am, and that Syrian air defenses hit one of the planes. After alleging that Israel then fired ground-to-ground rockets from the Golan Heights, the Syrian army claimed that its defenses had brought the missiles down. "At around 2:40 am, the Israeli air force fired a number of missiles over Lebanese territory at the Al-Qutayfah in the suburbs of the capital of Damascus. Our air defense systems responded and hit one of the planes," the Syrian army said. Confrontations broke out at south Tel Aviv protest against deporting foreign nationals from Eritrea and Sudan. Some 200 people protesting against deportation clashed with 50 "South Tel Aviv Liberation Front" activists who support it. BOISE Gov. C.L. Butch Otter delivered his 12th and final State of the State and Budget Address Monday, reflecting on his years in office while laying out highlights of his proposed budget for fiscal year 2019. The governors hour-long speech focused primarily on his top priority for the year education while also highlighting tax relief and the states improving relationship with the federal government under the Trump administration. Under Otters proposed budget, the state would spend 6.6 percent more than it did in fiscal year 2018, starting the year with a balance of $155.9 million and and ending with $70.2 million. Education The budget proposes $123.3 million in funding for enhancing K-through-Career initiatives, including $41.6 million for the fourth year of the five-year career ladder plan and funding to improve professional development, college and career counseling, classroom technology and literacy for elementary students. Throughout his speech, Otter repeatedly referred to the states moonshot goal of having 60 percent of young adults earn a postsecondary academic degree or professional-technical credential. He told reporters in a post-speech press conference that he believes the creation of a chief education officer to streamline functions across Idahos public university system will help the state reach this goal, by freeing up money that could otherwise be put toward making college more affordable. The position, recommended by the governors higher education task force, is projected to cost the state $769,500, including a salary of about $200,000 a year. Theres no doubt these changes will upend the status quo, Otter said in his address. They will mean less working from isolated silos and more rowing in the same direction. Taxes Otters proposed plan includes $115 million in tax relief over three years through reducing the unemployment insurance tax. As I said at the end of the 2017 legislative session, unemployment tax relief is job one for 2018, Otter said. The budget also includes $97.7 million in relief by substantially conforming to tax changes at the federal level. The proposal would drop income tax rates by 0.45 percent in all brackets for both individuals and businesses and create a $85 nonrefundable Idaho dependent tax credit. When asked by reporters what he would do if a bill cutting the states grocery tax were to come across his desk again a situation that ended in a veto and subsequent legal challenge at the end of last years session Otter expressed support for keeping a tax on groceries. If you enjoy a government service and that government service is driving up and down the highway, or police protectionI dont care what it is, you should pay some tax, he said. Im not going to try to tell everybody how much they should pay. But you should pay a tax. And in many cases, thats the only tax they pay. Relationship with the federal government This year brought a renaissance of responsiveness and regulatory relief from our national government, Otter told legislators. It has been especially refreshing to see the Trump administrations willingness to seek our input to really listen and embrace the value of state perspectives on issues that affect us most directly. He cited as one example the Good Neighbor Authority, a collaboration between the Forest Service and the state that allows logging on federal lands. The partnership has resulted in the Department of Lands selling and overseeing the harvest of 6 million board feet of timber from fire salvage and forest thinning projects over the past year, Otter said, bringing in upwards of $1.8 million in revenue. Another example of the states improving relationship with the feds, according to the governor, are rangeland fire protection associations: groups of local ranchers professionally trained, with the help of federal agencies, to fight wildfires. Of course, there are still challenges, Otter said. Obstructionists in Congress and the undue influence of a carryover proscribe-and-punish mentality in some federal agencies are still slowing progress. But were having fewer mother may I moments with our federal partners. Theres no doubt these changes will upend the status quo. They will mean less working from isolated silos and more rowing in the same direction. Gov. C.L. Butch Otter CAIRO Egypt's president and his Eritrean counterpart met in Cairo on Monday amid heightened tensions with Sudan and Ethiopia over border disputes and the construction of a massive upstream Nile dam. Egypt fears the soon-to-be completed dam in Ethiopia could cut into its share of the river, which provides nearly all its freshwater. Eritrea and Ethiopia have long been bitter rivals and went to war in the late 1990s. Ethiopia denies it is cutting into Egypt's share of the Nile, and has accused Eritrea of training rebels to carry out sabotage attacks on the dam. Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi hosted Isaias Afwerki at the presidential palace. "The two sides have agreed on continuing intensive cooperation in all issues related to the current situation to support the security and stability in the region," Egyptian presidency spokesman Bassam Radi said, referring to the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea strait of Bab al-Mandab as two major areas for ensuring stability. DUBAI Yemen's armed Houthi movement threatened to block the strategic Red Sea shipping lane if the Saudi-led coalition it is fighting keeps pushing towards the port of Hodeidah it controls, the Houthi-run SABA news agency reported. Yemen lies beside the southern mouth of the Red Sea, one of the most important trade routes in the world for oil tankers, which pass near Yemen's shores while heading from the Middle East through the Suez Canal to Europe. While SABA gave no details on how Houthis could carry out any such move, the Bab al-Mandab strait, where the Red Sea meets the Gulf of Aden in the Arabian Sea, is only 20 km (12 mile) wide, making hundreds of ships potentially an easy target. MOSCOW The Pentagon has denied any involvement in a recent series of drone attacks on Russian bases in Syria after Russia's Defense Ministry hinted that the US military may have aided the attackers. Marine Maj. Adrian Rankine-Galloway, a Pentagon spokesman, said Tuesday that "any suggestion that US or coalition forces played a role in an attack on a Russian base is without any basis in fact and is utterly irresponsible." Russia's Defense Ministry earlier said the attacks would have required assistance from a country possessing satellite navigation technology. It noted a "strange coincidence" of a US military intelligence plane flying over the Mediterranean near the two bases at the moment of the attack. The ministry said its forces repelled a series of drone attacks Saturday on the Hemeimeem air base and a naval facility in Tartus. It said that out of the 13 drones involved, seven were shot down and six were forced to land without inflicting any damage. TUNIS Tunisian police on Tuesday fired tear gas on protestors in the capital who were storming a Carrefour supermarket in an anti-government protest, a witness said. Police also clashed with protestors in two districts in Tunis as demonstrations against recent austerity measures continued, residents said. Hamas's military wing released a statement following the shooting attack that claimed the life of Havat Gilad resident and father of six Raziel Shevah, saying, "The Nablus attack is the first practical response with fire to remind the enemy's leaders that what you feared has now come. The West Bank will remain a knife in your body." Hamas itself said, "We welcome this heroic action that came as a result of Israel's crimes against our people in the West Bank, Jerusalem and the al-Aqsa Mosque. The Israeli government is responsible for the ramifications of its extremist racist policy." Brawls broke out on the streets of south Tel Aviv Tuesday evening as some two hundred social activists opposed to Israels deportation of Eritreans and Sudanese migrants packed the streets of the city's south, where they clashed with around 50 Israelis supporting the governmental measures. Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter Israel wants deportation, Deportation or prison, and Neither a refugee or a victim, only an invader and infiltrator, chanted the crowds in support of what they consider long overdue action by the government to finally take the matter in hand. Police blocked off traffic from the roads where the demonstrations were staged. (Photo: Motti Kimchi) Since the governments plan to remove the migrants from the country went into effect, south Tel Aviv became the epicenter of for and against protesters, with placards giving voice to the two sides being hung around the area over the last few days. With plans for supporters and opponents preparing to meet on the streets and vocalize their positions, police were instructed to secure the area amid fears that violence could erupt. Yigal Rambam, who led the protest against deportations said that members of the front for the liberation of south Tel Aviv were not wanted in the area. Your place is not here. We are pluralists, 35,000 people from Africa wont bother you. In Israel black people have never been liked, he said before accusing them of fighting against weak people without a status. Its shameful. The social activists were also joined by members of the migrant community themselves. Johnny from Eritrea said he was unable to return to his country, adding that he would seek asylum elsewhere given the option. Sign reads 'The rehabilitation of south Tel Aviv begins with deportation of infiltrators' (Photo: Motti Kimchi) I cant go to my country. If I could go to Sweden I would. I am here because I have no choice. Let me be in Israel because I cant be anywhere else, he pleaded. My dream is to not live here and I want to go back to my country, but I cant. There is a dictator in Eritrea and if I had the option I would immediately leave, he continued. We managed to have a revolution in Eritrea for nine years but we need more time. Johnnys assertions, however, were met with anger from of the protesters, who accused him of being a coward by not fighting for his country and leaving his family behind. (Photo: Motti Kimchi) Sheffi Paz, who was leading the front for the liberation of south Tel Aviv protest, said that her movement had ceased long ago to stage protests in the street, and had instead decided to dedicate its efforts toward rehabilitating the neighborhoods. We fought for them to deport the infiltrators and the moment that the plan began we needed to give the authorities time, Paz explained. We need now to invest the majority of our time and resources in rehabilitating the neighborhoods and in the war against the people who support asylum seekers in Tel Aviv who will try and prevent the deportations in any way they can. With the arrival of some 27,000 Eritreans and 7,700 Sudanesewho flocked to Israel through its once porous southern bordersouth Tel Aviv underwent one of the most conspicuous demographic makeovers, as migrants flocked to the area, raising concern among many of the residents. (Photo: Motti Kimchi) Since the mass arrival of the migrants, Israel constructed a huge barrier that stemmed the tide of illegal immigrants, granting the government the respite it sought to deal with the influx. Israel said last Wednesday it would pay thousands of African migrants living illegally in the country to leave, threatening them with jail if they are caught after the end of March. The vast majority come from Eritrea and Sudan and many say they fled war and persecution as well as economic hardship. Israel treats them mostly as economic migrants. The plan offers African migrants a $3,500 payment from the Israeli government and a free air ticket to return home or go to "third countries", which rights groups identified as Rwanda and Uganda. The UN urged Israel not to proceed with the plan, saying that it would offer help in resettling the migrants elsewhere. The year 2018 will never be complete without new makers and shapers of government policies. Let it be said that Ghana contains some men and women of valour whose words, actions and even statements live on to make national headlines.In this article, we put together a list of 7 most powerful men in Ghana at the moment. Click here for the latest stories in Ghana 1. Nana Akufo-Addo 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 He is the first gentleman of the land which means that he commands that armed forces of Ghana as commander-in-chief. With such administrative and military power, it is clear to see that Nana Addo remains the most powerful man in Ghana today. His power as a president can be most felt especially when he is documented to be the only politician to have ousted a sitting president in an election. 2. Kennedy Agyapong 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 The maverick politician stands out as one of the untouchable personalities in Ghana. This is a man who criticises members of his own political party. With a large following and deep source of wealth, Kennedy Agyapong has the power to either woo party supporters and undecided voters for the party during an election or disband all of them. His unquenchable influence both in government and the NPP leaves him as one of the most powerful men in Ghanaian politics. 3. Chief Imam 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 The 93-year-old Muslim scholar is the pillar on which Ghanaian Islamic Religion operates. Under his tenure, Osman Nuhu Sharubutu has been able to quell tribal and religious clashes in Ghana, especially among Christians and Muslims. His leadership continues to foster peace and stability within the Islamic community. He is seen as a force of power in Ghana's religious circles and his words are so powerful that even presidents have no choice than to take heed of them. 4. Archbishop Duncan Williams 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 The head of Charismatic Churches in Ghana is respected as the father of prayers in Ghana. Duncan Williams has prayed for every president in the 4th Republic. He has also led the country through national prayers on several occasions. This is a powerful Christian leader who was called to preach at the inauguration ceremony of US president, Donald Trump. He owns a sense of spiritual respect and most Ghanaians know that. 5. Shatta Wale 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 He is a very controversial figure but the entertainer has been able to cause national stirs time and time again. He reigns of his power was most felt during his invitation to the Flagstaff House by the president who named him king of Dancehall music. Shatta Wale is highly controversial but his music world has been able to attract the interest of millions of Ghanaians an Africans across the world. His words and actions are so powerful now. 6. John Mahama 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 He may have lost an election but John Mahama still remains a powerful political figure in Ghana. There are calls for him to contest the 2020 general elections and should he win, he would find himself running the affairs of the country all over again. Mahama has the power to make the news and spin national attention. As it stands now, he remains Nana Addo's fiercest political contender. 7. Gabby Otchere Darko 7 powerful men in Ghana you should look out for in 2018 He might be a legal practitioner but Gabby's influence in politics and national discourse is unquenchable. This is a man who stems public debate at the stroke of his pen or utterances. he has the capacity to stem controversial debates. YEN.com.gh is building a platform where Ghanaians can share local news and own experiences with each other. Witnessing an incident? Want to tell about a local problem? Know someone who is extremely talented and needs recognition? Your stories and photos are always welcome. Message us on now. Source: YEN.com.gh TWIN FALLS The sister of a fugitive killed by Boise police last week says his death was a suicide. Formerly of Twin Falls, Robert Cassidy Hansen, 27, died Thursday evening when police were forced to fire their weapons during a traffic stop, Boise Police said in a statement. Hansen was pronounced dead at the scene. If he had a choice and obviously he did that was the way he wanted to go, his sister, Cori Hansen of Twin Falls, said Monday. Cassidy Hansen was riding in the back seat of a Cadillac driven by his girlfriend on 27th Street near Fairview Avenue in Boise when she was stopped by police for a canceled registration, his sister said. Police say he pulled out a gun and pointed it at the officers, himself and the driver, who police have not named. Officers shut down traffic and ordered him to drop the gun. Fearing for the drivers safety, officers A. Crist and K. Zubizarreta, both 10-year veterans of the Boise Police Department, each fired one shot, according to police. This was understandably a very traumatic situation for the female driver, Boise Police Deputy Chief Eugene Smith said in a statement. We are thankful she is now safe and was not hurt. Idaho State Police are leading the Ada County Critical Incident Task Force in an investigation of the shooting. Cassidy Hansen was in and out of jail or on the run most of his adult life. At 20, he was arrested for aggravated driving under the influence, leaving the scene of an injury accident and domestic battery. He was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison. He got married soon after the hit-and-run accident in which 20-year-old Donovan Jones of Twin Falls was severely injured, his sister said. He has a 7-year-old daughter from the marriage. He was released from prison on an early parole when his mother, Bobett Hansen, was diagnosed with cancer. His mothers death was very hard for him, Cori Hansen said. He left Twin Falls after breaking parole, and was a fugitive at the time of his death, Twin Falls County Prosecuting Attorney Grant Loebs said. Cori Hansen said she hadnt seen her brother in the past few months. He had kept his distance because she works in a domestic shelter and is studying criminal justice, and he didnt want to jeopardize her future. Cassidy didnt want to drag me down with him, Cori Hansen said. She said she had a dream he was killed by police two days before he died. A friend sent her a link to a breaking-news story about Thursdays shooting. She said, I think this is your brother, Cori Hansen said. I called the police, the hospital and coroner. The coroner told me it was Cassidy. It was suicide by cop, she said. People need to know he had no intention of hurting his girlfriend. TWIN FALLS The intersection of Main Avenue and Hansen Street is quickly becoming the heart of downtown. To the east, a new City Hall serves as a place where much of the publics business is conducted. To the north, a vacant lot now under construction will soon become a spot where adults and children come to socialize and play. Whats next? Continuing in his vision to see a downtown where people live, work and play, Urban Renewal Agency Executive Director Nathan Murray wants to bring housing to the western corner. On Monday, the agency voted to buy the historic building thats been home to the Idaho Youth Ranch since 1989. I think this is critical property and that a project from Urban Renewal related to that property is a great idea, URA board member Perri Gardner said. The URA will pay $470,000 for the building, then lease it to the Idaho Youth Ranch for one month. The Idaho Youth Ranch, in search of a larger space, has intended to sell the building for some time. But its not ready to announce its plans following the sale just yet. Twin Falls is a market that we expect to be in in the future, said Jeff Myers, the corporate vice president of social enterprise. The thrift store will pay $2,400 for rent while it prepares to vacate the property. According to the citys Historic Preservation Commission, the building was constructed in 1905 as Allen Mercantile Co. and later renamed the Idaho Department Store. Its top floor served as the county courthouse from 1907 to 1910. Its a unique building in terms of its history, Murray said. Wed like to see it put to a higher and better use to that part of downtown. The URA vote passed unanimously, with Rudy Ashenbrener abstaining. Brad Wills had already resigned from the board. Board members also discussed what would be done with the building. The initial plan is to remove the metal facade to reveal the original brick and discover what the URA or future property owner has to work with. If the building isnt worth saving, Murray said, it may need to be demolished to make way for housing or another project. The URA will request proposals from developers on their plans for the property. The board made no decision as to whether it would limit those proposals to just housing. Gardner said she would be open to retail or other uses. Also at the meeting, the URA turned its attention across the street to the downtown commons plaza. The contractor, Starr Corp., submitted a guaranteed maximum price of $2.4 million for the project, including work thats already been completed on Hansen Street. The URA approved the maximum price, with hopes that the downtown plaza would be completed before the Fourth of July. The URAs reconstruction of five blocks of Main Avenue, meanwhile, is now being called substantially complete. And so far, its resulted in several private investments. Next to the Idaho Youth Ranch building, Extreme Staffing is remodeling the former Toy Orphanage and Things. Adjacent to the downtown plaza, the Gates building will soon undergo renovations to eventually bring a restaurant or retailer with an entrance onto the plaza. The URA expects to receive $2.4 million in property tax revenue this year, plus another $2.6 million from the sale and leftover lease money from the C3/CustomerContactChannels building. TWIN FALLS Tim Browne has been working for the same company for 21 years. But when he took over several years ago, he had some tough decisions to make. For one, he and CEO Leo Blanco didnt like some of the approaches they saw to safety in the workplace at Industrial Electric Motor Service Inc. They wanted to hold themselves and their employees to a higher standard of service. And they wanted to invest more in a company that does $3 million a year in services with only 16 people. During the transition, the longtime family-owned business had tremendous turnover, and it now employs mostly millennials. But Browne believes the changes will help keep the business up to the standards that will allow it to grow. I will admit, we lost a lot of older employees during that transition, said Browne, whos now the president of the company. The change was the hardest thing Ive ever done in my life. In December, the company moved to 3779 North, 3400 East in Kimberly, essentially tripling the size of its shop, office and storage. It was a nearly $1 million investment. Theyve taken it to the next level, said Ron Rasmussen, senior business banking officer at First Federal. Its great for the business. Its great for the economy. He believes the previous owner, Matt Hitchcock, had the foresight to bring in somebody with a vision to grow the business. But though he takes credit for the changes, Browne said he just wanted to do what was right. Im not a visionary, he said. Im just an average guy who wanted something better for everybody. Surviving the transition Browne, 38, got full ownership in August 2016 but hes been running the day-to-day operations of the company for about five years. When the ownership transition began, he felt that some of the employees had a negative view of the electric motor service industry and the future of the company. Electric motors convert about 70 percent of Idahos electricity into mechanical work, Browne said. A single company such as Jerome Cheese can have hundreds of motors inside. And throughout the state, hundreds of Industrial Electric Motor Services customers use electric motors for agricultural pumps, industrial equipment, dairies, feed lots and more. When Browne and Blanco, 32, took over the business, one of the first steps they made was to improve safety in the shop. It used to be kind of open-preference on if you wanted to wear your safety glasses, Blanco said. Now when you walk through that door, its been standardized. They implemented new measures to require personal protective equipment, and they trained employees on safely using equipment. The education didnt stop there the company is third-party accredited through the Electrical Apparatus Service Association and Browne works to make sure employees are qualified and certified technicians. In order to continue their job, they have to continue their education as well, Browne said. We wanted to take our standards more seriously. They also took a long look at the companys finances, having discovered the company had lost a quarter of a million dollars in a year just by not raising prices. Today, of the 16 employees, only three are older than Browne. Mike Brown, 52, is one of the supervisors and a master technician and hes one of the few who stayed through the transition. Brown said he likes how the work atmosphere is more structured than before. However, hes learned to exercise patience with the younger employees and to be more accepting of how they do things. If I jump in and do it, then they dont really learn, Brown said. An atmosphere of caring Industrial Electric Motor Service is a service company, not a repair shop, Browne said. It offers more precision-type repairs. We have high standards, qualities of equipment, he said. We can dial in a motor tighter than a factory can. In this specialized line of work, a mistake could cost you thousands of dollars. Khanty Bobby Xayaphone, a balancing technician at Industrial Electric Motor Service, recalled how once, he accidentally scratched some copper linings on a motor he was working on. He knew he had to fess up to the mistake, but he was worried about repercussions. Usually every boss would kind of throw the hammer at you, he said. But instead, Xayaphones supervisor told him it wasnt a big deal. The 30-year-old technician has been in the industry for 10 years and came to Twin Falls in 2015. He was pleasantly surprised at the response. Here, its family, Xayaphone said. Everybodys there for each other. Its this approach to business that Browne brought when he and Blanco took over. Blanco has been with the company 14 years. Were never shy about being wrong, Browne said. Were OK with failure. In his mind, thats the only way employees can learn and grow. And he believes he needs to show employees that he cares about them. Ive bailed guys out of jail, Browne said. We spend thousands a year investing in our employees because theres nothing harsher in life than the feeling of being alone. The new building, purchased from Idaho Construction, is part of a $950,000 investment and more than a year of planning. They spent $120,000 in electrical work alone. And a new test panel can allow them to test motors at their full operating voltage. Its been a long road, Browne said. One of our biggest cautions is the what-if. What if somebody gets hurt? What if something happens? Thats what scares us the most. The what-ifs will put you out of business if youre not careful. He believes the business now is set up for success. Within another five years, Browne and Blanco hope to have 30 employees. Ive seen family businesses that dont have a succession plan or that the succession plan doesnt have a visionary to see the business grow, Rasmussen said. The businesses typically dont make it. But here, he said, that wasnt the case. A new direction Matt Hitchcocks father, Robert, started Industrial Electric Motor Service in 1974. Matt took over the business in 1999 watching it grow from a four-man shop to more than a dozen employees. It became a larger operation than he felt he really wanted to handle. But he didnt want the company to end with him. I wanted to see that company grow and continue to provide great jobs for the Magic Valley, Hitchcock said. I found somebody that loved the company as much as I do. That person was Browne. Hitchcock has stayed on with the company through the transition he now does delivery work. Taking a step back wasnt always easy, but he knew a company could not be torn in two directions. Today, Hitchcock is glad to see the business diversify into uncharted territory. Its growing at a faster pace than when hed left the helm. While thats required the rules and standards to become more rigid, he understands that its all been for the ultimate goal of keeping a healthy company. There really is not much trouble letting go, Hitchcock said. It cant be any other way but that. We spend thousands a year investing in our employees because theres nothing harsher in life than the feeling of being alone. Tim Browne, President of Industrial Electric Motor Service President Donald Trump has kicked Stephen Bannon off the Trump train once and for all. Good for him. Now he should kick off a few more noxious passengers whom Bannon brought alongthe racists and anti-Semites of the alt-right whom Bannon promoted and who are like an albatross around Trumps neck, dragging down his presidency. Trump should be extremely popular today. Under his leadership, the economy is entering what is expected to be its third straight quarter of economic growth above 3 percent. Unemployment is at a 17-year low, consumer confidence is high and the stock market is soaring. He has enacted historic tax and regulatory reform, put conservative judges on the federal bench and driven the Islamic State from its caliphate. With this record, he should be riding high in the polls and expanding his base. Yet Trumps support is contracting, not expanding. After his inauguration, Trump enjoyed a 41 percent approval rating and 46 percent disapproval, according to the FiveThirtyEight average of polls. Today, Trumps approval has dipped three points to 38 percent, while his disapproval has skyrocketed 10 points to 56 percent. Why is that? Because, despite a booming economy and the presidents slate of policy achievements, many Americans are still uncomfortable with Trump in the White House. There are lots of reasons for that discomfort, many of them self-inflicted wounds. But a big reason is Trumps perceived association with the alt-rightan association that is largely due to Trumps now-ended association with Bannon. The alt-right is a fringe movement, and it would have stayed on the fringes but for Bannon. Back in the 1960s, William F. Buckley Jr. and his magazine National Review excommunicated the fringe right of his daythe John Birch Societyfrom the respectable right. But Bannon and his Breitbart News website did the opposite, bringing the alt-right into the political mainstream through his association with Trump. At the GOP convention that nominated Trump, Bannon declared proudly that he had made Breitbart the platform for the alt-right. He published pieces that praised, among others, white nationalist Richard Spencer as one of the movements leadersthe same Richard Spencer who led an alt-right audience (many with arms raised in a Nazi salute) in chants of Hail Trump! and helped organize the torch-carrying neo-Nazi mob that descended on Charlottesville in August. At the White House, Bannon wreaked havoc from within, leaking like a sieve and giving Trump horrible strategic advice. It was Bannon who reportedly urged Trump to double down on his many sides equivocation after Charlottesville. And since being fired and returning to Breitbart, Bannon has wreaked havoc from without, backing alleged sexual predator Roy Moore in Alabama and alt-right candidates such as Paul Nehlena virulent anti-Semite who refers to his critics as shekels-for-hireto challenge House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. Trumps association with Bannon has been a disaster for his presidency and the conservative cause. Trump said: Steve had very little to do with our historic victory, which was delivered by the forgotten men and women of this country. Yet Steve had everything to do with the loss of a Senate seat in Alabama held for more than thirty years by Republicans. Steve doesnt represent my basehes only in it for himself. Trump is right. The men and women of this country who delivered his victory are not racists, and they are not part of Bannons alt-right movement. The steel workers who lost their jobs because of Chinas illegal dumping, the factory workers who lost their jobs as manufacturing plants moved across the border and the coal miners who lost their jobs due to environmental regulations voted for Trump despite the alt-right, not because of it. Trumps reluctance to disassociate himself from the inhabitants of the alt-rights fever swamps has hurt him. Many Americans who might otherwise embrace Trump based on his record of achievement are unwilling to say Im a Trump supporter because of it. Trump must denounce the alt-right for one simple reason: because it has embraced him. Trump was factually correct that there was violence on both sides in Charlottesville, but only one side claimed to be acting in his name. And it still does. Which is why America needs to hear the president say: These bigots are not part of my movement. They dont represent me. I dont want their support, and I dont want their votes. Trump has denounced the alt-left. Yet, as Spencer pointed out gleefully after Charlottesville, Trump has never denounced the Alt-Right. Nor will he. Prove him wrong, Mr. President. The Syrian National Army loyal to President Bashar al-Assad has claimed it brought down an Israeli fighter jet, after the Israeli aviation fired several missiles on a military outpost near capital Damascus. The Israeli sorties according to the Syrian army took place Tuesday at dawn and targeted a military base in the city of al-Qutayfah, outside Damascus. Our air defenses responded to three Israeli missile attacks on military positions in the al-Qutayfah countryside, official Syrian state media quoted military officials as saying. Military officials told pro-Assad regime media, al-Mayadeen, that the armys air defense system was able to intercept three missiles and hit one jet. Israel, which usually does not comment on its military operations, has not confirmed the incidents. Israeli sources and Syrian rebels opposed to Assad indicate that the military outpost houses long-range missiles. The base is reportedly used by Syrian militarys 155th Artillery Regiment. The Syrian army claims that the first Israeli airstrikes were launched from inside Lebanons airspace, Turkish daily Sabah reports. According to Ronen Solomon, an Israeli freelance intelligence analyst who tracks Syrias weapons development programs, the 155th Artillery Regiment operates Scud missile launchers and has been known since 2010 as the regiment that hosts Hezbollahs advanced Scud missile base, Times of Israel reports. Israel has complained about alleged Irans presence in Northern Syria and in Lebanon. It fears Iran is building military bases in war-torn Syria. Iran has helped shore up President Assads regime by sending thousands of fighters and trainers. Israel in December reportedly fired missiles at a suspected Iranian military base in Syria. Twelve Iranian military personnel were killed and several buildings destroyed, reports said. The researchers based the analysis of care quality on guidelines developed by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the National Quality Forum, as well as on research that has shown patients consider some services undesirable or burdensome at the end of life. Specific criteria included whether patients received chemotherapy; whether they had two or more emergency department visits; whether they were admitted to the hospital and, if so, how many days they spent there; whether they died in the hospital; and whether they were admitted to intensive care. In the study, higher numbers of veterans receiving these services indicates lower quality of care. Our study showed that veterans can expect appropriately lower-intensity care as they face late-stage cancer at VA facilities. The researchers then compared the use of these services by veterans with cancer who used VA health care with veterans with cancer who received their care through Medicare. More than 90 percent of older veterans are enrolled in Medicare as well as the VA, so the population that is eligible for both programs is ideal for evaluating differences in care due to health care system factors, Gidwani-Marszowski said. Researchers accounted for a variety of factors, including the distance patients live from health care facilities, which can affect which system they choose for care, Gidwani-Marszowski said. The study showed that Medicare patients were more likely to receive unduly intensive care at the end of life, including chemotherapy, hospitalization, admission to the intensive care unit and longer stays in the hospital, and to die in the hospital, than those who received care through the VA. Gidwani-Marszowski said the studys findings that Medicare patients receive lower-quality, higher-intensity end-of-life care make sense given the different financial incentives of the two systems. VA physicians are salaried, while Medicare-funded physicians bill according to the services provided, which is known as fee for service. Therefore, additional services provided through Medicare generate funds for physicians and health care organizations. Emergency department use differs The researchers also found that the VA patients were more likely than the Medicare patients to have two or more emergency department visits. One possible explanation, Gidwani-Marszowski said, is that extended hours or access to appointments are not available at all VA facilities and that veterans may instead need to go to the emergency department for their care. Another is that Medicare patients are more often hospitalized for care that VA patients get in the emergency department. The VA has long been a leader in providing patient-centered care at the end of life, Asch said. Our study showed that veterans can expect appropriately lower-intensity care as they face late-stage cancer at VA facilities. If they choose instead to use their Medicare benefits outside the VA, they are at greater risk of getting chemotherapy, hospitalization and other services that will likely not help them in their last days. The work is an example of Stanford Medicines focus on precision health, the goal of which is to anticipate and prevent disease in the healthy and precisely diagnose and treat disease in the ill. The studys other Stanford authors are Todd Wagner, PhD, associate professor of surgery and director of the Health Economics Research Center at the VA Palo Alto; Karl Lorenz, MD, professor of medicine and section chief of the VA Palo Alto-Stanford Palliative Care Program; Manali Patel, MD, assistant professor of medicine; Kavitha Ramchandran, MD, clinical assistant professor of medicine; Derek Boothroyd, PhD, senior biostatistician; Gary Hsin, MD, clinical associate professor of medicine and director of the Hospice and Palliative Care Center at the VA Palo Alto; Samantha Murrell, research associate at the VA Palo Alto and Stanford surgical affiliate; and Vilija Joyce, research associate at VA Palo Alto. Researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles and Brown University also contributed to the study. The research was funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Program; and the VA Health Services Research and Development Service, VA Information Resource Center. Stanford Health Policy and Stanfords Department of Medicine also supported the work. Two former Zimbabwean ministers loyal to ex-president Robert Mugabe have been charged with corruption, their lawyers said on Saturday. Walter Mzembi and Samuel Undenge, who were respectively foreign minister and energy minister in Mugabes last Cabinet, were arrested last weekend by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission. The duo appeared in court following their arrest before they were freed on bail. Charges against Mzembi relate to his time as tourism minister while Undenge is accused of criminal abuse of office. According to the charge sheet, Undenge has issued a $12,650 contract without due tender to a company that did no work. President Mugabes successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa, vowed during his inauguration speech late last year to fix the southern African nations economy and battle corruption, which was closely associated with his predecessors rule. According to Mnangagwa, corruption remains the major source of some of the problems Zimbabwe faces as a country and its retarding impact on national development cannot be overemphasized. A Global Witness report released last year accused security and intelligence elites of being involved in the looting of diamond fields under Mugabes rule. Mugabe was sacked as the partys first secretary leading to his resignation as state president days later, following the launch of a military operation aimed at targeting criminals around the veteran leader. Julius Ayuk Tabe, the Nigeria-based chairman of the Governing Council of Ambazonia separatist movement in Cameroon has been arrested along with others by Nigeria security forces, local media reports. The separatist group said in a statement Tabe and six others were taken from Nera Hotels in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, by Cameroonian gunmen in an illegal abduction. The Ambazonia separatist movement is a group from the Anglophone region of Cameroon seeking independence from the Francophone nation. Cameroonian authorities have issued international arrest warrants for fifteen leaders of the separatist group late last year. Sisiku Ayuk Tabe, the self-proclaimed president, was among those wanted. The government accuses the group of being behind rising violence in the northwestern and southwestern regions. The two areas known as Anglophone Cameroon have been at the heart of clashes between pro-government forces and secessionists. The Anglophone part of the country has been accusing the government of President Paul Biya of indiscrimination. Biya has been in power for 35 years. Demands for independence have grown in the two regions in recent months and tension has been escalating. The crackdown by state forces, including the use of helicopter gunships has killed dozens of people and encouraged support for the separatist movement. Forces loyal to the UN-backed government of National Accord (GNA) have taken control of Ras Jedir border crossing to Tunisia and re-opened traffic. GNA forces, head by Usama Juwaili, raided the crossing point controlled by local militia, Amazigh, in the town of Zuwara. Juwaili claimed that the operation was aimed at fighting smuggling and conflict at the crossing. Hafez Ben Sassi, head of Zuwara municipality told Turkish Anadolu Agency that activities have resumed at the crossing. Work on both directions at the terminal is back to normal, he said. The crossing is now under the control of the interior ministry of the unity government, he added. Sassi protested against Juwailis action and called on the GNA to react. The mayor indicated that Amazigh militia was tasked to operate the border. Three people were reportedly killed during the Friday clash. Local reports say some Amazigh workers sought refuge on the other side of the border. @alextdaugherty Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart was happy with a high-stakes immigration meeting at the White House on Tuesday where President Donald Trump's negotiating skills were displayed on live television. Despite the media saturation, the Miami Republican said the meeting with about two dozen Democrats and Republicans was "one of the most productive meetings I've been to" as Congress tries to find a solution to help undocumented young adults known as Dreamers who came to the U.S. as young children. "We've been discussing these issues for a long, long time and this is one of the most productive meetings I've been to," Diaz-Balart said. "Particularly when you're talking about a large group like that, diverse and everything else. I think the president set the tone and I think it was exceedingly productive." Diaz-Balart said the conversation in real-time with the cameras running made lawmakers from both sides explain what they meant when using terms like "clean" and "border security." "One of the things that I have learned over the years is that there are certain terms that when people say them they're thinking of something, and who you are talking to is thinking of a totally different thing which is why i just don't use them," Diaz-Balart said, referring to terms like "clean," "comprehensive" and "amnesty." He said the exchange between Trump and California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, where the President initially appeared to back a solution for Dreamers without a promise for border security, was evidence of the productivity of Tuesday's meeting. "When the president thinks of DACA, he's thinking of DACA and border security," Diaz-Balart said. "It was good that Sen. Feinstein said 'What are we talking about here? Her version of 'clean' and his version of 'clean' are two different things and it was clarified and that was important. But it was a very, very, very positive atmosphere." Diaz-Balart said four items, and only four, will be part of any immigration deal between Democrats and Republicans that must pass by March when the Obama-era executive order called DACA that protects Dreamers expires. "That's DACA...border security, chain migration and the diversity visa lottery," Diaz-Balart said. "Some want more issues, others want less, but that's what the group agreed to." Diaz-Balart, who unsuccessfully pushed a massive immigration overhaul bill in 2014, is part of House Speaker Paul Ryan's immigration working group and was the only Floridian present at Tuesday's meeting. Miami Republican Reps. Carlos Curbelo and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen voted against a year-end spending bill in December because it did not address Dreamers. Diaz-Balart, who is generally the most conservative Miami Republican in the House of Representatives, voted in favor of the spending plan. Mowers beat includes reporting on economic issues, the opioid epidemic, emergency management and the Florida Senate. Mahoney will cover immigration, public education and campaign finance, among other issues, and Koh will cover health care, medical marijuana and the Florida House. 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A coalition that wants to keep Yellowstone-area grizzly bears under federal Endangered Species Act protection says a recent court ruling on gray wolves proves their case that the government is acting too fast. They gambled they were going to win that appeal and they lost, said Earthjustice attorney Timothy Preso, who represents the Sierra Club, Center for Biological Diversity, National Parks Conservation Association and Northern Cheyenne Tribe against the U.S. Government and the state of Wyoming. We pointed out to them they had a problem. The proper thing was to send it back, instead of cobbling together a new justification for an issue they blew off when they had the chance to consider it the first time around," Preso said. Last July, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem from the Endangered Species List, declaring the population of about 700 bears fully recovered and ready for state management. But in August, the U.S. District Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., ruled in a separate case involving gray wolves in the Western Great Lakes region that FWS cant decide a species is recovered in one place without first showing how that might affect other, unrecovered populations. The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is one of six recovery zones that grizzly bears inhabit or could inhabit in the Lower 48 states. Among the others, the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem in northwest Montana holds about 1,000 grizzlies. The remaining four recovery zones hold about 50 bears or fewer, with the Bitterroot Ecosystem on the Montana-Idaho border having no grizzlies currently. Federal officials anticipate delisting the NCDE bears later in 2018, but that depends on the results of the Greater Yellowstone challenges. Five separate federal lawsuits have challenged the Greater Yellowstone delisting rule. The Services power is to designate genuinely discrete population segments; it is not to delist an already-protected species by balkanization, the Court of Appeals judges wrote in the wolf case. The Service cannot circumvent the Endangered Species Acts explicit delisting standards by driving an existing listing into a recovered sub-group and a leftover group that becomes an orphan to the law. Such a statutory dodge is the essence of arbitrary-and-capricious and ill-reasoned agency action. In December, FWS announced a new public comment period asking how the wolf decision might affect the Yellowstone grizzly delisting. FWS grizzly recovery coordinator Hillary Cooley said Monday the agency could not comment on pending lawsuits. The public comment period ended Monday. Preso argued the wolf decision shows FWS acted unlawfully when it delisted the Greater Yellowstone bears without explaining how that would affect the other recovery zones. Monday's legal motion asks the U.S. District Court in Missoula to vacate the Greater Yellowstone delisting and return Lower 48 grizzlies to federal protection. The law doesnt let them go back and rejigger their analysis after their rule is out the door, Preso said. You cant do a surgical delisting without considering the whole species. Now that Washington, D.C., is done with Christmas, Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., would like Montana's tree back. A 79-foot Englemann spruce from the Kootenai National Forest served as this year's Capitol Christmas tree. As far as Tester is concerned, its usefulness shouldn't end there. Efforts "are underway to rebuild the Sperry Chalet, and I can think of no better use for some of the Montana lumber in our Capitol Christmas tree to assist in that endeavor, Tester wrote to Architect of the Capitol Stephen Ayers on Monday. Id like to see this tree go home to Big Sky Country, where it can continue giving to the people to whom our public lands belong. The Sperry Chalet dormitory burned down during last falls Sprague fire in Glacier National Park. Tester said donations from the Washington Companies, SmartLam and F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber Co. would pay for shipping the tree back to Columbia Falls, where the Stoltze lumber mill could saw it up. Pete Tallmadge of Yaak cut down the spruce tree on the Three Rivers Ranger District in the Kootenai National Forest. It was trucked 3,000 miles to the nation's capital. The tree would otherwise have been chipped into compost and spread on the U.S. Capitol lawn, according to Testers staff. The wood war on the Canadian border has a new player: the U.S. newspaper industry. The United States and Canada have been struggling for a year over claims that British Columbia sawmills unfairly price their softwood lumber exports to the U.S. housing market. Then last fall, a paper company in Washington petitioned the U.S. Department of Commerce to impose duties on Canadian uncoated groundwood paper, commonly known as newsprint. That drew counter-requests from two coalitions of newspaper publishers and printers from across the United States, warning that punishing Canadian papermakers actually would cause more damage to thousands of small publishing companies and the readers who depend on them. (W)e urge you to heavily scrutinize the antidumping and countervailing duty petitions filed by North Pacific Paper Co. [NORPAC], one group of 1,110 newspapers of wrote to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Dec. 4. We believe these cases do not warrant the imposition of duties, which would have a very severe impact on our industry and many communities across the United States NORPACs petitions are based on incorrect assessments of a changing market, and appear to be driven by the short-term investment strategies of the companys hedge fund owners. The signatories included Lee Enterprise-owned Missoulian, Billings Gazette, Helena Independent Record, Butte Montana Standard and Hamilton Ravalli Republic as well as the Gannett-owned Great Falls Tribune. North Pacific Paper Co. of Longview, Washington, called for the investigation of Canadian newsprint import prices. The request was made in August, shortly after NORPAC cut wages and retirement benefits for its 400 workers. It also laid off about 50 workers after it shut down one of its three paper machines, reducing its output by a third. New York-based hedge fund One Rock Capital Partners bought NORPAC from Weyerhaeuser Corp. and Nippon Dynawave in 2016. NORPAC claims its Canadian competitors use 65 separate government subsidies to reduce their prices, including tax breaks, loans, access to public forests and breaks on electricity costs. That allows the Canadian papermakers to export their newsprint at prices between 16 percent and 65 percent below American producers, NORPAC claimed. The U.S. lumber industry has accused the Canadian government of allowing Canadian timber companies access to federal timber at much cheaper stumpage rates than are available in the Lower 48 states. Since the Softwood Lumber Agreement expired in 2015, the two nations have failed to craft a new agreement for Canadian pricing and access to the U.S. lumber market. NORPAC argued the Canadian paper industry benefits from the same pricing inequalities. But the newspaper printers and publishers countered that other economic factors play more important roles. Facing increased costs of newsprint across all suppliers, many small-town papers will be at risk of failing, a separate coalition of 54 small publishers (including the Havre Daily News) wrote. To survive, some newspapers may resort to increasing print subscription prices, which would only exacerbate the severe challenges facing print newspapers. They also noted that the American Forest and Paper Association, a trade group representing U.S. paper industry, opposes the duty petition. Their letter was released on Jan. 4. Montana Newspaper Association Executive Director Jim Rickman said newspaper companies generally dont disclose what they pay for newsprint. Lee Enterprises is the states largest consumer of newsprint. Many smaller papers dont have their own presses and contract with a larger publisher for printing. The impact of the tariffs would come through the Great Falls Tribunes or the IRs [Independent Record of Helena] or the Billings Gazettes, Rickman said in an email. The Missoulian's printing presses unspooled about 75 metric tons of newsprint in December, producing editions of the Missoulian, Ravalli Republic, Missoula Independent and several local high school newspapers. That's about 80 tons of paper, stretching more than a thousand miles. The print newspaper industry has experienced an unprecedented decline for more than a decade as readers switch to digital media, the Dec. 4 coalition wrote. Print subscriptions have declined more than 30 percent in the last 10 years. Although newspapers have successfully increased digital readership, online advertising has proven to be much less lucrative than print advertising. As a result, newspapers have struggled to replace print revenue with online revenue, and print advertising continues to be the primary revenue source for local journalism," according to the coalition. As to the U.S. paper industry, the industrywide shift from print newspapers to digital news consumption not imports from Canada has caused a decline in demand for uncoated groundwood paper. Conversely, in recent years, the market share of Canadian uncoated groundwood paper imports has actually declined. A Helena man who deliberately sparked dozens of wildfires in May 2013 to bolster his work as a seasonal firefighter was sentenced Monday to 35 years in the Montana State Prison for starting another blaze in 2016. In 2013, Frederick James Maw lit 20 fires in Priest Pass, Spokane Hills and the York-Nelson area, causing nearly $1 million in damage. He was arrested in the York-Nelson area in full firefighting gear holding a trigger-operated lighter. He initially said he was a contract firefighter but confessed to starting the fires because he enjoyed the camaraderie of firefighting and needed the financial payoff from fighting fires. He received a 40-year suspended sentence for the 2013 offenses. While Maw was still on probation, he was arrested in April 2016 for lighting an acre-sized fire on a ranch where he was working. He was sentenced Monday to 60 years in prison with 25 of those suspended for the 2016 fire, which caused some $800,000 in damage. Im sorry to be throwing him away to some degree, Judge Kathy Seeley said as she handed down the sentence. While she noted that Maw has serious mental health concerns, she also said he is "an incredible danger" to society. This is a mental health issue, but its also an antisocial issue, Seeley said. Lewis and Clark County Attorney Leo Gallagher had asked the judge to impose a 40-year prison sentence with none of that time suspended. There needs to be a mechanism to keep this community safe from him, Gallagher said. The goal is to make sure hes under supervision for the rest of his life," he added. Maw apologized Monday to those in the courtroom, including several firefighters there to watch the sentencing. He will be eligible for parole in eight years. As famous union organizer Frank Little's body was swinging from a railroad trestle in Butte, Billings had its own union problems. Billings came close to adding a body to the count of casualties in the restless and paranoid year of 1917. Although historians would remember Little, who was martyred for his IWW cause Industrial Workers of the World union members, referred to as "Wobblies" many would forget the violence, strikes, brawls, mobs and spies in Montana during 1917 and 1918. The Magic City of Billings, which became synonymous for tolerance and solidarity with its "Not In Our Town" motto in latter part of the century, was equally well known during World War I for its patriotic zeal that would declare "not in our town" to all things German. 1917 was a tough year America had officially entered the war on the side of France and Britain, but not without criticism at home, largely from a wave of immigrants and first-generation Americans who had ties to Germany and Austria. At home, the Speculator Mine fire in Butte had started labor unrest that culminated in Little's murder. The state's largest company, Anaconda Mining, feared union interference would slow copper production desperately needed for the war effort. Around the state, unrest was spreading, and local officials were jittery. In Billings on the same day as Little was murdered restaurant owner George Brachos narrowly escaped a lynching of his own when he was chased by a mob of striking union men. Brachos owned the Princess Cafe, a restaurant at 11 N. Broadway. The union mob had gathered at his restaurant to protest one of their members who had been assaulted the night before. Dave Petrovich, who was a member of the cooks and waiters union, had been beaten by a fellow Princess Cafe employee, Mike Cachicapolis. Petrovich had been picketing the cafe with a sign that read, "Unfair to organized labor." Cachicapolis rushed from the cafe and belted Petrovich. As Petrovich was on the ground, Cachicapolis continued to hit and kick him. The next day, a larger crowd had gathered outside the Princess Cafe. When Brachos decided to use the front door instead of the alley exit, a mob began to follow. Brachos ran. The mob matched his speed. Then, bedlam broke loose, the Billings Evening Journal reported. Brachos ducked into the Forum bar, and his pursuers gathered around the door, planning their next move against the Greek. At this point, a Billings Police captain arrived and told the crowd to disperse. Another union official stepped forward to help quell the crowd. But for safe measure, police escorted Brachos back to his cafe. But the union wasnt finished there. It continued to beef up the picket lines and threaten other businesses who werent sympathetic to the union cause. The organizers made notes of the names of various business men and their wives who entered the place. The picketers then threatened to picket and place the placard of unfair in front of those businesses who supported Brachos. An editorial in The Billings Evening Journal said that Billings had enjoyed sensible agreements between employer and employee. Billings employers and Billings union men cannot afford to discard this policy now; so The Journal respectfully asks that the rough stuff be canned. The Wobblies are coming The union discord didn't stop with the dustup at the Princess. A handful of Wobblies went to Butte for Little's funeral. His funeral would be the largest ever recorded there. Meanwhile, local officials feared for more unrest and they had good reason. As soon as the funeral was done, Wobblies, many of whom were scared by Little's murder and the threats made to other union leaders, looked for places to get work or lay low. The Billings Evening Journal warned residents we are preparing for an influx of members of that organization within the next few weeks that will make members who have been in the city recently look small. A week later, the government began asking citizens to spy on each other. In a headline that read, Citizens asked to Report Enemies, the Assistant U.S. Attorney in Billings asked anyone who had overheard conversations in which the government is attacked or who knows of treasonable acts to report them. The Yellowstone County attorney assured residents in Billings that those tips would be acted upon promptly. It is believed from the tenor of Attorney Baldwins letter that the United States government is contemplating some drastic action against the members of the Industrial Workers of the World in this and other states, where, it is charged, they have been stirring up sedition, the Journal wrote. Unrest had spread to Billings' sugar refinery where some members of the workforce were still holding out against management for better working conditions. The situation was so skittish that even reports of sabotage ran rampant in Billings. For example, The Billings Evening Journal had sent a reporter to the Russell-Miller Milling Company because of a supposed explosion. When the journalist arrived, the employees were confused, saying they hadn't heard anything. No one at the Northern Pacific railyards next door had heard anything about sabotage or bombing, either. The reporter had heard that a Wobbly had planted a bomb. Instead, the company told the concerned reporter that it had just completed some blasting at the site in preparation for a new scale. Blasting, but no bombs. When news of a IWW strike happened in Spokane, federal troops had to be called into Washington. Local leaders pondered in the press whether railyards in Laurel might need the same because there was a small contingent of Wobblies at work there. Newspapers reassured residents that the police were keeping a secret list of union members. Just in case. Yellowstone Jail Blues The only credible case of union organizing taking place was safely behind bars at the Yellowstone County Jail. Having possibly heard of other sympathy strikes around the country, inmates from Yellowstone County Jail organized a protest of sorts on Aug. 19 less than two weeks after the murder of Little. It started at about 9 p.m., when prisoners started banging on bars, yelling about mistreatment. The racket caused such a disturbance that nearby residents gathered outside the jail and the reserve police force was called in, fearful that a full-scale riot had broken out. Yet, when the reserves rushed the building, they found prisoners behind bars and guards just fine, if not a bit frazzled by the ruckus. County officials had planned to let the prisoners scream themselves hoarse. Still, Billings Police Chief Bert Talgo reassured residents. If any members of that organization want trouble, trouble is what they will encounter, Talgo said. The next night, prisoners gave an encore performance this time to weary nearby residents and neighbors. Residents within a five-block area were apparently kept up all night by speeches, banging and clanking, and ribald songs. Sheriff Matlock threatened that he would turn the water hoses on any of them, but as soon as the hoses were brought out, the noise died down, only to start up again as the hoses were put away. According to accounts, there were songs, speeches in favor of the Wobblies, and then yelling. Unable to sleep, as many as 500 people gathered on the south part of the jail, at approximately Fourth Avenue North and North 27th Street. The prisoners charged that Matlock had cut the daily rations at the jail in order to buy gasoline for his automobile. The newspaper reporter couldnt quite get all the lyrics of the song the prisoners seemed to repeat, but he did record some parts, Hallelujah, give us a handout; hallelujah, Im a bum. The song was surely the famous IWW song, "Hallelujah I'm a Bum." The next morning, after the prisoners had again worn themselves out, tired citizens arrived at the jail and demanded that Matlock do one of three things: Give them T-bone steaks, turn them loose or "compel them to stop the nightly performance." On the third night, nearly 100 people showed up south of the jail for what had become a nightly show. But, Matlock had put the city fire department on standby, ready turn the fire hoses on at a moment's notice. The crowd left disappointed. Nothing happened except, the peaceful singing of an extremely amateur quartet. Editor's note: The online version of this story has been edited to correct a name misspelling. Cody Dodd, the 24-year-old pedestrian struck by a van on Front Street in mid-December, is expected to recover from his injuries, but he has a long road ahead of him, his mother said. Butte-Silver Bow Undersheriff George Skuletich said Dodd crossed Front Street at about 6 p.m. on Dec. 11 near Nevada Street. There is no crosswalk in that area. Skuletich said other drivers swerved to avoid Dodd. The driver of the van also swerved, and Dodd tried to jump out of the way, according to eyewitness accounts, Skuletich said. But both Dodd and the driver swerved in the same direction and the driver struck Dodd. Skuletich said Dodds head struck the windshield, but he was talking to first responders at the scene and later at St. James Healthcare. But Dodds injuries prompted healthcare providers to have him flown to St. Vincent Healthcare in Billings. Dodds mother, Misty, said from Helena last week that her son sustained severe brain trauma, a cracked and partly crushed skull, fractured cheekbones, his jaws have been wired shut, a tube is helping him to breathe and he was put into a medically induced coma for 19 days. He is out of the coma, but is disoriented and very confused, Dodd said. Cody Dodd is living in a long-term facility, the Advanced Care Hospital of Montana in Billings. Dodd said she expects her son to be moved to another rehabilitation hospital, either in Billings or Missoula, for at least a year. However, she said her son is expected to recover, but it will take a long time, she said. The crash remains under investigation, Skuletich said. But police have determined that the driver was not speeding and neither drugs nor alcohol were factors. The county attorney will determine if charges will be filed against the driver, authorities said. If ever the moniker can-do city were to be applied to Butte, the process in which the city has cared for and managed its homeless population would be the example, with leadership, followership, collaboration, sacrifice and savvy as the can-do elements. Last weeks monthly meeting of the Continuum of Care Coalition, a multi-agency group focused on homelessness, reported out on activity that continues to manage and assist the homeless, including establishment of a temporary emergency shelter on North Main Street, which has lived up to its mission preventing people without shelter from freezing to death outside this winter. The temporary shelter is able to operate at least through the end of May with the help of a $200,000 Community Development Block Grant from the Montana Department of Commerce. Shortly after the temporary shelter opened, Margie Seccomb, chief executive officer of Action, Inc., the agency that opened the shelter, went to work with Commerces director, Pam Haxby-Cote, to pursue the funding, which ultimately was issued by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Action, Inc., and Butte-Silver Bow were able to develop $277,340 in matching dollars. In a news release, Haxby-Cote said successful pursuit of HUD dollars usually takes much planning, but extreme weather created an urgent situation in Butte. Fortunately, everyone involved has been able to move quickly for the health and safety of Buttes homeless population. Seccomb also announced at last weeks meeting that Action, Inc., and St. James Healthcare were successful in obtaining a $60,000 grant from the Montana Healthcare Foundation to close what is acknowledged as a local gap in serving the homeless where do homeless people go when they are discharged from the emergency room, the state hospital, or behavioral health services? The philosophy behind the grant acknowledges the value of having a roof over ones head housing is healthcare. Day-to-day operational updates were also issued at last weeks meeting. Action, Inc.s Cassie OLeary reported that the shelter features 34 beds with 66 unique family units or individuals served in December, and 40 unique units or individuals exiting the system into some type of shelter. OLeary said the shelter serves an average of 30 people per night. Dinner for residents is served nightly at 4:30 p.m., and dinner for non-residents community members who are hungry is served at 5, with the feeding process complete by 5:30 (in an extraordinary community contribution, St. James Healthcare has been donating food for this effort). Community donations to the shelter, OLeary said, have been overwhelming The Continuum of Care Coalitions diversion/coordinated entry system is operational, working to make homelessness in Butte rare, brief and non-recurring. Families and individuals appearing at the shelter are queried about whether they have any shelter alternatives, and many of them do (this is the diversion piece of the system). Those with no alternatives are brought into the shelter with people with disabilities, the elderly and families with children receiving priority. As OLeary was delivering her report, she relayed that five unique family units or individuals had been housed during the previous week, that three more were being housed that day, and that two would be housed this week (this part of the system is the piece referred to as coordinated entry into shelter). Average length of stay at the shelter is 14 nights. A multi-agency team continues to meet weekly to coordinate entry into shelter for family units or individuals awaiting housing. In addition to nightly meals at the shelter, the multi-agency We Deliver program continues to deliver sack lunches at various locations in town, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Lunches are served Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Knights of Columbus. A welcome presence at last weeks meeting was that of Rocky Lyons, executive director of the Butte Rescue Mission, who provided an update on the missions plans for its newly acquired property on East Platinum Street. Lyons, accompanied by one of her board members, Paul Buckley, said the mission hopes to be operational by May or June, providing shelter for 56 individuals 28 men and 28 women and children. Lyons said the mission continues to work with Burlington Northern Railroad and the Butte Central Catholic School System on easement and liability issues, and must achieve contingencies at the site established by Butte-Silver Bow, such as storm water drainage, landscaping and lighting. Lyons said it is the missions intention, once it is open, to serve three meals daily to mission residents and hungry community members. At last weeks meeting, other agencies reported in the Volunteers of America in how its working with homeless veterans, and Western Montana Mental Health Center, on its new plan for clients in the midst of funding cuts, which has decimated its case management services. Continuum of Care Coalition members also discussed the upcoming Service Connect event, to be held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday, Jan. 26, at the Maroon Activities Center. Homeless people are invited to attend to receive a variety of services, including showers, haircuts, dental care and vaccines. Coordinating with other efforts nationally, a formal count of local homeless families and individuals will occur. Managing homelessness is an incredibly challenging endeavor. In this very difficult and important work in Butte, leaders, followers, collaborators and partners abound. Butte should hold its head very high, as we are serving the least among us in a respectful and honoring way. In a can-do way. All Valley County high school seniors are eligible to apply for a substantial college scholarship that will be awarded in February by the Hi-Line Sportsmen. Scholarship winners will be announced at the conservation groups annual fundraising banquet, scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 24, at St. Raphaels Catholic Churchs parish hall in Glasgow. Over the past four years a total of $10,000 has been awarded to 10 Barb Marsh Scholars. In keeping with the wildlife-conservation mission of the Hi-Line Sportsmen, scholarship applicants must possess a valid Montana hunting license. Other considerations are community service and participation in hunting and conservation-oriented activities. Application deadline for the scholarship is Feb. 2. The scholarship is presented in memory of Barb Marsh, a longtime supporter of wildlife conservation and local youth, who died unexpectedly in January 2014. Each year since her death, Barbs partner, Joe Younkin, has sponsored a special rifle that is auctioned at the conservation banquet. Proceeds from the previous years auction are distributed to eligible high school students the following year. The amount of the scholarship varies from year to year since it is dependent on funds raised by the auction, but in previous years, multiple $1,000 scholarships have been awarded to college-bound Valley County high schoolers. Younkin has donated another firearm to the Hi-Line Sportsmens 2018 banquet that will fund 2019 scholarships. Plan to attend the Feb. 24 banquet to bid on the special scholarship gun a Henry Golden Boy lever-action .22 rifle as well as other firearms, sporting goods, and products donated by local businesses, and to recognize the recipients of the 2018 Barb Marsh Memorial Scholarship. For details about eligibility and other information about the scholarship, students are encouraged to visit with career counselors at high schools in Glasgow, Nashua, Frazer, Hinsdale, Opheim, and Lustre. Call Jenn Jackson at 406-263-7339 or email Jackson at jennjenn910@gmail.com for information about the scholarship and the banquet, which raises funds for local wildlife conservation, outdoor recreation, youth events, and our hunting heritage. Anacondas three schools, including Lincoln Elementary, will be tested for arsenic and lead over spring break. Ever since the county found high levels of lead in a sand box in Anaconda's Benny Goodman Park last spring, Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Chief Executive Bill Everett has been pushing to have Anaconda's three schools tested for both lead and arsenic in the air ducts and attics. The Environmental Protection Agency tested for arsenic in the soil on school grounds years ago, but never tested for lead and never checked for either metal inside school buildings. EPA Regional Administrator Doug Benevento told The Montana Standard last month that he wanted to see the schools air ducts and attics checked for potential metal contamination before the end of 2017. Everett said he hoped we go in next week, to test for the potential hazardous waste during a meeting with Benevento in November. Anaconda School Superintendent Gerry Nolan said, at the same meeting, Well work with anybody to get that (testing) done this year. But that deadline has come and gone. EPA said that the agency is working with the school district and the school superintendent. The plan is to test for arsenic and lead during spring break, which is March 26 to April 2. That way, the students will be out and the process will not be disruptive for the children. EPA has been coordinating with the superintendent and school district, and they indicated a preference for sampling over spring break 2018 to minimize disruption of class schedules, Montana Superfund Chief Joe Vranka said by email last week. Anaconda School Board Chair Bryan Lorengo did not respond to requests for comment. Nolan did not respond to requests for an interview, but emailed a statement that said, There will be an update from the EPA at the board meeting on Wednesday. EPA officials do intend to give a presentation at the Anaconda School Board meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Anaconda High Schools Little Theater. EPA will offer up a draft plan for sampling. The school board must give approval of EPAs plan before the agency can go forward. EPA says agency officials will be listening for comments and feedback from the school board Wednesday. But, despite the delay, officials have been busy behind the scenes to get ready to sample the schools interiors for months, said Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Superfund Coordinator Carl Nyman last week. "We want to make sure were doing it right so the data is valid and credible whether there is something or there isnt. Everyone wants to do it right and hopefully do it once," Nyman said. Nyman participated in a 6-hour walk-through of all three schools in December. The walk-through included the agencies, Atlantic Richfield Company, and various consultants to take a close look at the interior of the schools. We hit every classroom and closet imaginable. But we needed to do that to get an idea of what we were looking at, Nyman said. Nyman said the group paid particular attention to the ceilings to look for cracks or other potential openings, and found the ceilings in all three buildings to be sealed up pretty good. Overall, the schools are very clean, Nyman said. So much so, that it may be hard to get a dust sample thats valid. It can be tough to get enough of a sample to get it analyzed. The janitors clean the classrooms five days a week, Nyman said. Anacondas Washoe Smelter processed 8,000 tons of Buttes copper ore daily for about eight decades until 1980, sending heavy metals into the air. Anacondas Superfund site is about 300 square miles. All three schools, Lincoln Elementary, Anaconda High School and Fred Moodry Middle School, were likely built in the 1940s or 1950s, Nyman said. Despite the behind-the-scenes efforts, Everett said he is frustrated and disappointed over the delay. The process has become more intensive than we originally anticipated. But were pushing on it every day, Everett said. Newspaper articles from 1917 and 1918 were given to The Billings Gazette by community historian Elisabeth DeGrenier of The Western Heritage Center who continues to research this time period in Billings. DeGrenier presented a research project recently at the Montana Historical Society's annual meeting about Billings' "Third Degree" committee. That presentation,"Are Undesirable," will be expanded in an upcoming lecture about about sedition and the local response, tentatively scheduled for September at the Heritage Center. She is also preparing the material for a full-length magazine article in Montana: The Journal of Western History. The basis for this six-part series was DeGrenier's research, presentation and belief that this turbulent time in Billings' history needs to be examined and understood more closely. Credit for the research belongs to DeGrenier, who spent hours culling newspaper articles and photos. Tweety Bird Trump is at it again. Actually, he never really stops. I'm referring, of course, to President Tweety Bird Trump. One has to show all the due respect, and that is all I can muster. So Tweety is pecking away as he starts off the new year with his Twitter bombast bomb blasts. Most of his output is the routine ridiculous stuff: He suggests that another political opponent in this case, Huma Abedin, who has been attached at the hip to Hillary Clinton her entire adult life should be jailed for her sloppy handling of classified emails, at least in President Tweety Bird's mind. He also takes credit for the significant aviation achievement that there were no commercial airline fatalities in 2017. Of course, he had little to do with it. And then there's his running trash-talk battle with North Korea's Kim Jong Un, who would be a clown, except for the fact that he's developing a nuclear arsenal that threatens world annihilation if not expertly finessed. Tweety obviously is not a finesse kinda guy. He ridicules the North Korean tyrant by calling him "Rocket Man." They're well-matched, and it's not just their small, pudgy hands. They both have fragile egos that they try to cover with bluster. So when Kim makes a speech taunting the United States by saying, "The nuclear button is always on my desk," Tweety Bird Trump can't resist: "North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un just stated that the 'Nuclear Button is on his desk at all times.' Will someone from his depleted and food starved regime please inform him that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!" Besides the fact that Tweety is once again displaying that he's always very insecure about size, he's also playing with fire at the very moment Kim also was hinting he might be willing to lower the temperature just a tad. Pollyannas might delude themselves into thinking that it's just some grand presidential negotiating tactic, the same one he is utilizing for his faceoff with congressional Democrats. They're trying to reach accommodations on a variety of contentious issues that, for starters, would keep the government open. Maybe the Trump belligerence is part of an "Art of the Deal" scheme. I know let's do like everyone else and search for clues in his 1987 bestseller "Art of the Deal." Yes, it was written by someone else with little input from Donald Trump, but let's look anyway. How about this quote: "I never get too attached to one deal or one approach." That might explain why Tweety Bird constantly contradicts himself. It keeps his adversaries off balance as they're trying to bargain with him. The other side of that is that his word means very little because he can't be trusted to mean what he says, and has little or no impulse control. Here's another insight worth pondering: "You can't con people, at least not for long. You can create excitement, you can do wonderful promotion and get all kinds of press, and you can throw in a little hyperbole. But if you don't deliver the goods, people will eventually catch on." That's the thing: His base, those millions of people who were conned into thinking he'd be their champion, should have figured out from his actions that he was blatantly ignoring the reasons that alienated them in the first place. Instead, he has constantly promoted the interests of the same robber barons who have cheated the system and obliterated economic fair play. That's what has left them frightened and angry. He was supposed to be an agent of dramatic change. If "people will eventually catch on," they certainly haven't yet. That other Tweety Bird, the cartoon figure, always exclaims, "I tot I taw a puddy tat." When he looks at Trump, he'll say, "I tot I taw an autocrat." MUSCATINE Following a pre-Christmas protest by a resident dressed as Santa Claus, the Muscatine City Council last week discussed the rules for banning residents from City Hall. On Dec. 21, Muscatine resident Max Kauffman, wearing a Santa suit, approached the city council and started to pull items out of his bag: candy for Mayor Diana Broderson and coal for the councilmen and City Administrator Gregg Mandsager. Before he could finish the demonstration, Mandsager called for Kauffman to be removed and told the police chief to ban him from City Hall for six months. At Thursday's meeting the first since the protest recently sworn-in At Large Councilman Kelcey Brackett, as well as Broderson, asked Mandsager to clarify, saying they received numerous complaints regarding Santa being banned from the council chambers. "A lot of citizens ... were quite disheartened about the six month ban and were worried this is my City Hall because I'm a citizen of Muscatine and I pay taxes," Broderson said. Mandsager said several people are banned each year from city-owned properties, including City Hall. In the past, he said some residents have submitted a letter of apology and had the ban reduced to three months. "Where do we go with moving this forward?" 2nd Ward Councilman Osmond Malcolm said. "I think the public as a whole acknowledged that they think six months is extreme. But we also feel [Kauffman's] actions were somewhat extreme. So there's got to be a compromise somewhere in there to move past this." Malcolm said he would like to see the council approve a plan for how to respond to situations like the protest in the future. He suggested requiring residents to submit an apology letter and then possibly have the opportunity to return to City Hall after 30 days. Brackett also questioned whether Mandsager had the authority to ban residents from the property. The city administrator said he has the authority because he oversees the facility. The mayor, however, said because in Muscatine City Code she is responsible for overseeing the council meetings and maintaining order, that the duty should fall under her scope of authority. While Mandsager said there is "dual authority" with the mayor and himself allowed to call for residents to be removed, Brackett requested he provide more information in the future. Broderson and Brackett also requested that clearer information be provided about how residents should follow correct protocol at city council meetings, and Mandsager said he will look into updating the website. The conversation also brought about a discussion about safety at City Hall. Several council members said they heard complaints about Kauffman being allowed to pull unknown items out of a bag at a public meeting. Some said they felt fear because the incident could have involved a weapon. Mandsager said police officers are allowed to search residents at their discretion, but tighter rules might be needed in the future. He mentioned searching every person before they enter, but said new rules will take time to consider. MUSCATINE While the art of elementary students is usually saved for the front of a fridge, the Figge Art Museum in Davenport wants to show parents their children's work deserves to hang in a gallery. On Sunday, up to 100 Muscatine elementary students will have the chance to show off their art on display at the Figge, as part of the annual Young Artists Exhibition. A reception for families and friends will be held from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. at the museum, 225 W. 2nd St., Davenport. "It's just a joy to see the kids' faces and the families love coming here," Creative Arts Coordinator Lynn Gingras-Taylor said. "They love seeing their kids' art in frames and hanging on the wall. It gives a new appreciation for the talent of their own children and what's going on in the school district." Muscatine is one of eight school districts participating in the program this year, according to Gingras-Taylor, who said the Young Artists Exhibition began in 2006 to support art curriculum in area schools. "Muscatine has been with us for years and they're generally our first show; they lead the charge," she said. "The kids have great art curriculum out there and really good art teachers." Teachers choose what pieces to submit for the exhibition, which features 76 frames. She said the frames often include more than one piece of art, so around 100 students are usually included. "So there's a lot of art to sort through," she said. "This show, especially the Muscatine show this year, is a very good representation of a wide variety of media and technique with style and color. It's just a blast." The work is usually driven by lessons in the classroom, according to Gingras-Taylor, and celebrates the achievements of students as well as the teachers who encourage them to pursue the arts. "It's a whole trial; everything from critical thinking to decision making to applying intuitive knowledge of color, balance and weight," she said. "Everything translates into everything else you do in life." And the kids, she said, usually never forget the first time they had art displayed in a museum. "Kids come back year after year for tours and they never forget it," she said. "It's something that stays with them." On Sunday, the museum will be open with free admission during the reception. At 12:30 p.m., students from Franklin, Jefferson and McKinley schools will be honored. And at 1 p.m., students from Colorado, Madison, Mulberry and Grant will receive certificates. Gingras-Taylor said visitors are invited to view the entire museum on Sunday, as well as the Young Artists Exhibition. MUSCATINE With everything from a Jr. Pac-Man arcade game to a poster for "The Breakfast Club," Muscatine's newest pizza restaurant pays homage to all things 1980s. Retro Pizza is set to open Tuesday in Muscatine's Western Hall, 801 Oregon St., in the Southend, according to owner Nelson Cruz. Cruz has never owned a restaurant before, but has always had a love for the decade he was born into, from the movies to the clothes. "I love the atmosphere," he said. "Everything was different then than it is now. I didn't live through all of it but I was around older cousins and friends and watched them play arcade games. And you can't beat the music. I can't listen to anything else." Cruz, who was born in 1985, previously incorporated his obsession with his childhood era into his work. "My friend and I used to do a show and review old retro video games online," he said. "I just don't have the time anymore." Now the father of four young children, Cruz said he is doing all he can to support his kids. And opening the restaurant is his latest gift to his family. "The main reason I'm doing this is because my son loves pizza," he said. "Six years ago, with job cutting and all that, I didn't have the money to buy the ingredients and make pizza. And now I can do this. I'm making pizza just for him." While the pizza is for his son, the nostalgia of the '80s is for Cruz. He hopes Retro Pizza will offer an atmosphere not yet available in Muscatine. The restaurant's walls are lined with vintage posters and customers could spend hours playing the several arcade games at the front of the room. Along with Jr. Pac-Man, the mix of vintage and new games include WWF Superstars and Marvel Superheroes. "I wanted to bring arcade games into this town," Cruz said. "They don't have this here and it gives me an opportunity to add more of an '80s atmosphere." The menu includes favorites like taco and Hawaiian pizza, plus a build-your-own option. Cruz hopes to offer delivery in a few weeks. "There are a lot of pizza places here but I'd argue they all have a different taste and different textures," he said. Retro Pizza held a ribbon-cutting with friends and family Monday night, and Cruz said he is nervous but excited to open the doors at 11 a.m. Tuesday. The pizza restaurant is the latest new business to open in the Western Mall, which is being redeveloped by local developer Tom Meeker. Recently, Ninel's Mexican Bakery, a Salvadoran-Mexican restaurant and others have opened in the mall. Family Resources also has relocated to the facility. Retro Pizza will be open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Les blattes ou cafards (Blatta orientalis) sont des insectes qui appartiennent a la famille des Blattoptera. Ils se caracterisent par leur forme allongee, leurs ailes [] Health minister Cleopa Mailu has refuted claims that the decision to ban shisha in the country is not based on biasness, unreasonable or bad faith. In an affidavit filed in court on Monday, the Cabinet Secretary explained that the ban was based on the greater public interest of protecting and enforcing public health from harmful effects and practices associated with shisha consumption. Mailu asked the court to dismiss the case challenging the shisha ban, noting that shisha-smoking is a gateway to using hard drugs such as heroine. Available statistics on the use of shisha have revealed severe acute and chronic health effects on consumers and exposed non-consumers, he said. He said the manufacture, importation, distribution, sale and the consumption of shisha is not licensed in Kenya and thus, importers and promoters cannot claim violation of their rights. The ban was purely driven by public health interest, which is the golden thread that runs through all laws cited. None of the applicants have demonstrated that they are licensed by any regulatory authority in Kenya he explained. Mailu further attached a copy of an advisory note on waterpipe smoking published by WHO. The report indicates that shisha contains nicotine which is a highly addictive substance. The CS also claims that the report observes that the smoke emanated by burning and consuming shisha contains chemicals that are harmful to non-users who work in areas where shisha is sold. In the documents, the CS said that the Ministry of Health has taken steps to create awareness and educate the public on the effects of smoking shisha with a view to protect their health. The court will on January 15 rule on whether to lift the ban imposed by the government, pending the determination of the case. Television actor Nick Mutuma has been forced to apologize after posting a tweet admonishing those going through hard times in January. The Shuga actor raffled feathers on Twitter over the weekend with a Tweet telling off anyone who complains about Njaanuary. According to Nick, anyone above 25 should know how to save money. He further threatened to unfollow anyone who complained about the tough January times when most people are usually broke after spending excessively during the festive period. I unfollow anyone over 25 and talking about Njanuary. By now you should know how to save Bruh Nick Mutuma (@nickmutuma) January 5, 2018 The post appeared to rub some of his followers the wrong way as they hit back with free advise on humility. Well forgive some of us as we Deputy assistant Parents.. Being first borns in our families we have responsibilities Labyrinth (@Daggie_M) January 5, 2018 Some people get a 6 figure salary but they rarely use/see any of this cash, due to the number of responsibilities they have at home (mostly ushago). So let guys have peace please!! Thank you. Tole (@TeeMwangemi) January 5, 2018 So by un-following them, youll be teaching them a lesson in saving? You so full of yourself. Be humble Kilo_10.750 (@kilo_ni_zile_2) January 5, 2018 So Nick, I am curious how do you know their age? Youve been collecting data the past year on Social Media? Martin Maina Mwangi (@martomwangi) January 5, 2018 As long as you dont save for them, they have a right to talk about Njanuary all they want Azra (@slyazra) January 5, 2018 Smh.as if unfollowing them will add days to their Njaanuary kk (@KkKarmau) January 5, 2018 First of all following a celebrity is not employment and secondly you can only save from money that you already have Coll!ns ?? (@King_Ifrica) January 5, 2018 Be humble and learn dont assume they dont know how to save when they have nothing to save bobo (@ImeldaNjoroge) January 5, 2018 After the backlash, the actor posted an apology explaining that the tweet was meant for one of his friends. He wrote: That tweet was subtle shade for one of my mates who Id watched partying hard through out December only to complain about a tough financial situation in Jan. It wasnt a shot at anyone and I honestly didnt think it would go South this quick. Sorry if it rubbed you the wrong way. A case in which a father of seven has been charged with stealing a measly Sh105 has elicited sympathetic reactions from Kenyan internet users. The middle-aged man, identified as Paul James Mwangangi, pleaded guilty to stealing the money from Kenyatta National Hospital on Wednesday, January 3, 2018. The suspect further requested the court to accord him a lenient sentence because he is a father of seven children who depend on him. According to the prosecution team, the man stole a purse belonging to a nurse, Oyunge Cement Harriet, containing Sh105 and the total value of other valuables coming to Sh1,105. Mwangangi faced another count of handling stolen goods contrary to the law on similar dates and place. He was accused of dishonestly retaining a purse while having reason to believe it was stolen goods. The court heard that the nurse was on duty at the hospital when she left her handbag in the doctors room 3 only to find the bag missing. When he saw the doctor, Mwangangi is said to have left the room after which the nurse realized that her handbag was missing. Security guards responded leading to the arrest of Mwangangi. Magistrate Martha Mutuku referred the matter to a probation officer who is to consider whether to grant Mwangangi an out of court sentence. The matter will be mentioned on 12th January. The case has caught the attention of Twitter users who used the platform to share their sentiments. Majority noted the irony in prosecuting the accused while alleged big-money looters like former Devolution CS Waiguru continue to prosper. We have sampled some Tweets below. The court should release The Father of 7 and detain the nurse for having only Ksh 105 in her purse Moremy Dantey (@MoremyDantey) January 8, 2018 You steal millions, you can pay your way out. The father of 7 only stole 105 thats why he couldnt buy his way out. Thats Kenyan Martin Cornel (@O_Cornel) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 still 105 and go to jail but 1billion and amend the law.??????? bronics alvin (@BronicsN) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 charged with stealing Ksh105 when looters of 791M+,5B et al are walking freely with govt security. May GOD deliver us Kijana Stevie Nderi (@HEStevieNderi) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 charged for stealing ksh 105, sheria tulizonazo zinamkandamiza maskini saaana, lets do away with them. Some people stole billions and they are f**ng free Ngosha Don (@NgoshaDj) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 charging this man will cost so much. Just give him that money instead. He needs it! That Kenyan Dude (@ThatKenyanDude) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 there is always no justice for the poor shadrack okoth okore (@OkoreOkoth) January 8, 2018 This Father of 7 story reminds me of my lecturer at Egerton, Dr. Apollos who once told us that if you must steal, steal something heavy. Yes, something heavier than Rick Ross not 105! John Nyiggih (@JNyiggih) January 8, 2018 Hata Fuel ya Landrover inapeleka Father of 7 court imeshinda pesa ameibaCourts should apply economics.. AKUNGU (@eng_akungu) January 8, 2018 From the story of father of 7 getting prosecuted for stealing sh 105,its safer and wiser to steal billions in Kenya and still catwalk around Eric Mose (@ItsMose) January 8, 2018 A father of 7, steals Ksh 105, he is taken to court to be prosecuted. Anne Waiguru, Ksh 20 billion disappeared under her watch, she is now a Governor. Kenya is a sad affair. juma (@jumaf3) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 charged in a court of law for stealing 105 shillings while the corrupt like Anne Waiguru, Mutahi Ngunyi and Murkomen are free after stealing Billions in the NYS corruption scandal. Ronald Kamanza?? (@RonaldKamanza) January 8, 2018 Boy child is under siege,Father of 7 charged for taking ksh105 without permission ni DHULMA!Girl child Waiguru robbed us bt still shes free @Sen. Busolo_Aggrey (@BusoloAggrey) January 8, 2018 A Father of 7 charged for stealing Ksh 105, When will Kenya be Fair? Waiguru Stole Billions and she is still catwalking out here like Kenya belongs to Kirinyaga! #KenyaDieHard?? (@ConradOmwenga) January 8, 2018 Are thr categories of theft??? Isnt stealing 1Billion the same as Stealing a Rwabe??Fact Father of 7 Stole,However, What he stole was not enough to play some gymnastics with the Law!! Bitch>>> The law is a BITCH, Thats what they say! MBICH.. Mwendwa Mbithi (@MwendwaMbithiKE) January 8, 2018 Si mtoe paybill tuchangie huyu Father of 7? Ngetich Dennis (@Kipkorir_Denno) January 8, 2018 Ksh105??? Father of 7 charged of stealing Kes 105! Hii Kenya aki ya nani! Wilson Mwangi (@WillieGooner) January 8, 2018 Father of 7 charged for stealing ksh 105. This could as well mean that if you intend to commit a crime, do a massive one until your people applaud you as a hero. IG: NaffKenya (@NaffKenya) January 8, 2018 Lets start a Paybill for the Father of 7 who stole Kes. 105. Boychild President anasemaje? Lagaless, HSC. ?? (@lagaless) January 8, 2018 If ever there was a better start to a new year then it would be by welcoming a bundle of joy. Kenyan female rapper Gloria Mecheo aka Xtatic and her lover, TV producer Mushking, are celebrating the arrival of their newborn. The femcee, who remarkably managed to conceal her pregnancy throughout the nine months, was elated as she took to social media to break the news. Sharing a picture of the bouncing baby boy named Kal-El, Xtatic wrote: So Jor-El and Lara hit me and Mushking up in true millennial fashion on the app like, Listen man, we changed our minds We hadnt caught up with the yallz politics n shit. And in true millennial fashion we said, New phone, who dis? So now to get a house by a farm, and Lois Lane, and Milo Sorry, wrong script, sorry Mask No, actually, sorry Mask, going to actually take Milo with me#NewBaby #WhoDis?#Kal_El. Xtatics partner, King Mushking Muriuki, was equally elated as he took to Instagram to describe Kal-El as the biggest blessing. He welcomed his son into the world writing: Welcome to ? Baby Kal-El,the biggest blessing possible to start my year off.Thank You God for @officialxtatic for bravely delivering him safely despite all the challenges faced! #SoliDeoGloria#daddygang #newlife #baby #Kalel#VoiceofGod #Superman The newborn is the couples second child after daughter Eden, from Xtatics previous relationship. Terence Mulligan of the Napa Valley Community Foundation (NVCF) has been named to the board of directors of the California Wellness Foundation. Mulligan has led the NVCF as its president for the last 13 years. Mulligan said he is honored to be joining the California Wellness Foundation. I believe the future of California, in many important ways, is being written in rural and semi-rural places where thorny issues like immigration and inequality are front and center, but philanthropic resources have historically been scarce, he said. Brandon left this earth on December 24, 2017. Brandon was an artist, poet, comedian, dancer, dreamer and he was spiritual. He was a dear friend to many and wherever he went brought joy. Brandon met the love of his life Lisa Tsitsivas in Napa, where he spent much of his childhood growing up. He had a great love of traveling and traveled to Europe. Lisa and Brandon went on a bike tour from Napa to southern California, up to Jackson Wyoming and down through Colorado to Arizona. Brandon had a very loving gentle soul and he deeply touched the lives of many of his dear friends and family. Brandon struggled with conforming to society and brought a childlike sense of joy wherever he went. He enjoyed life to the fullest. His last journey led him and Lisa, after 5 and a half years together to New Orleans where he lived for 6 weeks before he passed on Christmas eve. Brandon is predeceased by his great great Auntie Dorothy Joy, his great grandfather Stan Wood and his grandmother Carol Wright. He is survived by his mother Kelly Solari (smith), his father Jesse OConnor and his brother Joshua Marzan. He also leaves behind his uncle Kevin Smith, and Aunts Kasie Michel and Marianne Dort. There will be a memorial for his life at Fuller Park to honor his memory on January 27th at 1pm. Agnes was born to Frank and Lea Nye on August 2, 1914 in Keats, Kansas and after celebrating her 104th new year, decided to trade in her party hat for angel wings this year. Her earlier years were spent working on the farm with her six siblings in both Kansas and Colorado. After graduating college, she taught school in typical 1-room schoolhouse style, but that was far from the end of her journey. After marriage and a honeymoon to California, she packed .50 caliber bullets for the war effort and later worked as a seamstress at Rough Riders. One can only imagine the changes she experienced in her lifetime, from horse & buggy to flights to the moon or receiving news via a week-old letter to instantly watching events on your phone. But through all of her experiences, at the very core of Agnes, was her unwavering devotion to her family. She tirelessly led us all to live a life defined by famililal relationships with her example of selflessness, compassion, dedication, persistence, hard work, courage and love. Whether you were a relative, friend or someone she just met, you were truly touched and forever a better person because of your relationship with 'GG'. If you had the pleasure of sharing a part of your life with this unparalleled woman, you were loved, cherished and supported unconditionally. She joins in heaven her husband Wayne, son Robert 'Bob' and daughter Charleen. She is survived by daughter Wayneen Olson of Klamath River, CA, son and daughter-in-law Arlan & Karen Williams of Benicia, CA along with a host of loving grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Services are being coordinated with Tulocay Funeral Home and will be on the 27th of January at the 1st Presbyterian Church in Napa at 11 am, followed by internment and reception. MOSKOWITE CORNER The Lucite pulpit was empty, a cloth was draped over the keyboard, and all the padded chairs were stacked against the back wall. It was the first Sunday in 52 years without a service by the Community Church of Lake Berryessa. In the coming weeks, the furniture and books and articles of worship were to be removed down to the cross-topped wooden pedestals a member had hand-carved as symbolic Stations of the Cross for Easter services and this storefront-style space in a cream-colored one-story building would no longer be a chapel but an empty room. A week after worshiping there for the last time, half a dozen members returned Sunday to share memories of their congregation, and the bonds it had forged. They had found other places to attend services, in Napa or Vacaville or just down the road, yet all hoped that friendships and a shared sense of purpose would long outlive their church. The building is not the church, said Judy Johnson-Forseth, who attended services during its final two years. The people are the church. Set among the marinas, campgrounds and resorts ringing Lake Berryessa, the church emerged in 1965 as a summer-only congregation whose members were led by Napa-based Presbyterian ministers near a cemetery in the Spanish Flat area, amid the natural scenery that drew thousands of tourists to the region. There was a roadside sign that said Catholic Mass on Saturday night, Christian services on Sunday, remembered Carolyn Nelson, a Napa native who joined the congregation in 1974 when its members gathered outdoors only from Memorial Day to Labor Day when vacationers flocked to Lake Berryessa. They had these green benches, trees that went out that way, a pulpit and a little pump organ they used to bring in. As more people began settling in what began as a resort community, church members followed suit, hiring a pastor, switching to year-round worship and moving to Moskowite Corner in 1985. Their sanctuary was no cathedral a nondescript carpeted space flanked by small offices, with a wooden cross topping the sign mounted over the front door but it remained Lake Berryessas only permanent house of worship for nearly two decades, drawing as many as 40 people for Sunday worship. Over the years, some members came to see the nondenominational church as much more than a place to pray and sing. To some, the church and its minister Bob Lee, who arrived in 2005, has been an instrument to help Napans in need and even to get their own lives on track. I got really sick, and my family knew Bob and he came to see me in the hospital, remembered Angelo Tuvo of his first encounter with Lee in 2013, after Tuvo was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder. The doctors gave me six months; Bob visited me during that time and Ive come here ever since, and hes been a real help to me. Im going to miss this place, dearly, said Tuvo, whose wooden carvings came to adorn the churchs sanctuary including cross-topped platforms to symbolize the Stations of the Cross during the Easter season. I moved up here in 2016; Id gotten sick and I found this church broken body, broken spirit, recalled another member, Johnson-Forseth, who at one point was given only a week to live due to cirrhosis. Meeting Lee for the first time and asking him if an Alcoholics Anonymous group met in Lake Berryessa, she was told no, but received a bag of food and an invitation to church and now is studying at Napa Valley College to become an addiction counselor. This whole congregation has been instrumental in my walk with God, said Johnson-Forseth, who has since began a new AA group in Capell Valley. Its my family. When youre sick as I was, you need a strong support system. Members said their aid has included rent and utility assistance for those in need, whether in the church or not, as well as weekly food collections, a community Christmas dinner and a twice-yearly Napa ministry for the developmentally disabled. What I try to teach is the love of Christ, said Lee, a love of service to build a family that can rely on one another under the leadership of God not only to make their lives better, but the lives of their community better. Such assistance has often strained church finances, however, and the Lake Berryessa groups small size has made for a tiny fundraising base. Weve always been hurting a bit financially, said Bonnie Radi, who joined the church in 2011. I never really understood how he kept the doors open. The 2003 opening of Valley Christian Church nearby left the two congregations catering to the same small, isolated community, although Lee described relations between the churches as friendly enough to cooperate on many programs. But members said a combination of the late-2000s recession and a declining resort industry in Lake Berryessa resulting in the loss of jobs and full-year residents may have done more to pressure the Community Church, where Sunday attendance dropped from a peak of 30 or more to barely a dozen in its final year. When Lee decided to retire from the pulpit and floated the idea with the church board last fall, its leaders decided to wind down the congregation. One of our thoughts was that it was better to have one healthy church than two that struggle, he said of the Community Church and Valley Christian, which continues to operate in Lake Berryessa. Lee, a longtime Vallejo Police officer before entering the ministry, plans to stay in the community for the time being, though his next mission remains undecided. Some of the church members already have made the move to nearby Valley Christian, a similarly tight-knit nondenominational group. But in his churchs final service on New Years Eve, the pastor sought to assure members that the good they had accomplished together can go on, even if the church itself cannot. For my last sermon, I told them, this church is closing, but nothing can take away what weve created, which is a family, he recalled a week later. And thats something well carry with us all the rest of our lives. The size and cultural complexity of California spawns many unique political conflicts, and none more so than a years-long, multi-party squabble within the nations largest judicial system. The new year will doubtless see renewal of the power struggle, which grew out of the 2002 decision by the Legislature and then-Gov. Gray Davis to consolidate what had been county-governed courts into a statewide system managed by the state Judicial Council, chaired by the Supreme Courts chief justice, and its Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC). Consolidation was strongly advocated by then-Chief Justice Ron George and counties were happy to have the state relieve them of financial responsibility for the courts. But in time and particularly when the state budget was awash in red ink during the Great Recession many local judges came to resent what they saw as arbitrary management decisions by the Judicial Council and a bloated and self-serving bureaucracy that starved trial courts of funds they needed to handle huge increases in civil and criminal caseloads. Ultimately, it led to creation of the Alliance of California Judges, which broke with the California Judges Association and advocated a more confrontational attitude toward the San Francisco-based court administration. The Alliance now counts about a third of the states judges as members and has waged a non-stop duel with the judicial establishment, even though George retired in 2010 and was succeeded by Tani Cantil-Sakauye. Flashpoints in the duel have been a massive courthouse construction program that George also championed and a computerized statewide case management system that cost hundreds of millions of dollars but could not be made operational. Late last year, the rebel Alliance hailed a report by the state auditor, Elaine Howle, that mildly criticized the Judicial Councils purchasing processes. This is yet another blow to the branch occurring right before state budgeting action, the Alliance said. The Judicial Council/AOC is the same entity that brought shame on the judicial branch for wasting over a half billion dollars on a failed IT project. The most likely battleground in 2018 is pending legislation that would overhaul the bail system for criminal defendants, reducing the power of judges to set cash bail and relying, instead, on newly created pre-trial services agencies in local court systems to determine whether defendants can be released without bail. The measure, Senate Bill 10, has passed the Senate but was stalled in the Assembly, in part due to strong opposition from judges, as well as from law enforcement groups and private bail bond agents. The Judicial Council is also opposed because it reduces judges role in pre-trial release. And while the Alliance is opposed, it is critical of giving a vast amount of oversight responsibility for a revised system to the Judicial Council and the AOC even though they failedto build a statewide case management system, wasting over a half a billion dollars (and) lavished hundreds of millions of dollars on opulent new courthouses while the older buildings rot and crumble. Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislature have shied away from inserting themselves into the long-running battle, largely because it would smack of interfering with a co-equal branch of government. Theyve left it to Cantil-Sakauye, who has made some management reforms but has not placated the Alliance. When the court system was consolidated, it created, in essence, a huge new state agency with nearly 20,000 mostly unionized employees and a budget thats now more than $3.5 billion a year. The proposed bail reform would enlarge the system even more, adding potentially thousands of new workers in pre-trial services agencies. A big bureaucracy with a big budget is always going to be politicized, as the conflict illustrates. The outcry would be enormous if large numbers of farmers began using Zyklon B as a pesticide on fruits and vegetables. That was the nerve gas Nazi Germany used to execute six million Jews and eight million other victims in their notorious death camps. But there was little outcry except from environmentalists when the chief of President Trumps Environmental Protection Agency late in 2017 decided to let U.S. farms continue using another nerve gas invented by the Nazis on crops as diverse as nuts, apples, broccoli, melons, citrus, corn and soybeans. German scientists didnt invent the organophosphate chemical chlorpyrifos as a pesticide; rather they used it to gas Jews, gypsies and others they crammed into the airtight rear areas of mobile vans, a total of more than half a million people. Trump is not alone in allowing manufacturers (primarily the Dow Chemical Co.) to keep selling the noxious substance to farmers and others. In fact, ex-President Barack Obamas EPA didnt move to prevent use of chlorpyrifos (pronounced klawr-peer-uh-fos). Obamas EPA, though, did not claim the evidence against the substance was insufficient to declare it a health hazard, as current EPA head Scott Pruitt did. But the EPA under Obama did drag its feet, so much that in a 2015 hearing of the Ninth Circuit federal Court of Appeals, longtime appellate Judge Wallace Tashima scolded an EPA lawyer about the eight years it had by then taken the agency to work on a possible chlorpyrifos ban. I think this is a pretty miserable record, Tashima opined. The upshot is that chemical companies, not objective scientists, appear to control Americas pesticide regulation, no matter who is president. That became clear when a scientific panel of Californias Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment last month voted unanimously to place the chemical on the list of dangerous substances under the 1986 Proposition 65. The panel included professors from UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC Davis and Stanford, along with a scientist from the pharmaceutical firm Genentech. Proposition 65 hazard warnings usually are found on gasoline pumps and tanker trucks, not grocery shelves. But California farms now use more than 1 million pounds of chlorpyrifos yearly, about one-fourth of the national total, even if it is at lower concentrations than what Nazi executioners employed. Just last May, 50 farm workers exposed to its spraying near Bakersfield immediately suffered symptoms like vomiting, nausea and fainting. A 2016 EPA report found there are no safe uses of chlorpyrifos. All food exposure, the study said, is unsafe and there is no safe level in drinking water. The chemical is found at unsafe levels in schools, homes and widespread communities in agricultural areas like the Central Valley. In fields, unsafe levels continue 18 days after spraying. Ironically, this chemical also puts the lie to the old saying that an apple a day keeps the doctor away. For apples are one of the crops where chlorpyrifos is most commonly used. In California, it is used most heavily in Kern, Tulare and Monterey counties. A detailed 2016 study by Project TENDR, an independent group of academic scientists, found Children in Americaare at an unacceptably high risk of neurodevelopmental disorders that affect the brain and nervous system, including autism, intellectual disabilities and behavioral disabilities. The pesticide puts children at risk for lower IQ, attention deficit disorders and childhood tremors, among other problems. Instead of using it, farmers could fight insect pests with botanically-sourced pesticides including cinnamon oil and garlic oil. State officials report some have switched to another family of insecticides known as neonicitinoids. One problem: These substances threaten bees, even if they are easier on people. But no one has to make changes for now because of the Pruitt ruling. So children not only in California, but nationwide, may be endangered by eating foods their parents have good reason to believe healthy. Thats in part because studies show toxicity even at very low concentrations. The bottom line: Obama may have been slow dealing with the chlorpyrifos problem. But Trump and his appointee Pruitt make it clear they dont even see a problem. Jodie Foster, accomplished producer, director and actor, isn't impressed with the fare generally available at the local multiplex. Noting the film industry's current infatuation with superheroes, she complained last week to Radio Times Magazine that "going to the movies has become like a theme park." Continuing: "Studios making bad content in order to appeal to the masses and shareholders is like fracking -- you get the best return right now but you wreck the earth." Anyone who criticizes popular taste immediately makes herself a target for charges of high-browed snobbery, which is precisely what happened to Foster. Some called her "old-fashioned," others argued that superhero movies aren't necessarily as "soulless" as she suggests and one critic asks, "what's wrong with a little escapism?" And, after all, movie-making is a business. The movies that studios can afford to make are generally obliged to reflect the taste of the viewing public. And the studios seem to be getting it right: among the top 10 on IMDb's list of top-grossing movies for 2017 are "Star Wars: The Last Jedi," "Wonder Woman," "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2," "Spider-Man: Homecoming," "Thor: Ragnarok" and "Justice League." Still, maybe Foster has a point. The top-10 list implies considerably more than a "little escapism." And, with TV, Netflix, Hulu, sports, videogames, binge-watching, alcohol, marijuana and opioids, maybe escapism is getting a bit out of hand. One wonders whether we could raise the bar a little. Here are a couple of places to start: In one of the less-populated theatres at your multiplex you may find "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri." Critics liked this movie, but on IMDb's list of top-grossing films, it can be found at about number 82. In "Three Billboards" Mildred (Frances McDormand) posts said billboards to spur the local sheriff (Woody Harrelson) into a more vigorous investigation of the rape and murder of her daughter, a vicious, random crime that Mildred feels has been ignored and forgotten. There are no superheroes in "Three Billboards." The evil forces of the universe aren't vanquished or even identified. It's a dark, ambiguous, very human tale about what ordinary people do in response to unspeakable violence. Its excellent acting, good writing and dark humor raise complicated questions about guilt, revenge and justice. Here's another non-superhero film: Woody Allen's "Wonder Wheel." I'm going out on a limb to recommend this one. Many critics didn't like it much, but some of the reviews may have been colored by Allen's private life. But art has at least some right to stand apart from the artist. "Wonder Wheel" is this year's version of what Allen has been doing every year for several decades. It's not his best work, but it's serious, competent storytelling set against the backdrop of our complicated human condition. It's a play on film that at times takes on the look and feel of a Greek tragedy. Ginny (Kate Winslet) is a clam house waitress whose bad choices condemn her to a fraught marriage to an alcoholic carny named Humpty (Jim Belushi) in a noisy, dying Coney Island. She has an affair with a hunky lifeguard (Justin Timberlake) that reminds her of her prior aspirations. Things get complicated when Humpty's gorgeous daughter (Juno Temple) shows up and immediately catches the lifeguard's eye. Neither Ginny nor Mildred is Wonder Woman. Neither encounters and destroys the evil forces of the universe. But they are very human heroes in their own right who struggle with humanity's primary dilemma: the ambiguities, doubts and uncertainties that reside in the human heart. Of course, the American viewing public is not likely to suddenly abandon the escapism of superhero movies, nor should it be expected to; they have their merits, and we all need to occasionally "escape." But the best art, literature, music and film are meant to be escapes from ordinary life, as well; it's just that when you come back home to "real life," you're able to bring along with you something that may help you make a little more sense of it. Join us for a community gathering celebrating the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and continuing his legacy through a day of action and compassion. Everyone is welcome. This event is being organized by the MLK Coalition - a group of non-profits, religious groups and local service organizations. Action starts the day before. On Sunday, Jan. 14, at 2 p.m. there will be a viewing and discussion of Family Film The Watsons Go to Birmingham (rated PG), at the Napa County Library - 580 Coombs St, Napa. At 6 p.m. there will be a viewing and discussion of American documentary 13th (rated MA), a film that explores the "intersection of race, justice and mass incarceration in the U.S, at Congregation Beth Shalom, 1455 Elm St., Napa. On Monday, Jan. 15, from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. the Community Service Projects Basecamp will be at St. Johns Parish Hall, 924 Napa St., Napa. At 7 p.m., the Community Celebration will be at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, 960 Caymus St, Napa. To sign up for community service projects, visit cvnl.galaxydigital.com and click on MLK Day of Service. Follow us on Facebook: @mlkmonday. Jim Tomlinson Napa New to Napa and ready to start their family, Courtney and Raul Garcia gave birth to a 6-pound, 13-ounce baby girl on Jan. 2. The baby, Mae Louisa Garcia, was the first to be born at Napas Queen of the Valley Medical Center this year. We thought she was going to be a New Years Day baby, Courtney Garcia said from her hospital bed on Tuesday afternoon. Mae was born at 11:40 a.m. Her parents said she was due last Friday, which would have made her one of the last babies born in 2017 instead of the first of 2018. The Garcia family checked into the hospital about 7 a.m. Monday, then they were sent home. They checked in again about midnight. I did a lot of walking trying to get her to come out, Courtney Garcia said. I was ready and she wasnt. Courtney had gestational diabetes during her pregnancy, so she was worried about Maes sugar levels. By Tuesday afternoon, though, it seemed that the babys color was good and so was her health, she said. Courtney, 36, and Raul, 38, have been together since 2006 and married since 2009, but decided to wait to have children until after they were done taking care of Courtneys father who was undergoing chemotherapy. They took care of him for three years then, after he died, they knew it was time. Courtney Garcia chose the babys first name in honor of her father, who was from Tennessee. Tuesday, Jan. 2 0712 The sounds of jackhammering were heard on McCorkle Avenue starting at 7 a.m. 0818 Report of a reckless driver swerving, passing over double yellows, and almost causing several collisions on Silverado Trail. The car was last seen turning onto Old Howell Mountain Road. 0907 A car jack was stolen from the passenger seat of an unlocked car parked on Mariposa Lane. Other items in the car appeared to have been shuffled around, and the trunk was left open. 1351 Police had previously sent a letter admonishing a Mitchell Drive resident whose barking dogs have caused complaints from neighbors. The resident said the barking dogs do not belong to him. 1702 A car was reported stolen from Hunt Avenue between midnight and 1 a.m. 1721 Medical aid for a person having a heart attack on Allison Avenue. Wednesday, Jan. 3 1135 Someone reported fraudulent charges on their credit card. 1322 Items were reported stolen from an unlocked car on McCorkle Avenue. 1416 A man whod reported his car stolen said hed found it in a Hunt Avenue parking lot. Damage to the ignition system had left it undrivable. 1520 Report of a clothing donation bin overflowing at Elmhurst/Quail. An officer contacted the company that operates the bin. 1548 Report of a non-injury accident on Spring Mountain Road. 1628 A young man was seen flailing his arms in and out of traffic near Main/Vidovich. Police checked the area. 1630 Report of a possible drunk driver at Main/Adams. Police checked the area. Thursday, Jan. 4 1239 Someone working at a St. Helena business had fraudulently been using a Social Security number belonging to an 8-year-old child in Glendale. 1333 Report of a white husky-type dog wandering around Tainter Street. 1545 Non-injury accident near Main/Sulphur Springs. 2132 Report of a possible trespasser on a Madrona Avenue property. Police made sure the property was secure. Friday, Jan. 5 0536 A caller reported hearing a loud noise earlier this morning on Pratt Avenue. She wasnt sure what time it had occurred because shed gone back to sleep. 1000 Report of a reckless driver going over double yellow lines near Silverado/Pope. 1016 Medical aid for a woman feeling sick on Mountain View Avenue. 1233 A package was reported stolen from someones front porch on Spring Mountain Court. 1547 Medical aid for a man having a seizure on Railroad Avenue. 1602 The fire department responded for a lift assist after a man fell on Laguna Seca Court. 1722 A non-injury accident briefly blocked the Main/Madrona intersection. 2209 The windows of an SUV were smashed on Monte Vista. 2254 Following a traffic stop, police arrested a 24-year-old Napa woman for violation of probation. 2347 Report of people talking loudly outside a Park Street home, keeping a neighbor awake. Saturday, Jan. 6 0459 Following a traffic stop at Main/Adams, police arrested a 23-year-old South Lake Tahoe man for an outstanding warrant. 1121 Report of a dead possum on Spring Street, near Hudson/Valley View. 1929 Report of a car unable to maintain its lane near Main/Grayson. Sunday, Jan. 7 0307 Police responded to a report of four or five people yelling and screaming on Crinella Drive. 0333 Medical aid on San Juan Court. 1009 Police assisted with a 12-year-old girl who was stuck in a bathroom on Quail Court. 1027 A driver saw hazardous debris fall all over Oak Avenue from an untarped trailer being pulled by a Toyota pickup. 1255 Report of a leaf blower going for about half an hour on Stockton Street. 1357 Medical aid for an elderly woman feeling very dizzy on Pratt Avenue. 1412 A car parked on Crinella Drive was damaged in a hit-and-run. 1423 Two packages addressed to someone in Sacramento were found opened on Kearney Street. Monday, Jan. 8 0012 Report of a suspicious man whod been watching a woman on Main Street. 0849 Report of a landscaper blocking an alleyway near St. Andrews Court. 0941 Medical aid on San Juan Court. Tuesday, Jan. 9 0408 An officer went to Calistoga to help search for a man last seen jumping out of a window on Mora Avenue. 0437 A caller claimed to be hiding in a closet to avoid a violent brother. It starts as wine. But before a concoction from St. Mayhem reaches its growing audience, founder-owners and winemakers Kat and Rob McDonald tweak the equation, removing from the final formula as much convention as possible. They prefer peppers. Mounds and mounds of them, Kat said of the jalapenos and habaneros that are blended with a Lake County sauvignon blanc, imparting their flavors on the wine before being strained off. Or peaches; there are the Pacific Northwest varietals of the fruit that are pureed to join a mashup between dried ginger and chardonnay from Clarksburg and Napa. Or the fresh mint, hundreds of pounds worth, on which a blend of chardonnay and sauvignon blanc sits with raspberries and Matcha Tea before bubbles are added, becoming what its creators call Tao of Mint, or, the lovechild between a rose and a mojito. Speaking in the St. Mayhem headquarters on Coombs Street in Napa in December, McDonald attempted to define the fusions dreamt up with her co-founder, co-owner, co-winemaker and husband Rob. Its not just wine, she said. We just kind of kept going. Kat, a native of New Orleans and Rob, of Australia, began traditionally, producing sauvignon blanc and cabernet sauvignon through labels like Girls in the Vineyard. The couple still produces their customary wines which, like St. Mayhem, fall under the purview of their winery Art + Farm Wine. And then St. Mayhem is its own kind of separate animal, Kat said. We started just making really good wine and then we just didnt want to stop. Experiments with co-ferments and aging the wines on a litany of ingredients, from chocolate and dried cherries to the eventual peppers, gradually began to yield creations that clicked. For years, we were just playing around, McDonald said, and eventually landed on a few that just worked. While polarizing, St. Mayhems inventions have cultivated a steady momentum over the brands short six- or seven-year history, pushing it into a growing number of stores and onto wine lists, garnering praise from the likes of Wine Spectator, and prompting the McDonalds to now seek a permanent home for the brand in the form of its own production facility. Ahead of the expansion, the team grew its ranks this year by six new employees and in July began tackling the market for cans or as McDonald dubs them, craft wine coolers. In the works since about 2010, the first bottles of St. Mayhem were made and sold in 2015. Since then, production has inched up, McDonald said, mostly taking place at Mendocino Wine Company in Ukiah and Bin to Bottle in Napa. Though exact amounts today are elusive, lots are small, she said, estimating that numbers for their latest cooler, Huckfest, came to roughly 1,500 cases of 250 milliliter cans. A collaboration with family friend Andy Erickson, one of Napas most celebrated winemakers whose credits include the high-end wines of Mayacamas Vineyards, Ovid and Screaming Eagle, Huckfest offers a St. Mayhem take on mulled wine; a marriage between red varietals from Amador County and a cast of spices. The concept matured from the flasks of mulled wine Rob and Andy would devise on trips to Squaw Valley for their childrens ski races. To McDonalds knowledge, the wine is the first of Ericksons efforts to make its way into a can. Adding another foothold to St. Mayhems growing reach, the Huckfest debuted this month in all Whole Foods stores throughout Northern California. Before the advent of St. Mayhem in cans, such distribution was more challenging, McDonald said. Though buyers would eagerly take on bottles of St. Mayhem, she said, many then faced the hurdle of Where do I put this in my store? We sort of created a category. We werent just creating a new wine. Its a whole new category. The coolers continue to defy consumer-friendly categorization, yet with each can coming in at slightly more than a serving size, curious drinkers are offered a slightly easier point of entry. As for wine lists, St. Mayhem is available mostly in Southern California restaurants and brewpubs, per its distribution through Stone Brewing. In that vein, the brand has a place reserved on the menu at Stone Brewings upcoming brewery and restaurant in downtown Napa, and is thus far the sole wine being offered. Explaining the decision to carry the brand earlier this year, Stone co-founder Greg Koch, also a longtime friend of the McDonalds, noted its appeal from a brewers perspective. Its a very craft beer approach to wine, he said. A lot more of the why not? Working with Stone also brings full circle a back and forth of distribution between the McDonalds and Koch. The couple previously owned and operated Old Bridge Cellars the first to distribute Stone Brewing outside of the brewerys hometown San Diego area. Fast-forward to the creations of St. Mayhem, We were enjoying drinking them, McDonald said, but we were like, No ones going to buy them. And (Greg) said, Yeah they will. Ill prove it to you. Today, the demand speaks for itself. More people want it than we can make right now, McDonald said. Were kind of at the tipping point We cant get on canning lines fast enough. Hence the need for a production facility specifically for St. Mayhem, which the McDonalds are hoping can be found in Napa. This is our home, she said. its the center of wine. Its geographically beautiful. All that aside, this is an incredible community of people. I cant say enough about them. Such a facility would likely include a tasting room, she added, though it couldnt be what everybody else is doing. We would kind of have to St. Mayhem it. With Huckfest bringing the current St. Mayhem portfolio to four craft wine coolers, the sights for long-term production are set on a dozen coolers being available year-round and another half a dozen appearing seasonally or as one-off experiments. For now, the next concoction is in the works, something McDonald calls an ode to sangria, while on the distribution front Tao of Mint is set to hit Whole Foods shelves next year. In the meantime, as the hunt for a facility continues in tandem with a widening reach and mounting demand, McDonald counts St. Mayhems limits as few. If theres anything thats going to prevent us from growing, she said, its going to be if we cant get the quality of ingredients we want. Other than that, The rules dont apply. Congress has a long to do list for the new year. Issues include funding the government, renewing a childrens health program, agreeing on a plan to prevent hundreds of thousands of young people from deportation, boosting border security, busting spending caps and lifting the debt ceiling. This would be a daunting task in any year, but the mid-term elections in 2018 create a tighter schedule for Congress. The challenge is that bipartisan support will be required to get these issues resolved. FY2019 reconciliation? One key question is whether Republicans will attempt to advance another reconciliation bill in 2018, a tactic that allows expedited passage of certain budgetary legislation with a simple majority (instead of the usual 60 votes necessary for Senate approval). The Republican Senate majority has narrowed to 51-49, following the Alabama special election. Republicans will be hard-pressed to advance an FY2019 reconciliation bill, whether it is an entitlement reform bill focused on welfare programs, an Affordable Care Act (ACA) repeal-and-replace bill, or a tax reform technical corrections bill. Election-year politics Heading into 2018, election year politics will have a profound impact on both the agenda and the composition of Congress. Retirements are expected to grow as we head into primary season, and this could have a significant impact on what the Congress looks like in 2019, as well as how strongly positioned the Georgia congressional delegation is within the overall Congress. Fourteen members of the Georgia congressional delegation are up for re-election this year. Georgia has 10 Republicans and four Democrats serving in the U.S. House of Representatives. The states two Republican senators are not up for re-election in this cycle, providing Georgia with some stability during what is likely to be a tumultuous election season. Federal funding Emory leverages federal funding in our research endeavors as well as in our education and training programs. When funding is stagnant or at risk through continuing resolutions and/or sequestration, it places financial stress on the federal governments partners. This funding climate is especially complicated because the current budget caps are lower than what congressional appropriators deem acceptable. Further, emergency funding to meet disaster aid needs is increasing anxiety among conservative members who cannot be counted on to vote for increased spending. Congressional leaders and the White House are working toward an agreement to raise the spending caps. Once a budget deal is enacted, we expect it to take up to four weeks to draft an omnibus appropriations package with the revised funding levels. Without a deal, sequestration or across-the-board funding cuts will return. We are currently operating under a continuing resolution through Jan. 19. Health care Health care policy will continue to percolate on Capitol Hill this year. A number of programs that Emory cares about the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP), Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments, and the 340B drug discount program are in funding peril or under legislative scrutiny. Congress recognizes the need to take further action on the opioid crisis. Some GOP members are still calling for ACA repeal-and-replace legislation; meanwhile, a promise to Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) to bolster the health insurance markets by codifying subsidy payments remains unfulfilled. Of particular interest to Emory is legislation to improve health outcomes for Medicare beneficiaries living with chronic conditions. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), chair of the Senate Finance Committee, recently announced he will not be running for re-election in 2018; as he works to solidify his legacy, the probability of advancing a chronic care bill increases. Immigration Last week, President Trump urged a bipartisan deal to protect undocumented immigrants from deportation, along with his demand for enhanced border security. Facing a March 5 deadline, leadership on both sides of the Capitol, and in both parties, are working toward a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) agreement. Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) is pushing a merit-focused immigration bill to be included in any deal. Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) has endorsed protections for those who received status under former President Obamas deferred action executive order. Expect this issue to remain politically volatile, threatening a government shutdown as early as next week. Infrastructure Infrastructure is a top priority for President Trump. The administration is readying a proposal to generate $1 trillion for improvements. The possibilities it presents for Georgia are numerous, from federal funding for the Savannah Port Authority to facilitating a transit line into the Clifton corridor. The biggest challenge will be how to pay for it, and whether the Republicans can find the votes for passage or if it will be a bipartisan measure. Expect to hear more about this issue ahead of the State of the Union Address, scheduled for Jan. 30. Emory will celebrate the life and work of Martin Luther King Jr. this month with speakers, community recognition awards and an opportunity to help others with a Day On of community service. Campus events kick off this Thursday before the Jan. 15 holiday with a special lecture in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day featuring the Rev. Raphael G. Warnock, who will speak at 6 p.m. in Tull Auditorium at Emory University School of Law. Since 2005, Warnock has served as the senior pastor of Atlantas historic Ebenezer Baptist Church, which was founded in 1886 and is known as Kings spiritual home and for its ongoing legacy of social activism. Warnock graduated with a bachelors degree in psychology from Morehouse College, and holds a master of divinity, master of philosophy and PhD in systemic theology from Union Theological Seminary. His lecture will be followed by a reception in Hunter Atrium. Admission is free, but those attending should RSVP. Martin Luther King Jr. Day Monday, Jan. 15 is a university holiday, but at Emory the week ushers in an array of activities and service projects to honor the famed civil rights leader. Since classes begin Jan. 16-17, Emorys traditional MLK Day On of community service will be held Feb. 3 on the Atlanta campus and Jan. 20 on the Oxford College campus. Here is a current schedule of Emorys King Week events: Thursday, Jan. 11 MLK Day Lecture, 6 p.m., Tull Auditorium, Gambrell Hall The Rev. Raphael G. Warnock, senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, will speak. The son of two Pentecostal pastors, Warnock is the fifth and youngest person called to the senior pastorate of the Ebenezer Baptist Church. His activism was honored in 2016 when his footprints were placed on the International Civil Rights Walk of Fame. Hosted by Emory Law, the event is free; reception to follow. Monday, Jan. 15 MLK Day Holiday Day of Service at Branan Towers, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Glenn Memorial UMC Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church is sponsoring an MLK Day of Service to assist residents at Branan Towers Senior Living in East Atlanta. Volunteers may meet at the church at 2 p.m. to carpool and bus to the site. For more information, email the Rev. Brent Huckaby. Wednesday, Jan. 17 King Week keynote, 5 p.m., Cox Hall Ballroom Tim Wise, one of the nations most prominent antiracist essayists and educators, will present a lecture in observance of Emorys King Week celebration. Wises antiracism work traces back to his days as a college activist in the 1980s fighting for divestment from and economic sanctions against apartheid South Africa. Following graduation, Wise pursued social justice as a youth coordinator and associate director of the Louisiana Coalition Against Racism and Nazism. He has served as an adjunct professor at the Smith College of Social Work and served as an adviser to the Fisk University Race Relations Institute. The event, which is free and open to the public, is sponsored by Emorys Department of African American Studies and Campus Life. MLK Celebration, 7:30 p.m., Old Church, Oxford College This years celebration features speaker Beverly Daniel Tatum, a clinical psychologist and higher education thought leader known for her expertise on race relations, along with music from Oxford College and community choirs. Tatum served 13 years as Spelman College president and has written extensively on racial identity development, race in the classroom and strategies for creating inclusive campus environments. The program will include selected readings from King and other civil rights leaders, as well as presentations from Oxford students. Voices of Praise gospel choir, Oxappella and the Newton County MLK Interdenominational Choir will perform. Thursday, Jan. 18 MLK Celebration and Community Service Awards, 4 p.m., Claudia Nance Rollins Auditorium, Rollins School of Public Health For more than 20 years, Emorys Rollins School of Public Health and Goizueta Business School have partnered to present the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Service Awards. With a theme of Uniting in Divisive Times, this years program features guest speaker James Bailey, chair and co-founder of the Phoenix Leadership Foundation, which is dedicated to funding and creating programs that provide positive role models for young black men. Though its auxiliary programs, the foundation has reached thousands of young men across Metro Atlanta. The program also recognizes members of the greater metro Atlanta community who raise awareness of social injustice, speak on behalf of justice, celebrate diversity and impel action in building a better future. The ceremony is free and open to the public. Saturday, Jan. 20 MLK Day of Service, Oxford College Members of the Oxford College community are encouraged to volunteer for the 2018 Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service. For more information or to register to attend, contact Ricardo Horne at ricardo.horne@emory.edu. Sunday, Jan. 21 2018 Beloved Community Worship, 11 a.m., Cannon Chapel The Rev. Dominque A. Robinson affectionately known as Rev. D will preach at a service that also features Emorys Voices of Inner Strength Gospel Choir. Lunch will follow in Brooks Commons. Scholar, teacher and award-winning Christian leader, Robinson is currently serves as the youth and young adult pastor at Shaw Temple AME Zion Church in Smyrna, Georgia. She earned a BA in government and psychology from Georgetown University and a masters of theology from Emorys Candler School of Theology. She is a 2017 graduate of Columbia Theological Seminary, where she earned a doctorate of ministry in gospel and culture. Saturday, Feb. 3 Volunteer Emorys Day On Day of Service, varying times Members of the Emory community are invited to honor Kings legacy by taking time to offer a day on. To learn more about community service projects or to volunteer, visit Volunteer Emorys Days of Service page, where information will be posted as the event nears. Emory University King Week events are supported by the Department of African American Studies, Emory Campus Life, Emory University School of Law, Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church, Goizueta Business School, Oxford College Religious and Spiritual Life, Rollins School of Public Health, the Office of Spiritual and Religious Life and Volunteer Emory. For years, global companies like Airbnb, MasterCard and Fitbit have used big data to better understand the dynamic landscape of business and consumer engagement. In South Florida, the trending topic of big data continues to push business leaders toward the incorporation and understanding of advanced computing and algorithms to effectively improve current functionality and growth. At the University of Miamis Center for Computational Science (UM CCS), experts are constantly engaged with data scientists around the world to remain at the forefront of the rapidly changing and profoundly impactful use of data as an advantage over their competitors. In addition to conducting research, CCS partners with local business leaders, including UM alumni, to dive into the world of big data. Recently, as part of the second annual CCS Big Data Conference and Workshop, held at the UM Robert and Judi Prokop Newman Alumni Center, Emily Hill, director of strategy and analytics at VITAS Healthcare and a 2014 MBA graduate of the School of Business Administration, had an opportunity to expand upon her knowledge of big datas influence over the healthcare sector. Like Hill, many attendees are not computer scientists, but instead understand the importance and opportunity that big data can bring to their work. Hill answered a few questions about her experience at the conference: UM News: How do you anticipate the use of big data will impact the future of your work in the healthcare industry? Emily Hill: The future of data analytics within the healthcare industry is bright. While there is much work to be done, there are great opportunities to be realized in patient care, operations and traditional support services. UM News: What was your biggest take-away from the conference? Hill: I do not have a traditional data science background so the opportunity to participate in the Big Data Conference and Workshop allowed me to hear valuable insights from business leaders and learn other ways to leverage data in my role. Additionally, I work with a team of data scientists and engineers, so learning more about the technical components of their work allows me to more readily collaborate with them. UM News: As an alumna of the University and business leader in South Florida, what is the value of having CCS as a resource? Hill: The Center and its resources provide opportunities to connect with individuals working in similar fields and the ability to participate in events like the Big Data Conference. The UM CCS Big Data Conference and Workshop is an annual event that will continue to expand upon and incorporate the use of big data in South Florida. For more information on the Center for Computational Science, visit www.ccs.miami.edu. Posted by Mark Williams | January 9, 2018 Volkswagen has taken the first step in protecting the name of its global pickup truck, the Amarok, for the U.S. marketplace by filing a trademark application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, presumably because it is preparing to eventually sell the mid-size pickup truck in the states. According to Motrolix.com, the registration process started Nov. 22, 2017. No doubt VW is protecting itself here, making sure that no other company automotive or otherwise can claim the Amarok name before VW enters the potentially lucrative U.S. mid-size pickup market. The mid-size pickup truck class has steadily grown during the last several years. Next to join the mix will be the 2019 Ford Ranger, set to debut at the 2018 North American International Auto Show in Detroit next week. Additionally, although not officially announced, we expect a new Nissan Frontier in the near future and possibly a U.S. Mercedes Benz X-Class, which will share a platform with the new Nissan. How soon a VW Amarok will be sold in the U.S. is anyone's guess, but VW has proven itself quite capable in producing solid three-row SUVs: Both the Tiguan and Atlas won their respective Cars.com Challenges in 2017. Although VW did not make an official announcement about the trademark application, it would need to get many issues in order before it could jump into the U.S. mid-size pickup market. Among them: It will need to produce the Amarok somewhere in North America in order to price it competitively, but that takes a huge investment, which may not be justifiable given the size of the mid-size market and the average transaction price for existing competitors. However, if those factors fall into place, the trademark puts VW in the perfect position for having a dramatic impact. Manufacturer image 18:38 Films loaded with social message may be the trend in the industry but Anurag Kashyap believes filmmakers should not be expected to deliver a message through their movies. The director, whose upcoming film Mukkabaaz promotes sports in its own way, said as a filmmaker his aim is never to address a social issue. "Films are not supposed to give a message. A film is not a charity or an NGO. We have been making love stories since forever but people still don't know how to love. "Even if a film gives a message, people clap for a moment and then forget. As a filmmaker, I don't believe in giving a message. The only time I gave a message in my film was in Black Friday," Kashyap said in a group interview in New Delhi. The director said Mukkabaaz may be a pro-sports films, but it is not an "advertisement" for boxing. "It is a film which shows us a mirror. What people take from it depends on them." The film has been given a U/A certificate by the CBFC and Kashyap yesterday praised censor board chief Prasoon Joshi for a "reasonable, rational and empowering experience". While the CBFC was criticised for suggesting modifications in Bhansali's Padmavat, including a title change, Kashyap said he believes in speaking against or forany authority, based on his "personal experiences". "Padmavat getting modifications is not my personal experience with CBFC. I have had my own experiences with the censor board. It was my first experience with Prasoon and I was literally given the space and respect a filmmaker should get. I was given the space to explain the context of the things in my film and it has never happened before. "What Padmavati went through only Bhansali knows. My personal experience has been great (this time). I have always said the CBFC is not supposed to cut the film. I still believe in that and we are heading towards it. It is going to be a long process." Kashyap said being the head of CBFC is not an easy job and he would never want to be in that situation. "Prasoon's position is not an easy place to be in. He will be accused of a lot of things and by the end of it, will lose a lot of friends. I would never want to be in such a position. "If something wrong happens I criticise it, but when something good has happened, I am suppose to praise it as well," he said. -- PTI U.S. News ranks UF Online No. 12 in the nation for online bachelors degree programs UF Online, the University of Floridas online bachelors degree program, is ranked No. 12 in the 2018 U.S. News & World Report Best Online Programs in the country, up eight places from its previous spot at No. 20 in 2017. This makes the University of Florida the top-ranked public university for online undergraduate programs in Florida, according to the U.S. News list. UF Online was ranked No. 12 based on the following factors: student engagement (35 percent); student services and technology (25 percent); faculty credentials and training (20 percent); and peer reputation (20 percent). We are thrilled with this latest ranking and recognition from U.S. News, says Evangeline Cummings, assistant provost and director of UF Online. I am extremely proud of this campus and in particular the accomplishments of our amazing UF faculty that have propelled UF up eight spots in the rankings since last year. The University of Floridas commitment to being the best online undergraduate program in the nation is only fortified by these rankings, as we continue to deliver and expand academically rigorous programs paired with an engaging and rich student experience. Other interesting findings from the U.S. News rankings include: The University of Florida is the No. 1-ranked school in the Southeastern Conference for online bachelors degree programs. Three graduate programs at the University of Florida also achieved top rankings: Education ranked No. 2 MBA ranked No. 6 Engineering ranked No. 21 Additionally, three other public colleges in Florida were also ranked in the top 50 the University of Central Florida (No. 16), Daytona State College (No. 23) and the University of North Florida (No. 31). The University of Florida, ranked No. 9 in the list of top 10 best public universities by U.S. News, has been offering online undergraduate degree programs since 2001. Students can select from 19 majors across a variety of disciplines as well as seven minors and work with a dedicated academic advisor to design their own academic pathway. Degree programs are continually being added. Visit ufonline.ufl.edu to learn more. Review the rankings for the Best Online Bachelors Programs on the U.S. News site. Read more details about UF Online in its U.S. News profile. Yesterday, YIMBY brought you news of the stabilization of the citys new development pipeline through the end of 2017. Echoing the end-of-year positivity, 2018 has already brought one major new development to light, on Surf Avenue in Coney Island. Today, we have the latest on an even larger project coming to Harlem, with the reveal for the first rendering of the massive expansion proposed for Lenox Terrace, which would eventually yield over 1,600 new apartments by the time of full build-out. We previously reported on the project back in 2015, but evidently plans for expansion have increased substantially since then. The proposed number of new units has seen a large jump, from 1,300 to 1,642. Besides the residential component, which will include somewhere between 411 and 493 affordable apartments, the current plan would also add another 40,000 square feet of retail, 15,000 square feet of community facility space, and approximately 200 parking spaces. The parking spaces are definitely the least palatable part of the plan. Lenox Terrace resembles many NYCHA properties in this regard, where residents who are already subsidized at dramatically below-market rates receive free or extremely affordable parking, taxing the citys infrastructure and preventing the towers-in-the-park style complexes from reaching their full potential. Unfortunately, this seems to further confirm that Mayor DeBlasios Vision Zero is nowhere near realization, with city officials failing to realize that urban planning is the most crucial aspect behind reducing the number of pedestrian and automobile fatalities and injuries. Beyond fixing broken parking minimums, which still apply in many transit-rich neighborhoods, City Hall has failed to take action against one of New Yorks own local politicians, Marty Golden, whose actions have resulted in a quantifiable death toll, and an ever-lengthening list of additional traffic violations, as Golden regularly speeds through school zones, and has allegedly impersonated a police officer. With a double-standard for elected officials gaping wider than ever before when it comes to the rules of the road, it should not be surprising that redeveloping massive wastes of space still comes with additions of new parking. Lenox Terrace enjoys excellent transit access, with the 135th Street stop for the A, B, and C trains just three blocks west, and the 125th Street stations for the D, 2, 3, 4, and 5 trains just ten blocks south. Increasing density of long-underused parcels is a definite necessity as New York City continues to grow, however, it is time for a complete rethink when it comes to parking policies. With NYCHAs failures widening into a chasm of deficits, their capital list now totals approximately $25 billion. Though residents who are already living in subsidized housing may feel entitled to free use of automobiles, the situation on city streets demands the exact opposite, with the elimination of wasteful and useless surface and underground parking lots across all tower-in-the-park style housing with proximity to transit. As for Lenox Terrace, the first phase is expected to be completed by 2022, with the full build-out anticipated for 2027. The Olnick Organization is behind the project, though there is currently no word on which architect will design the ultimate build-out, with exact plans appearing to be in-flux. Subscribe to YIMBYs daily e-mail Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates Like YIMBY on Facebook Follow YIMBYs Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews Permits have been filed for a four-story, 612-seat public elementary school at 1-35 57th Avenue, in Queens. The project comes as part of the redevelopment of the formerly-derelict Hunters Point South neighborhood, along the East River. The area has been activated over the last decade thanks to several residential towers and the HPS Park, alongside a new ferry terminal, which is just a four blocks away from the proposed school. The Vernon Boulevard Subway Station is also eleven blocks away, serviced by the 7 train. The New York City School Construction Authority will be responsible for the development. The 65-foot tall structure will yield 75,100 square feet of space. The sizable facility will bring classrooms, a cafeteria, library, parent community space, outdoor playground, and a large multipurpose space that can hold 214 people for gymnasium use, and 411 people for auditorium use. FXFOWLE Architects will be responsible for the design, which features a minimalist grey masonry facade with green space nearby. The estimated completion date for the school is set for September of 2021. Subscribe to YIMBYs daily e-mail Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates Like YIMBY on Facebook Follow YIMBYs Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews Share Many companies and individuals are gathered this week at CES (News - Alert) in Las Vegas to talk and learn about the latest solutions in tech. And 5G is likely to be a recurring theme. Thats because this up-and-coming cellular technology is just getting ready to roll. Early standards have been finalized. Endpoint device and network element companies are working to deliver standard-compliant 5G gear. And service providers are testing 5G and telling us about their commercial timelines. MTN (News - Alert) earlier this week announced it has launched the first 5G trial in South Africa with supplier Ericsson. And AT&T and Verizon in recent months have provided details about their 2018 5G service rollout plans. AT&T revealed last month that it expects to be the first carrier to launch a standards-based mobile 5G service in more than a dozen markets in the United States by late 2018. This year it also plans to reach more than 660,000 total locations, and 1.1 million locations by the end of 2020, in those 18 states with fixed 5G services. Verizon, meanwhile, expects to launch 5G-based fixed wireless residential broadband services in three to five U.S. markets this year. It currently does not have plans to introduce commercial mobile 5G services in 2018. And Korea Telecom (News - Alert) is preparing for next months Winter Olympics, where it will be delivering 5G. Intel is involved in that effort. And KT in late October said it had successfully interconnected 5G demonstration Olympic venue networks with Samsung Electronics 5G terminals. It also deemed its test transmitting bulk images over 5G a success. At PyeongChang 2018, Intel, KT (News - Alert), and our ecosystem collaborators will deliver a 5G showcase in Gangneung Olympic Park, and in Gwanghwamoon, Seoul and at other Olympic venues across Korea, said Sandra Rivera, senior vice president and general manager of the network platforms group at Intel. In addition, there will be 5G experiences made possible by the Intel 5G Mobile Trial Platform and Intel 5G network technologies (including FlexRAN technology) that will be activated on the 5G network at a variety of Olympic locations. The GSMAs (News - Alert) The 5G era: Age of boundless connectivity and intelligent automation report says 5G connections could represent 12 percent of total mobile connections by 2025. Edited by Mandi Nowitz We have used your information to see if you have a subscription with us, but did not find one. Please use the button below to verify an existing account or to purchase a new subscription. Fine china and silverware at each place setting may not be a common occurrence at the family dinner table on any given evening, but recognizing how and when to use those special utensils as well as knowing which glass of water belongs to those around the table during a formal occasion could UK-based SDX Energy has decided to abandon the ELQ-1 well in the Gharb Center permit, northwestern Morocco, after failing to achieve desired results from a drilling campaign. Drilled to a total depth of 1,484m, the well has encountered 22.6 net meters of reservoir interval and two meters of marginal net conventional gas pay in the Hoot formation, the company said in a statement. Despite the result at ELQ-1, we remain very upbeat about the remainder of our Moroccan drilling campaign, which has already yielded discoveries from the first three of this nine well campaign, SDX Energy president and CEO Paul Welch said. It is important to note that this well is also the only one in the current program drilled using legacy low-resolution 3D data, acquired from the previous operator, he said. It was an important test that has strengthened our belief in the need to acquire high resolution 3D seismic data that we have successfully used in our first three wells, across all of our concessions of interest, he added. Last December, the company, confirmed a new natural gas discovery as part of its well drilling campaign in Sebou, Eastern Morocco. Leaders of the Moroccan Jewish community downplayed the attempts at submitting a draft bill to the Parliament providing for the withdrawal of Moroccan nationality from Jews of Moroccan origin residing in Israeli Settlements. The draft law was suggested by opposition Authenticity and Modernity Party (PAM), whose head, Ilyas Omari, promised Hamas leader to forfeit Moroccan Jews in Israeli settlements of their Moroccan nationality in a show of solidarity with Palestinians. Mental aberration! This is how Secretary General of The Jewish Community in Morocco, Serge Berdugo, reacted to such a legislative proposal. In a statement to Moroccan magazine Telquel, he explained that the draft law is mere speculation, and that there is no way the Moroccan legislator can locate the residency of Moroccan Jews in Israel. I believe that there are many Moroccans living in settlements, these include Moroccan Muslim women married to Palestinians. This is all absurd, he said. Berdugo, former tourism Minister in Morocco, deemed such a draft law unpractical and unfeasible and at odds with the constitution. He went on to say that the 2011 constitution enshrines that the Moroccan nationality is acquired Jus sanguinis and is therefore unrelated to the location where the citizen lives or to the birthplace. Withdrawing the Moroccan nationality from Jews residing in settlements would require an amendment of the decree relating to Moroccan nationality, he added. The Moroccan nationality can never be withdrawn, Moroccan Jewish writer, Nicole El Grissy said on her facebook page. For his part, Chairman of the Federation of Moroccan Jews in France, Simon Skira, deplored the propensity of some Moroccan political leaders to take decisions with drastic repercussions. For many analysts, the PAMs promise is but a move in a fierce competition with the ruling Justice and Development Party (PJD) in instrumentalizing the Palestinian cause to gather support around their political agenda. The visit by Hamas leader to Morocco upon an invitation from the ruling Justice and Development Party (PJD) was far from creating unanimity. Amazigh rights groups for their part denounced the Islamists use of the Palestinian cause to galvanize support for electoral purposes. They denounced an unhealthy infatuation with Hamas as a sign of the PJDs loyalty to a pan-Arab political Islam. Tension has resurfaced between Khartoum and Cairo over the Halaibs triangle disputed territory on the Red Sea as the Sudanese foreign minister protested to the UN and demanded that Egypt hand over control of the disputed territory. In addition to the Halaib triangle, the two neighboring countries have been at odds in recent years over a host of issues on top of which the distribution of the Nile river water in light of Ethiopias plan to build a mega dam threatening to curb their share of water. Sudanese President Omar Bachirs decision to hand a strategic island to the Turks for development has also stirred the anger of the Egyptian regime, which views Erdogan as a regional adversary due to his pro-Muslim brotherhood stands. Bachirs decision was announced during the visit Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan paid to Khartoum recently. On January 19, 1899, Egypt and Britain signed the Sudan Convention. The first article in that agreement stated that the word Sudan refers to all the territories south of the 22nd parallel of latitude. In 1956, when Egypt recognized Sudans independence, the 22nd parallel of latitude as stated in the Sudan Convention was the agreed upon border between Egypt and Sudan. Later amendments to the borders, aimed at keeping Nubian tribes unified under one administrative system, have caused the core dispute between the two countries. The Egyptian position is largely aimed at facilitating ease for the Nubian tribes living along the border region by uniting them under one administration. Morocco has awarded French VINCI Construction company a 284 million contract for building a pumped storage hydroelectric plant (PSP), located 70 km from Agadir. The project is part of the North African Kingdoms plan to develop and integrate renewable energies. The contract covers construction surveys, civil engineering works, supply of materials and pumping equipment, assembly, testing and commissioning. The civil engineering works to be carried out by VINCI Construction include earthworks for two reservoirs, excavation for the powerhouse to be embedded in the slope, and installation of the penstock pipe over a distance of 3 km, including 1 km underground. New roads will be built and several others will be refurbished to provide access to the facilities both during construction and during operation of the future site. The electromechanical equipment, for which Andritz Hydro is responsible, includes two 175 MW Francis turbines specially developed in the companys laboratory and a high voltage substation. A total of 840 people will be recruited for the 48-month project, including 780 to be hired locally. A training program will be set up to ensure worksite safety and quality. The water stored in an uphill tank will be released into a 3-kilometre transfer line (penstock and galleries) and travel on a natural slope to a tank about 550 meters downhill. A 350 MW hydroelectric plant will be built along the penstock between the two reservoirs. The reversible plant will generate electricity when operating in turbine mode and pump water from the lower to the upper reservoir in pumping mode. The system will thus generate renewable energy on demand. The system can be switched between pumping and turbine mode up to 20 times a day, depending on the amount of surplus electricity available or the needs of the Moroccan electricity grid. In Morocco, VINCI operates primarily via its subsidiaries Sogea-Satom and VINCI Energies. Sogea-Satoms subsidiaries, Sogea Maroc and Dumez Maroc, have been operating in the country for 90 years. Sogea Maroc delivers solutions and services in four business areas (building, engineering structures, industrial civil engineering and hydraulic engineering). Its notable past projects include civil engineering works for the Jorf Lafsar chemical plant and the Renault plant in Tangier. The company is currently building the high-speed railway line stations in Tangier and Kenitra. Dumez Maroc specializes in marine works and recently built the new fishing port in Casablanca. VINCI Energies Maroc began operating in Morocco 70 years ago and is a major provider in the countrys electrification program initiated in 1996. It is also the leading developer of high voltage and extra high voltage electricity generation, transmission, transformation and distribution infrastructure. What should I not build first? Photo: Joe McNally/Getty Images In the last month, Trump administration officials began suggesting that theyd finally release a detailed infrastructure plan in mid-January, or at least before the State of the Union on January 30. This was a risky move, and not because anyone would be shocked if they blew past another deadline. For whatever reason, President Trump has spent the last year thwarting efforts to roll out one of his most popular proposals. Sure enough, Trump was at it again on Friday; he reportedly knocked a key element of his administrations plan in private talks with congressional leaders, even as his aides continued to promote it. If the past is any indication, this months planned pivot to infrastructure could yield a memorable Trump self-own, like the ones below (to say nothing of the continuing deterioration of our roads, railways, and bridges). Promising a Plan in His First 100 Days, Then Failing to Produce One Trumps trillion-dollar rebuilding plan was a key campaign proposal that he compared to FDRs New Deal in his book Crippled America. If we do what we have to do correctly, we can create the biggest economic boom in this country since the New Deal when our vast infrastructure was first put into place, Trump wrote. Its a no-brainer. The third item on Trumps list of legislation he planned to pursue during his first 100 days in office was the American Energy and Infrastructure Act, which leverages public-private partnerships, and private investments through tax incentives, to spur $1 trillion in infrastructure investment over ten years. Trump called for such a bill in his first address to a joint session of Congress in February, receiving a standing ovation when he proclaimed, The time has come for a new program of national rebuilding. There was even talk of Democrats working with the new Republican president on this much-needed legislation and then, nothing happened. In May the much-hyped infrastructure plan was released as a six-page fact sheet packaged with Trumps 2018 budget proposal. White House officials suggested a more detailed plan was coming in the fall. Now theyre supposedly putting the finishing touches on a 70-page document that would still only serve as the building block for a bill to be drafted by lawmakers. Trump squandered the initial enthusiasm for his plan, and now all signs suggest it would be DOA in Congress. Scheduling Infrastructure Week Opposite Comeys Testimony There was never any chance that a week of events promoting Trumps vague infrastructure proposal was going to distract from fired FBI director James Comeys testimony on Capitol Hill. But during the first week of June, which the White House dubbed Infrastructure Week, it seemed like Trump was doing everything he could to draw attention away from his key policy proposal, from attacking the mayor of London following a terror attack: Pathetic excuse by London Mayor Sadiq Khan who had to think fast on his "no reason to be alarmed" statement. MSM is working hard to sell it! Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 5, 2017 To firing off a tweetstorm that undercut the legal case for his travel ban: People, the lawyers and the courts can call it whatever they want, but I am calling it what we need and what it is, a TRAVEL BAN! Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 5, 2017 The Justice Dept. should have stayed with the original Travel Ban, not the watered down, politically correct version they submitted to S.C. Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 5, 2017 To letting his planned infrastructure pitch at a rally in Ohio devolve into what the New York Times called a wandering assortment of self-defenses, attacks and non sequiturs that bumped into one another like untethered barges. Defending White Supremacists During Another Infrastructure Pitch One of the most appalling moments of Trumps presidency (so far) came during a press conference that was supposed to be about his plan to rebuild America. Though he made three requests for infrastructure questions, most of the questions the president answered in the lobby of Trump Tower on August 15 were about his incendiary comments on the violence at white-supremacist rallies in Charlottesville, Virginia, days earlier. The most memorable line from the event had nothing to do with fixing our transit systems: You have some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. Disbanding His Infrastructure Council Before It Started On July 19, Trump signed an executive order establishing a Presidential Advisory Council on Infrastructure. Before formally naming anyone to what was supposed to be a 15-member panel, Trump disbanded it on August 18. In the wake of Trumps Charlottesville remarks business leaders had begun fleeing his Manufacturing Council and the Strategic and Policy Forum. He suggested he was canceling those panels to spare those who stuck with him: Rather than putting pressure on the businesspeople of the Manufacturing Council & Strategy & Policy Forum, I am ending both. Thank you all! Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 16, 2017 No explanation was ever offered for the demise of the infrastructure council. Privately Telling Democrats That He Doesnt Like Public-Private Partnerships Since the campaign, Trump had been talking about using private-sector funding to finance rebuilding projects across the country. But in September a House Democrat revealed that Trump rejected the idea during a private meeting with the Ways and Means Committee. Representative Brian Higgins said Trump emphatically rejected what everybody assumed was his position relative to financing infrastructure, adding, He dismissed it categorically and said it doesnt work. It appeared the new idea might be to have state and local governments foot most of the bill but if that was the case, Trump forgot to tell his staff. On the same day D.J. Gribbin, Trumps special assistant for infrastructure policy, spoke at the P3 Hub Americas conference, which promotes public-private partnerships. Robert Poole, director of transportation policy at the Reason Foundation, told the Washington Examiner that he was dismayed by Trumps shift. Its so frustrating someone would make off-the-cuff comments like that about P3s, Poole said. I cant imagine that he was coordinating with his staff. The whole reason Gribbin was hired was to do P3s. That has been his specialty for the last 20 years both in government and out of it. Its very strange. Privately Telling Republicans That He Doesnt Like Public-Private Partnerships Though Trumps newfound dislike of public-private partnerships was widely reported in September, he didnt direct his staff to change course. The Washington Post reported that on Friday he told Republican leaders gathered for a strategy session at Camp David that he doesnt think the arrangements work, and the government should probably pursue a different path. The next day Gary Cohn, his chief economic adviser, gave the group a detailed briefing on an infrastructure proposal that relied heavily on public-private partnerships. According to the Post, Trumps complaints have infuriated and surprised some administration aides who have worked on the plans for months. Unsurprisingly, the timetable for the rollout of the infrastructure plan remains fluid. Four (Cuo)mo years. Photo: Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images Typically, House majorities will take pains to spare their most vulnerable members difficult votes. Paul Ryans caucus did the opposite in 2017. The GOP has 28 House members from New York, New Jersey, and California. Many of them will seek reelection this fall in districts that Hillary Clinton won two years earlier. And yet, the Republican leadership wrote a tax plan that cuts taxes on virtually everyone except many of the affluent professionals who make up the partys blue-state base. In capping the state-and-local-tax deduction (SALT) at $10,000, the GOP dramatically downsized a favorite benefit of well-heeled homeowners in high-tax states. In doing so a couple weeks before the end of the year, they forced this constituency to spend the holiday season in a frenzy of last-minute tax planning. Many a denizen of Nassau County where the average SALT deduction in 2015 was $20,000 spent the week between Christmas and New Years fighting for her tax planners attention; waiting in long lines to prepay her 2018 property taxes, in hopes of getting in one last, unlimited deduction before the new rules take effect and then learning that those prepaid taxes might not actually be deductible, anyway. Democrats in these states are now relishing the opportunity to play the party of low taxes on suburban, single-digit millionaires while also seizing the chance to regionalize national political dynamics that favor Team Blue. Even as the Congressional GOP has grown steadily more distasteful to the average resident of Massachusetts, Maryland, and Vermont, Republicans have managed to win governors races in those states by localizing them. But with their tax legislation, Republicans found a way to draw a bright line between federal and state-level policymaking. New York governor Andrew Cuomo has responded by painting the GOP as the states enemy in an economic civil war. Before SALT was capped, the Empire State already sent the federal government more tax revenue than it recouped in spending, but now those red-staters are looking to bleed New York dry with the help of traitorous New York Republicans! In a funny way, Cuomos been handed a political gift here, Larry Levy, executive dean of the National Center for Suburban Studies at Hofstra University on Long Island, told Politico this week. Putting the state on war footing, invoking the language of conflict, is a brilliant political strategy. Cuomo, New Jersey governor-elect Phil Murphy, and California Senate President Kevin de Leon are all pushing plans to preserve the SALT deduction in full, by exploiting various loopholes in federal law. Meanwhile, the Republican Party has yet to find a single 2018 candidate for any of New Yorks statewide offices. Two potential challengers to Cuomo backed out this week. Kirsten Gillibrand remains, for the moment, unopposed. And there still isnt any declared Republican candidate for state attorney general or comptroller. Given the national mood (Democrats currently lead the 2018 generic congressional ballot by double digits), and the strength of the states Democratic incumbents, the GOP has little chance of winning a statewide race in New York this fall, whether they run solid candidates or not. But in statewide races, winning isnt (always) everything: When a party fails to mount competent candidates for long-shot gubernatorial and Senate races, it can doom more competitive candidates down-ballot. Without statewide standard-bearers investing money and volunteers into turning out Republican voters next fall, the GOPs New York House delegation could be done for. And their colleagues in California could end up in a similar predicament: Its entirely possible that two Democratic gubernatorial candidates could emerge from the states jungle (multiparty) primary. For the moment, it looks like Republicans will be able to avert a total collapse in deep-blue states: The GOP governors of Maryland and Massachusetts, Larry Hogan and Charlie Baker, both used the tax bill as an opportunity to loudly distinguish themselves from the national Republican Party and both appear poised to win reelection in November. I wouldnt count on that. Photo: STR/AFP/Getty Images Theres already been a breakthrough in the renewed talks between the Koreas, with the North agreeing on Tuesday to send its athletes to Februarys Winter Olympics in the South. But one does not need to look far for a reminder that the situation on the Korean Peninsula remains incredibly dangerous. According to The Wall Street Journal, Trump administration officials are quietly debating whether its possible to mount a limited military strike against North Korean sites without igniting an all-out war on the Korean Peninsula. This bloody nose strategy would entail responding to some provocation by North Korea with a limited strike to demonstrate the potential price of dictator Kim Jong-uns continued misbehavior. Financial Times describes what that might look like: Dennis Wilder, a former top CIA analyst, says there are many options that could be interpreted as a kick in the shin or a bloody nose. They include striking a military facility such as an air base or naval facility not associated with the ICBM programme, destroying one of Mr. Kims homes, hitting a key part of the missile programme or targeting a missile during a test launch. Presumably, such a strike would be a one-off attack that is immediately followed-up by a presidential announcement that this is a warning shot and nothing more, says Mr. Wilder. Trump officials are said to be debating whether this strategy is even feasible, with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Defense Secretary James Mattis focused on using diplomacy to curtail North Koreas nuclear program, and National Security Adviser H. R. McMaster arguing that its time to consider military options as well. Many experts are deeply skeptical of the idea that the U.S. could strike North Korea in any way without provoking devastating retaliation. Our intelligence is not great, so how do we know that they would not respond? Michael Mullen, who served as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff from 2007 to 2011, told FT. If I was Japan or South Korea, I would be asking what are we, chopped liver? The U.S. is supposed to be protecting them. Even if Kim did not respond to a preemptive U.S. strike with nuclear weapons, he could still use the estimated 15,000 cannons and rocket launchers he has aimed at Seoul. James Stavridis, former NATO supreme allied commander and current dean of the Fletcher School at Tufts University, foresees no military options which would result in fewer than several hundred thousand casualties and perhaps as many as 2 million to 3 million. So the plan said to be under consideration involves carefully calculating how North Korea might respond to a limited strike, U.S. officials are working with spotty information, and millions of lives hang in the balance. That would be a terrifying prospect under any administration, and we currently have a president who thought it was smart to give Kim a fun nickname and threaten his nuclear prowess on Twitter. Yes, this could become real, but at some point Oprah will likely become someone different and more politically vulnerable. Photo-Illustration: Daily Intelligencer. Photo: Getty Images The buzz for a possible 2020 presidential candidacy by veteran talk-show host, entrepreneur, philanthropist, and all-around do-gooder Oprah Winfrey that began with her well-wrought Golden Globes speech occurred at the perfect time for Why not? speculation. The 2020 elections are far enough away that anything seems possible. And the ongoing spectacle of President Donald Trump demonstrates that anything is indeed possible in contemporary politics. An actual Winfrey presidential run would quickly become something quite different from the fantasy projection it represents right now. And so while its worth taking the idea seriously, it should not be taken literally as the Oprah America knows and loves suddenly appearing on a presidential ballot opposite Trump. People on political soap operas like the hit show Scandal may suddenly be vaulted to national presidential tickets without the inconvenience of actual campaigns or controversy, but Trump has by no means abolished normal politics. He merely exploited fault lines in the existing political system and won over relatively weak and divided intraparty and interparty opposition with a persona and message that galvanized a distinct following that was central to the GOP base and underestimated as part of the general electorate. It is by no means clear some other celebrity can do the same, despite continuing public hostility to the political Establishment. Oprahs assets as a national candidate are real and tangible: 100 percent name ID; enormous personal wealth and even more enormously wealthy connections; a personality with an appeal that reaches well into the ranks of voters who might otherwise be likely to sit out elections; and priceless communications skills honed over 4,561 episodes of The Oprah Winfrey Show and countless additional on-camera appearances. As a putative 2020 Democratic candidate, Winfrey has several other advantages. One is a field potentially as large and as diffuse as the one Donald Trump divided and conquered in 2016. Another is the unique combination of being a familiar, reassuring figure and a fresh face when it comes to electoral politics, particularly if her Democratic rivals wind up including such warhorses as Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders. And a third asset in the nominating contest could well be her identity as an African-American woman. There is a swath of southern primaries relatively early in the process where African-Americans represent half or more of Democratic voters. And in a general-election contest with Trump, women frustrated by Hillary Clintons loss to so piggish a man might well rally behind a female nominee with especial vigor, while the 2016 falloff in African-American turnout a crucial factor in several close states could be reversed. But it is by no means certain that Winfrey will draw the sort of inside straight that Trump drew in 2016, making his improbable candidacy viable and then victorious. For one thing, there are at least two prominent African-Americans (Cory Booker and Kamala Harris) and multiple women (Harris, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, Amy Klobuchar, and others) mulling serious presidential runs of their own. The field may not nicely line up as Oprah versus the Lilliputians. Most importantly, the minute Winfrey becomes an active politician rather than a tantalizing possibility, her aura will likely dim, particularly when she is drawn into issue positions that divide the country. She has been known to smile upon public support for private educational opportunities in K-12 education. Thats very controversial within the Democratic Party. Shes vaguely pro-choice, but will have to become outspokenly pro-choice if she wants to be the Democratic presidential nominee. And while her eloquent Golden Globe remarks linking the #MeToo Movement to the civil-rights movement struck a perfect chord for a particular moment in Hollywood, its too narrow a platform for a successful presidential candidacy. The more you think about it, Oprah Winfrey would need exquisite timing to maintain herself as Oprah the American icon in the crucible of a presidential campaign. As Ben Smith has noted, simply discussing her as a possible candidate takes a toll on her popularity: To run for president is to ensure, demand even, that at least 40% of Americans hate you. The one recent political poll on Oprah hints at this: She had a surprisingly high unfavorable rating: 33%. Who dislikes Oprah? When you put her in a political context, Republicans do, it turns out. And Oprah has had her ups and downs, and would be signing on for the sort of hostile examination of her own career that nobody would welcome. Smith raised another point about a Winfrey candidacy that is worth pondering: Will Democrats embrace an if-you-cant-beat-em-join-em strategy for reclaiming the presidency instead of soberly running someone with a serious record of accomplishment in public office? And will voters be ready for an anti-Trump rather than someone who can trump Trumps celebrity? Democrats dont want to improve on Trump. They want to reverse him. And thats where governors and senators with deep experience, proven political chops, and an unglamorous sense of normalcy come in. I dunno about that: If Trump heads towards 2020 with a reasonable chance (say, 30 percent or more) of achieving reelection, Democrats would probably consider anyone this side of Don Jr. as an opponent if it meant beating the feared and despised incumbent, whose trajectory in a second term could be terrifying. To a considerable extent, the plausibility of Oprah 2020 is a function of the likelihood of Trump 2020. If Democrats ride a huge midterm wave in 2018 and Trumps approval ratings stagnate in the 30s, its unlikely they will resort to their own, benign nonpolitical celebrity. Its always possible, of course, that with her money and fame and the right landscape Winfrey could conquer the Democratic Party much as Trump conquered the Republicans. But if thats the idea, shed better get going right away and descend on Iowa with her heart and her checkbook open. Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images Hold on to your Amazon Echo Shows, theres a new smart device in town. Or, at least, there will probably be soon. Facebook, according to a report on Tuesday from Cheddar, is reportedly getting into the smart-home game with a $499 device called Portal. Facebook intends to pitch Portal as a way for families and friends to stay connected through video chatting and other social features, Cheddar reports. The device is expected to ship in late 2018. From Cheddar: Like Amazons screen-equipped Echo Show, Facebooks Portal is designed to work indoors and be controlled through voice commands. According to people familiar with Facebooks plans, Portal will be equipped with a wide-angle lens that is capable of recognizing individual faces and associating them with their Facebook accounts. The device will also reportedly work with services like Netflix and Spotify. Now, itll just be a matter of time, price Amazons Echo Show retails for $230, so Facebooks device would be a significantly pricier choice and, oh, right, seeing if people actually want to let Facebook into their homes to watch them. Given that Facebook founding president Sean Parker recently gave an interview in which he said Facebook was built to exploit human vulnerability and consume as much of your time and conscious attention as possible, Facebooks chances seem good. Plus, Mark Zuckerberg reportedly told employees that he doesnt care if the Portal doesnt make Facebook any money. Its supposed to change user behavior and encourage phone-like usage among owners. Love to have a tech giant change human behavior! Also, and this is apropos of absolutely nothing, now seems like a good time to mention that Mark Zuckerberg a man now trying to sell you cameras for your home apparently tapes over his own laptops camera for privacy. James Damore is suing Google after he was fired for writing an anti-diversity memo. Photo: James Damore/Twitter James Damore, the infamous ex-Google engineer who was fired in August after writing a multipage, anti-diversity memo, is back at it again. (Though with Damore, it could mean so many things. It could mean praising the KKK for having cool titles. It could mean comparing being a conservative at Google to being gay in the 1950s. It could also mean choosing to do your first in-depth interview with an alt-right YouTuber.) Today, Damore and his attorney, Harmeet Dhillon Dhillon is a civil-rights attorney who is also the National Committeewoman of the Republican National Committee for California announced that they are suing Google for discrimination against conservative, white men. The suit claims that Google uses extreme and illegal practices to keep these dudes down. Its not a totally surprising filing given Damore filed a federal labor complaint last year and began working with Dhillon during August 2017 on fact gathering looking for other white dudes who felt wronged by Google for what would eventually become todays complaint. The document comes in at over 150 pages, so let us save you a little bit of reading you can find the whole mess here if youre feeling ambitious and share a few of the, uh, more interesting things it contains. Googles persona non grata list includes a number of alt-right personalities. Mencius Moldbug, a.k.a. Curtis Yarvin was reportedly escorted from Googles campus while visiting a friend for lunch because his name triggered a silent alarm. Others on Googles reported blacklist include Alex Jones of Infowars, and Vox Day, a.k.a. Theodore Beale. After a Google employee asked if the men could be taken off of the list, HR allegedly changed the system so that employees couldnt access the blacklist anymore. Google apparently has it out for straight couples, but furries are welcome. Google furnishes a large number of internal mailing lists catering to employees with alternative lifestyles, including furries, polygamy, transgenderism, and plurality discussing sexual topics, reads the complaint. (Note the use of the term transgenderism, which, well, isnt how anybody in 2018 should be talking about the transgender community.) The only lifestyle that seems to not be openly discussed on Googles internal forums is traditional heterosexual monogamy. This section of the complaint also references a presentation from an employee who identifies as a yellow-scaled wingless dragonkin and another who identifies as an expansive ornate building. At least one of Damores former co-workers received a bonus for speaking out against his memo. As per an email screenshot documented in the complaint, one of Damores colleagues received a peer bonus for speaking up for googley values and promoting [diversity and inclusion] in the wretched hive of scum and villainy that is [Damores Memo]. Peer bonuses are given by fellow employees, but have to be approved by Googles Recognition Team. Damore also received threatening emails while still at the company, Youre a misogynist and a terrible person. I will keep hounding you until one of us is fired. Fuck you, wrote one of Damores fellow engineers. White men at Google are booed just for being white men at Google. Not only was the numerical presence of women celebrated at Google solely due to their gender, but the presence of Caucasians and males was mocked with boos during company-wide weekly meetings. We look forward to defending against Mr Damores lawsuit in court, said a Google spokesperson when asked for comment. And even though it delivers a more powerful punch than the dryers at most salons, its terrific for home use because its shorter, and much easier to maneuver. I find professional hair dryers so long that I tend to hit myself in the head with them when trying to reach certain spots. Its called a super compact, which may conjure a visual of those pathetic, pointless hair dryers youll find in hotel bathrooms, but I wouldnt say its that small. At just over a pound, though, I travel everywhere with mine. The nine-foot-long cable means that Im not leashed to the outlet, either. The thing isnt cheap, though its more affordable than the Harry Josh or Dyson, but what you spend in upfront payments, you more than reap every time you use it. Much like I discovered it through a friend, now my other friends who borrow it while were traveling gush about how great it is and immediately buy one for themselves. Theyre all blown away. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Tuesday interacted with industry CEOs along with Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu to set the Indian government's agenda and participation at the forthcoming annual meeting of World Economic Forum at Davos. The External Affairs Ministry on Monday announced that Prime Minister Narendra Modi would lead the 'largest ever' Indian contingent of over 100 delegates to Switzerland during the four-day World Economic Forum 2018 in Swiss Alps town of Davos on January 23. The Prime Minister would deliver a keynote address at the 48th event of the World Economic Forum on January 23. The ministry has said PM Modi would also hold a bilateral meeting with Alain Berset, the President of the Swiss Confederation. In a big achievement to India, the country has been entrusted with the responsibility of hosting the welcome reception at the world leaders' event, and Indian foods and yoga would mark the commencement ceremony of the four-day annual jamboree of the rich and powerful. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit marks the first-ever visit of any Indian prime minister in the past 20 years after former PM HD Deve Gowda who visited the forum in 1997. This year's World Economic Forum Annual Meeting aims to "rededicate leaders from all walks of life to developing a shared narrative to create a shared future in a fractured world," states the WEF website. Earlier, the WEF had said over 3,000 leaders representing over 100 countries would gather to discuss global, regional and industry agendas. CEOs of top companies, government heads, artistes, and civil society members from across 120 nations would debate issues that matters to the world. 6.40pm: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley interacts with industry CEOs along with Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu about the Indian government's agenda and participation at the forthcoming annual meeting of World Economic Forum at Davos. 6.20pm: Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion Secretary Ramesh Abhishek tells CNBCTV 18 this year would see the biggest ever delegation of Indian ministers at Davos2018. "The Prime Minister is doing so much and the world needs to know about it," he says. India-related issues to be discussed during the forum include the country's role a major economic power, 'how India is using big data in policymaking', 'India's role in ensuring peace and stability in the Asia'. The Indian delegation also includes Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Railways Minister Piyush Goyal, Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu, Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, Minister of State for External Affairs MJ Akbar and Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Development of North Eastern Region of India, Jitendra Singh. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's counterpart Shahid Khaqan Abbasi would also attend the WEF. Neighbouring Asian giant China would mark a significant presence, and its Belt Road Initiative would be part of several forum discussions. This year's global agenda for WEF includes 'global governance', 'changing geopolitical landscape', 'sustainable and inclusive economic development', and 'Fourth Industrial Revolution', says the WEF. For the first time, the forum would have all-women co-chairs. PM Modi addresses PIO Parliamentarians Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday indirectly slammed China for its expansionist foreign policies in Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bangladesh, and said India didn't eye anyone's territory. During the persons of Indian origin (PIO) parliamentarians' meet, PM Modi said India's development model didn't define 'give and take' policy. The event marks 102nd anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi's return from South Africa. He asked them to invest in India, and contribute in the country's economic growth. "India is that country which has always played a constructive role in the world arena. We do not measure our policy towards any nation on the basis of profit or loss but view it through the prism of human values," he said, adding that India neither intended to exploit anyone's resources nor was "eying" anyone's territory. "Our focus has always been on capacity building and resource development," he said. The day-long conference was attended by as many as 134 elected representatives from 24 countries, including France, Fiji, Switzerland and Mauritius. With inputs from PTI Medical professionals rang in the New Year debating the implications of the National Medical Commission Bill tabled in the Lok Sabha. That it has now been sent to the standing committee should hopefully put some concerns to rest considering the bill. Despite some of its good provisions, the bill was far from ideal and needed revision. Debate on medical medical education reform is not new. "This is a debate with a history," says a former health ministry official referring to nearly the decade spent on the issue by successive governments. Many within the industry would remember around 2009, in her address to the Parliament, Pratibha Patil, the then President of India, talked of the need for a National Commission For Human Resources In Health (NCHRH). But then, not much happened thereafter. Sometime in May 2010, the government promulgated the Indian Medical Council (Amendment) Ordinance, 2010. This ordinance superseded the IMC Act, 1956 for one year with a newly constituted Board of Governors taking over the functions of the Medical Council of India (MCI). It was a six member board chaired by Dr Shiv Kumar Sarin. The IMC (Amendment) Act, 2010 replaced the ordinance in September 2010. The Amendment Act required, however, that MCI be reconstituted within three years from the date of supersession, by May 2013. By amending the Act in 2011 and 2012, the government twice extended the terms of the board of governors by one year at a time. The ministry then apparently revived the announcement by the government and the whole exercise, as is being done currently, was followed, right upto the making of a bill. Called the NCHRH bill, it was moved in the parliament in 2011 and later sent to a standing committee, which returned it with some strong observations and seeking a fresh attempt. The MCI was thereafter reconstituted by a notification in 2013. Again, in 2016, the government constituted a committee on the Indian Medical Council (IMC) Act 1956 under the chairmanship of the Vice Chairman, NITI Aayog. The Committee was charged with examining all aspects of the IMC Act, 1956 and suggest reforms leading to improved outcomes in medical education in India. It included as members: P.K. Mishra, Additional Principal Secretary to Prime Minister, Amitabh Kant, CEO, NITI Aayog andi B. P. Sharma, Secretary, Department of Health. Subsequently, a National Medical Commission was proposed and meant to replace the current MCI with the new body having a different structure and governance system. So, where do we go from here? What needs to be watched now is how progress is made on two or three main issues: Primarily, the whole process of nomination of the board members. It is no brainer that unless, it is seen as one that is rigorous, objective and not susceptible to pressure from the government, the new arrangement may not take off. Second, is the hotly debated aspect that mixes up homeopathy and ayurveda with allopathy. A former senior official of the health ministry, who has looked at this subject in detail, said, without undermining the AYUSH system, you cannot use the Act to make an AYUSH doctor into an allopath. Provision that the commission can frame appropriate bridge courses and maintain a register of AYUSH doctors who have cleared the bridge course and thereafter eligible to practice as allopath, is not done. Equally debatable will be the provision around fees. This refers to the section 10 (i) of the bill that says: the commission can "frame guidelines for determination of fees in respect of such proportion of seats, not exceeding forty per cent., in the private medical institutions and deemed Universities which are governed by the provisions of this Act". This could keep the door open to raise the fees to exorbitantly for the rest and since it is not exceeding 40 per cent, it could theoretically be as low as fees fixation for just 1 per cent of the seats. One positive provision is the common exit exam that all would-be doctors will need to clear before getting the clearance to practice. This will address concerns around need to ensure uniform quality across the country. The other bright spot in the bill is the move to constitute four autonomous boards for under-graduate medical education, Post-graduate medical education, Medical assessment and rating; and Ethics and medical registration. One only hopes the bill sees the light of day for reforming medical education and not meet the fate of the NCHRH bill, which was also moved in the parliament and underwent a similar process. I want to forget old wounds for ppl of Pakistan: Nawaz Sharif CHAKWAL: Former prime minister Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif said on Monday that the disqualification verdict against him by the apex court had spread chaos in the country. He was talking to a gathering of tribal elders in Chakwal, where he also spoke to the media about the current political climate. The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government has been faithfully served the people of the country over the past four years. Everyone saw how well we have served in the previous four years. People know my mission, explanations about it are not necessary. We have ended load-shedding in Pakistan and restored peace to Karachi. Nawaz Sharif recounted how he had been exiled from the country after the military-led coup in 1999. You know how we were evicted from the country. My father died during the exile. Where are the people who steered the country towards darkness? he said. He said that the decision against him by the top court in the country had disqualified the PM not on grounds of corruption, but an imaginary salary. The case was registered against me on the Panama scandal, and I was disqualified based on Iqama, he said. Nawaz Sharif also challenged opponents to prove even a Rs 10 corruption charge against him. I want to forget the old wounds for the sake of the people in Pakistan, Sharif said. Not a single penny of corruption has been proven against me and during our rule during the past four years, he said, while addressing a memorial reference for Chaudhry Liaquat Ali in Chakwal Monday. He reaffirmed his stance on the SC verdict to disqualify him by saying that the Iqama was reasoned for his ouster while the case filed in the top court was regarding the Panama Papers offshore accounts. While talking about the state of power supply, Nawaz said ever since his party came to power, they freed the country of the load-shedding by initiating a large number of power projects. He added that an uninterrupted power supply and strong road network played a fundamental role in a countrys progress, which was why his vision included focusing on power and infrastructure. People should not forget the faces of those who plunged the country into darkness. Nawaz said they started the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, under which investment of $56 billion was brought to the country. One should go and see the heights to which progress work in the country was reaching. The travel time between Chakwal and Islamabad has been halved earlier it would take three hours while now it takes an hour and a half, he said. The PML-N leader said people came closer when distances among them were shortened. The ousted premier voiced concerns on the law and order situation in the country, adding that only the people should decide how the country should be run. Our vision is to build roads and motorways, he said. He directed the party workers to stand up against injustice, warning that the public mandate should not be crushed beneath the feet. The ex-PM has been addressing various gatherings and public rallies in the country to garner support for himself and his party after the announcement of the Panamagate verdict. Earlier, Nawaz had addressed a gathering in Kot Momin near Sargodha, along with daughter Maryam. She had accused political opponents of hiding behind state-institutions and the apex court. Maryam Nawaz had alleged that the political opponents were extremely afraid of the massive love for ex-prime minister Nawaz Sharif. Taking a jibe at chairman Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan, she had said that the PTI chief attempted to appear on television on daily basis to utter lies. Pakistan to grant one-month extension to registered Afghan refugees ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan expressed concern at Pakistans decision to grant only a one-month extension in the stay of registered Afghan refugees and insisted that 1.4 million refugees could not be repatriated in such a short period. The cabinet in its January 3 meeting granted one-month extension in the Proof of Registration (POR) Cards that allow registered refugees to stay legally in Pakistan. The period of PoR cards expired on December 31, 2017. Under the cabinet decision, registered Afghan refugees can stay until January 31. The cabinet had also decided that the issue of early repatriation of Afghan refugees should be raised with the UN refugee agency and with the international community. Pakistans economy had carried the burden of hosting Afghan refugees for a long time and in the present circumstances, cannot sustain it further, the cabinet had said in a statement. Afghanistan deputy ambassador Zardasht Shams said that the decision to repatriate over one million refugees in a month time was impossible. We are concerned at only one-month extension. If a reasonable time-frame was not decided, it would provide an excuse to the police and others to harass the refugees, Shams told reprters on Monday. The Afghan diplomat said the process of voluntary repatriation of the refugees by the UNHCR had also been suspended for winter break until March and the decision to send Afghans back in one month was difficult to be implemented. He said about one million refugees had returned in 2016-2017 and repatriation of over million Afghans would require enough time. He said Afghanistan had not yet received a formal notification and Kabul would take up the issue with Pakistan at highest level after a formal decision was received. Reports earlier suggested that Pakistani officials at a recent tripartite meeting of Pakistan Afghanistan UNHCR had agreed to extend by six months a deadline for Afghan Refugees beyond December 31, 2017. Official sources had earlier told Daily Times that the Foreign Office had suggested extension of PoR by end 2018. However, it is thought Pakistan approved only one month extension of the refugees legal stay in the wake of deterioration of relations with Afghanistan and the US leaders recent accusations against Pakistan. Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif claimed last month in a TV interview that militants who came from the Afghan side of the border had transit into the camps of Afghan refugees and later they keep on changing positions and relocate. He had called for repatriation of the refugees with dignity and honor, urging the US administration to spend money on the settlement of the refugees in Afghanistan. The cabinet has taken the decision at a time when the documentation of the hundreds of thousands of un-registered refugees is underway in Pakistan. Shams, who is also monitoring the documentation process, said that about 700,000 unregistered refugees had been documented until January 5. The documentation process, which is going-on in 21 centers across Pakistan, is scheduled to conclude on January 31. The process was started last year amid concerns both in Pakistan and Afghanistan about the large number of unregistered Afghans in Pakistan. In Kabul officials of the refugee ministry says that Afghan officials in Islamabad were making efforts to convince Pakistani officials to extend the refugees stay for six months. To get security aid,no safe haven for Taliban- Haqqani leadership in Pakistan: USA The United States has told Pakistan what it must do if it wants Washington to resume paying out hundreds of millions of dollars in security aid, the Pentagon said on Monday. Our expectations are straightforward, Pentagon spokesman Colonel Rob Manning told reporters. Taliban and Haqqani leadership and attack planners should no longer be able to find safe haven or conduct operations from Pakistani soil. Last week, President Donald Trump froze payments from the Coalition Support Fund for Pakistan, worth $900 million, saying Pakistan is not doing enough to target Afghan Taliban and Haqqani group bases. The coalition funding is set aside to refund Pakistani spending on counter-terrorism operations. Also in question is almost $1 billion of US military equipment that has allowed Pakistan access to advanced military technology. The United States has conveyed to Pakistan specific and concrete steps that it could take, Manning said. We stand ready to work with Pakistan to combat terrorist groups without distinction. We will continue these conversations with the Pakistani government in private. Pentagon officials are watching to see if Pakistan is going to retaliate against the US by cutting supply lines to US troops from its port at Karachi into Afghanistan. So far, Manning said, there was no sign Islamabad was preparing to take that course of action. He stressed that the suspension of funding was not permanent at this time and that the money was not being diverted elsewhere. Suspension of aid a 'chance' for Pakistan: CIA chief Meanwhile, US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief Mike Pompeo has repeated the Trump administration's mantra that Pakistan continues to provide shelter to terrorists who target US citizens, saying this is "no longer going to be acceptable". Speaking on CBS show Face the Nation on Sunday, the spy agency chief said US has given Pakistan a "chance" to reinstate its alliance with the United States by holding back all security aid until Pakistan proves its commitment to fight all terrorist groups operating in the region. "If they fix this problem, we're happy to continue to engage with them and be their partner. But if they don't, we're going to protect America," he said. Providing the "intelligence perspective" on the situation in Pak-Afghan region, the CIA director said: "We see the Pakistanis continuing to provide safe harbour, havens inside of Pakistan for terrorists who present risks to the United States of America. "We are doing our best to inform the Pakistanis that this is no longer going to be acceptable." When asked by the host whether it was a good idea to pressure Pakistan, a nuclear power, by cutting off all aid, Pompeo said he would avoid addressing this policy and could only present the intelligence viewpoint. The host mentioned that Pakistan provides a number of facilities to the US counterterrorism forces in exchange for the aid and whether that could be a national security problem for the US. He wondered whether this relationship that "may not be perfect" could continue nevertheless. "The president has made very clear that he needs Pakistan to cease being a safe haven for terrorists that threaten the United States of America, end, period, full stop," the CIA chief responded. In the new year, Washington has increased pressure on Islamabad to "do more" in the fight against terrorism. See: Pakistan does not have an alliance with the US, claims Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif Washington has stated that the suspension of military aid, which came after Trump accused Pakistan of "lies and deceit", is part of America's South Asia strategy. The development has followed in the aftermath of an increasingly terse back-and-forth between Washington and Islamabad since Trump announced the policy. In Pakistan, the move has been seen as the first step to implementing Trumps pledge to tighten economic restrictions on Islamabad. Despite the tension, however, US and Pakistani officials remain in contact with each other. US Defence Secretary James Mattis on Friday said that the Pentagon was maintaining its communication with the Pakistani military establishment even after the suspension of military assistance. Gregg Burdo was walking along Upper Glen Street in Queensbury one frigid day last week when a Warren County Sheriff's Office patrol car pulled up alongside him. The officer driving asked him how he was doing, and told him that sheriff's Lt. Steve Stockdale had asked him to check up on him. Burdo told the officer what he has told me the last couple of times I have checked in on him: That he is doing fine, despite the most brutal winter stretch in decades. Burdo is the Vietnam veteran and former local star athlete who has lived in the woods of Queensbury for decades, caring for a variety of cats and subsisting on social security and returnable bottle-and-can collections. At Warren County Sheriff Bud York's request, the sheriff and I checked in on him on Monday, and found him in good spirits at one of his restaurant haunts in town. Burdo talked with us about a project he wants to undertake, photographing his cats, with the pictures to be shared with sick children at Glens Falls Hospital. The sheriff offered him some help with the project. Burdo's rib pain from breaks suffered during a fall on an icy sidewalk last month has improved, though he found out that his diagnosis was worse than initially thought. He had broken five ribs. (Sensing doubt on my part that he could carry on with five broken ribs, he pulled a folded yellow doctor's diagnostic sheet that showed he has fractures of ribs 8 through 12 on one side.) He said he has seen a lot of bad winters over the years, and said his key to keeping warm has been a synthetic underlayer of clothes. When we saw him Monday, he had three layers on in the restaurant, and five when we headed back outside, including two hats. He said it's been a struggle to make sure his cats, (he has 16 at this point) stay out of the cold. They know not to spend a lot of time out in the severe cold, and find ways to persevere, as he has for decades. "They basically go out, pee and come right back in," he said. Burdo has put his shelter together with layers of materials that allow he and the cats to keep each other warm. He spends much of the coldest times inside local businesses, (the Christmas snowstorm was spent in a convenience store), and says there is little sleep to be had during the supercold nights. I told him that we have heard from many readers who continue to want to help him. He said the only help he could use was with his veterinarian bills at Glens Falls Animal Hospital in Queensbury, where readers helped him with thousands of dollars in donations last year, and with Wal-Mart gift cards for cat food. He has a post office box in Queensbury where he gets mail, PO Box 4683, Queensbury, NY., 12804. Burdo is confident we have seen the worst of winter. If anyone would seem to know, he would. -- Don Lehman QUEENSBURY A man from Florida who repeatedly assaulted a woman he knew in Lake George last summer was sentenced Friday to 14 years in state prison. Scott G. Baber, 52, was sentenced to the maximum by Warren County Judge John Hall on felony counts of strangulation and assault, which a Warren County jury convicted him of during a three-day trial last month. The jury verdict came after a trial that focused on injuries the victim suffered while she was with Baber, a Port Charlotte, Florida, resident, in Lake George. He was in the area to work for the summer and she reported he beat and choked her during two attacks, five days apart. Baber had denied he was responsible for her injuries. He will spend 6 years on parole after he is released from prison. QUEENSBURY Former Councilman Doug Irish is taking much of the blame for the town election that swept Democrats into the majority for the first time ever. I shouldve resigned, he said, adding that he will try to help future candidates learn from his mistakes. Including never letting ego influence your decisions, he said. Democrats won in an election that had the highest voter participation in recent history for local Queensbury elections. Last year, 42 percent of registered voters participated in the election. By comparison, in the last contested supervisor race in 2009, the turnout was 34 percent. So many people voted in 2017 that turnout rivaled the last governors election in 2014, when 49 percent of registered voters voted in Queensbury. It did not come close to the participation rate for the presidential election. In 2016, turnout was 77 percent. But actions by various Republicans motivated many people to come to the polls last November. Irish said he realized, too late, that the Republicans running for office should repudiate him. The losses were partly due to his actions, he said, adding that he takes so much blame that he would say only that the losses were not completely my fault. Irish had refused to resign from his Town Board seat despite moving to North Carolina in July to take a full-time job. He was also one of three Republicans in an email conversation in which Irish proposed having others campaign for Ward 1 candidate Hal Bain, who no longer wanted to run for office. He told Bain he could resign after winning and the Republicans would be able to pick someone else. At the polls, voters said they did not like the idea that they were voting for an unwilling candidate who would be replaced by an unknown person. Irish realized that voters were turning against Republicans over those issues, and resigned on Oct. 23, two weeks before the election. It wasnt enough to turn the tide. I should have resigned in August, he said. She (Seeber) shouldve been smart enough to say, Doug, you should resign. He told her to call him out. I told her if you have to take a hard line, do it, he said. I think one of the problems was, Rachel is loyal to a fault. Seeber has called the election a perfect storm in which other issues were not discussed as thoroughly as the ethical problems. But Irish isnt convinced. I do think the issue was more about me not resigning and her not calling me out on it than about the issues, he said. Overall, it was as she described a perfect storm, but it would have been nice to have it decided on the candidates platforms than on multiple opinion pieces and negative stories in The Post-Star linking (Councilman) Brian Clements and Rachel Seeber to an issue they had nothing to do with. As for the Hal Bain campaign, Irish blames Bain. The 72-year-old man had just been appointed to a vacancy on the town Republican Committee and had never campaigned door-to-door before. While Bain said he got out because the race turned negative, Irish said he clearly didnt want to do the work of campaigning. The driveways are really long, the dogs are really big, he said. I think I made a big mistake with trusting Hal Bain. Irish resigned from the GOP committee, but Warren County Republican Committee Chairman Mike Grasso asked him to accept a reappointment. Irish accepted it and voted by proxy in the crucial organizational meeting in which some thought Grasso would lose his chairmanship. He kept it, but agreed to let a new executive committee take over some of his work. I shouldnt have a role and did resign, Irish said. He asked me to stay on as long as I can and I agreed. If I have any knowledge of landmines that can help other candidates, Im glad to help. His main landmine lessons so far: Resign if you move away, dont listen to your ego and dont pick a fight with a newspaper, he said. Seeber disagreed with Irishs assessment, saying her loyalty to him was not a factor in the election. Loyalty has nothing to do with this. My loyalty is to the people of Queensbury. Its their voice I wanted to represent. I ran to represent the citizens of Queensbury. Period, she said. She strongly supported the idea of video-conferencing. But she added that Irish knew she thought he should resign when the Town Board would not allow him to attend meetings by videoconference. I told voters this on their doorsteps, she said. As I have said many times, Doug Irish makes decisions for Doug Irish. I can only control my own actions. And as you know, Im not afraid to speak up or out, evidenced by my continual advocacy for people in our community. Im disappointed in the election results, but the people spoke and they made their decision. She and Irish both said that The Post-Star focused too much on Irishs residency and the Hal Bain situation and not enough on Seebers platform, leaving her to be linked to the drama, as Seeber put it. Despite social media and door-knocking, I was unable to overcome it, she said. If you want to reflect upon loyalty, perhaps its your papers loyalty to (Supervisor) John Strough and slanting a narrative versus letting voters read the facts and decide for themselves. The Post-Star worked very hard for John Strough and the Democrats. I can only assume that was because of loyalty. KINGSBURY Firefighters responded Monday night to a house fire at 3759 state Route 4, the fire starting in a chimney and extending into the structure, officials said. A call for tankers from throughout the region went out shortly after 9 p.m., and responding firefighters had the fire knocked down by 10 p.m., according to police scanner reports. An occupant of the home reported the fire herself and evacuated safely, according to family members who were checking on her at the scene. The fire damaged the structure and smoke escaped from an open garage, but the house wasn't a total loss. The Northeastern New York Chapter of the American Red Cross was assisting two people who live in the home, the agency said in a news release. FORT EDWARD The Fort Ann man who is accused of strangling his 95-year-old grandmother last summer is considering a plea deal offer that would send him to prison for 22 years to life. Kevin L. Gonyea was in Washington County Court for a pretrial hearing Tuesday that was to focus on the admissibility of the statements he made to police last July, after his grandmother, Leona Twiss, was found dead in the bedroom of her West Fort Ann home. Instead, his lawyer, Greg Teresi, spent at least five hours conferencing with Gonyea, Washington County District Attorney Tony Jordan and Washington County Judge Kelly McKeighan as a possible resolution to the charges was discussed. The day ended with the case adjourned until Jan. 19 for a ruling on pretrial motions and establishment of a trial date, if no guilty plea occurs. Teresi said his client maintains his innocence, but was considering a plea deal to avoid the potential of a longer sentence if he were convicted at trial. At this point, he is willing to consider all the options that have been put before him, Teresi said. Hes still adamant this wasnt him, and there were other people in the vicinity who had a motive and accessibility to the victim. Gonyea, 50, is accused of choking Twiss with a towel July 9 as she battled dementia and the family was considering putting her in a nursing home. Gonyea and his wife had moved from Florida to care for Twiss and her husband, who died in November 2016. Prosecutors believe Gonyea killed Twiss because he wanted to return to Florida. Gonyeas wife, 35-year-old Melissa Gonyea, was charged with helping him dispose of the towel allegedly used to kill Twiss, and she pleaded guilty to seven charges last month, agreeing to testify against her husband in exchange for a 4-2/3- to 14-year prison sentence. The Gonyeas told police they believed Twiss fell out of bed before she died, and she did not have any obvious serious injuries. But an autopsy found she had been choked to death, and a police investigation led to the Gonyeas being charged two days later. She told police that her husband came out of Twiss bedroom crying, said Its done and told her to dispose of the towel he had, court records show. She took police to a remote part of West Fort Ann, where the towel was recovered days later as she accompanied police. Jordan said plea discussions occur to avoid a trial for a number of reasons. Trials bring uncertainty and they bring difficulties for the family, he said. Were ready to go to trial, but Mr. Teresi wanted to keep that door open for his client. Gonyea was given until Monday to accept the plea offer, or it will be withdrawn. In addition to a second-degree murder count, he also faces charges related to alleged welfare fraud before Twiss death, which could result in additional consecutive prison sentences. He is being held in Washington County Jail without bail. CAMBRIDGE, Vt. A Vermont woman was killed Monday when the vehicle she was in was hit by a tractor-trailer driven by a man from South Glens Falls, police said in a news release. The crash happened at the intersection of routes 15 and 104 in the central Vermont town of Cambridge, according to Vermont State Police. Debbie S. Jewett, 61, of Morrisville, Vermont, was pronounced dead at the scene after the 8:46 a.m. crash. Police said a tractor-trailer driven by Drew B. Rosenhaus, 45, of South Glens Falls failed to yield the right of way at an intersection to the sport utility vehicle in which Jewett was a passenger. The driver of the SUV was seriously hurt, but Rosenhaus was not injured. Vermont State Police said the investigation was ongoing. Like many people of faith, as well as secular persons in the greater Glens Falls community, I am deeply disturbed by the apparent Code Blue fiasco. Who is to blame is not my concern. I am concerned that the Code Blue shelter for the homeless, during one of the worst cold periods in decades, is still not available to persons in need. I am also aware that there are at least five large downtown churches that are not, to my knowledge, opening their doors to the needy in this crisis. I realize that none of these churches are licensed to be overnight shelters. I am sure they have liability concerns. However, there is nothing preventing any of them from having overnight prayer vigils for world peace. All persons in the community could be invited to take part. If someone happens to fall asleep, no laws are broken. Welcome Guest! You Are Here: PKL 9: Important for us to win against Pirates, says Tamil Thalaivas' coach Ashan Kumar Youth World Boxing: India's Rhythm eases into quarterfinals; Vanshaj, three others enter Last-16 North Sydney Oval to host the final of eighth season of Women's Big Bash League Genesis Health System is warning that if UnityPoint Health doesn't sign an agreement with one of Iowa's two Medicaid managed care organizations, it will weigh on the rest of the health care system in the Quad-Cities. Genesis officials said Medicaid patients would lose continuity of care, and it would be difficult for Genesis and other health care providers to absorb the new patients. "We have only so many doctors, nurses and medical assistants," said Dr. Kurt Andersen, executive medical officer for Genesis Health Group. Genesis and UnityPoint are the two major hospitals and medical providers in the Quad-City area. UnityPoint Health and Amerigroup of Iowa have been in negotiations for weeks on a new contract. But UnityPoint warned in November that it may end its arrangement with the insurer, notifying 54,000 Iowans of the possibility. If the contract were to end, those people would need to change health plans or health care providers. UnityPoint and Amerigroup agreed to a short term extension of the contract last week, saying they expect a resolution of the matter by Friday. Amerigroup and UnitedHealthcare are the two remaining managed care organizations handling Iowa's Medicaid population. A third company dropped out last year. The Medicaid program handles care for 600,000 poor and disabled Iowans. In Scott County, Amerigroup manages care for about 8,000 people on Medicaid, according to state records. Genesis spokesman Craig Cooper said about 80 percent of Amerigroup's Medicaid population in Scott County are already Genesis patients. Still, officials there say absorbing more would have an impact. Typically, Medicaid, a joint state and federal program, pays providers less than private insurers and even Medicare, so providing care can also have a significant financial impact on hospitals and doctors. Andersen also said it would be difficult to expand quickly to meet the needs of an influx of new Medicaid patients. Tom Bowman, chief executive at Community Health Care, Inc., expressed similar concerns as Genesis. A spokesperson for UnityPoint, Teresa Thoensen, declined to comment on the matter Tuesday. She said discussions with Amerigroup are continuing. A similar situation arose in late 2016, when Genesis came close to severing its relationship with IlliniCare, a managed care company overseeing about 10,000 Quad-City area people on Medicaid. At the time, Genesis said it was handling an inordinate amount of IlliniCare patients, many of them in emergency rooms, because the insurer did not have an agreement with UnityPoint. Both health care providers had said IlliniCare did not have an adequate provider network in the area, so patients ended up in emergency rooms. Eventually, they both re-signed with IlliniCare. Opposition to proposed updates on employee purchasing policies led to a discussion of checks and balances on credit card limits during Tuesdays Scott County Board of Supervisors Committee of the Whole meeting. Purchases currently are approved either by the department head or through the boards approved annual budget, said David Farmer, director of budget and administrative services, the cardholder accounting program administrator. Farmer said there are three levels of card purchasing limits. Standard level cards issued to most employees set $500 per purchase and $2,500 per 28-day billing cycle limits. Under intermediate level limits, employees are allowed to charge $3,000 per purchase up to $25,000 per billing cycle. Only a few employees hold enhanced level cards allowing for purchases of $15,000 per transaction up to $25,000 over 28 days. A proposed policy change increases the limit from $10,000 to $15,000 on bids and contracts requiring board of supervisors approval. Also, department heads and one of two program administrators would review purchases prior to the auditors review. There are 259 card holders, according to Auditor Roxanna Moritz. Moritz said there was long-standing opposition to issuing purchasing cards to county employees, such a policy was first approved by supervisors in 2006. In a written statement, Moritz said her office questions allowing public money to be spent without direct approval of the elected board. This is an opportunity for misuse, intended or accidental, after the fact, Moritz wrote. I dont think this many people should have the authority to spend that kind of money without oversight from the board. The risk is not worth the convenience. Im not comfortable with that. Moritz also objected to the proposal to have the auditors office review all purchases. Farmer said the changes were proposed because many supplies are ordered online now. Farmer and Speidel used the example of purchasing paper from vendors offering limited time sales on products. Were watching the prices, trying to get the best deal and purchasing under deadlines. Thats why both of these policies are being addressed, Farmer said. Who is ensuring were getting a competitive bid with that $10,000 to $15,000 purchase? Supervisor Diane Holst asked. Its not going to be on an agenda for the public to see how were spending their money. Its a trust relationship, Board Chair Tony Knobbe said. We hire professionals to do their jobs and to look out for the interests of the taxpayers. We discuss after the fact. After the fact is the key word here, Holst said. Were revisiting after its already done. I want to see it first. Supervisors will continue the discussion during Thursdays regular 5 p.m. meeting. In other business, supervisors heard initial details of the first comprehensive salary and benefits study to be completed in 30 years. Human Resources Director and Assistant County Administrator Mary Thee recommended supervisors retain Public Sector Personnel Consultants to conduct a review of job classifications for the purposes of updating job descriptions, salary and benefit packages. The cost would be $74,000. Thee said the firm based in Phoenix, Arizona with representatives in Chicago and Minneapolis, specializes in government workforce studies. Eight bids were submitted. Thee said the firm will set a date to present the full proposal to the board once supervisors approve the contract. That agenda item will be considered on Thursday. "Don't fight it," goes the opening song of "The Greatest Showman," sung by Hugh Jackman. "It's coming for you, running at ya." Well, that's for damn sure. "The Greatest Showman" is a one hour-and-45 minute onslaught on the senses all peppy, fizzy ballads and frantic energy, earnest sentiments and impossibly good intentions. It's begging for love, like a puppy serenading us with pop songs. It's exhausting, and messy. And that's too bad, because Jackman really IS one of the great showmen of our time. Give the man a stage and a song, and it's near impossible not to love him. The movie? Not so much. Jackman plays P.T. Barnum, the 19th-century businessman and politician but a showman above all who founded the Barnum & Bailey circus. He did a lot more than that; the movie's publicity notes call him "America's original pop-culture impresario." OK, but they weren't singing 21st-century pop ballads back then, and one of the movie's biggest problems is its almost desperate determination to contemporize everything for a young audience. It's not so much the casting of Zac Efron and Zendaya as young lovers; it's that they and the others are given upbeat pop songs and self-empowering anthems that would perhaps sound great (if generic) on their own, but simply feel jarring when sung by 19th-century characters in period dress. It's all the more frustrating given that the songs come from talented duo Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, who wrote the lyrics for "La La Land" and the terrific score for Broadway's "Dear Evan Hansen." The film is a debut feature from director Michael Gracey, known for his work on commercials and music videos, and that's telling, because it often feels like a collection of slickly produced music videos, loosely tied together with a plot we're not supposed to care too much about. It does start off with a bang that opening number set at the circus, with Jackman in a top hat and long red coat, wielding a cane and recalling the stylish emcee in "Pippin." Then we go into flashback, meeting the young Barnum as a poor boy, a tailor's son. He meets the angelic girl of his dreams in a fancy mansion, and resolves to marry her. "A million dreams is all it's gonna take," he sings. The song continues as the youngsters segue into adulthood: "A million dreams for the world we're gonna make." Their early years together are short on cash, long on, um, dreams. Wife Charity Michelle Williams, given little to do but always genuine and touching insists she doesn't regret leaving her wealthy past. Barnum loses his first job, and comes up with the idea of a museum of oddities. The first version is a bust. Then one of his little daughters tells him: "You need something alive." Light bulb! Barnum realizes his oddities need to be human: General Tom Thumb, the Bearded Lady, the Siamese twins. "They're laughing anyway," he tells one of them, "so why not get paid?" The place is a hit, and suddenly Barnum's very wealthy. But he needs something more: Acceptance, among the snobby elites. He convinces a young, patrician playwright, Philip (Efron) to join him in the business. They seal the deal in an energetic number set in a barroom, "The Other Side," which reminds us of those "High School Musical" days and how we've rather missed Efron singing and dancing. Soon Philip will be falling in love with a beautiful, soft-spoken acrobat (Zendaya), and their mixed-race romance scandalous back in the day will produce the sweet yet also generic "Rewrite the Stars," performed with the help of aerial acrobatics. Then there's a subplot with the Swedish soprano Jenny Lind inspired by fact but veering into the fictional. Barnum goes to Europe to persuade Lind (Rebecca Ferguson) to tour America; the high-stakes enterprise, he reasons, will finally get him embraced by high society. If there's an eleven-o'clock number, it's got to be "This Is Me," ably sung by Broadway belter Keala Settle, a motivational anthem that seems meant to stop the show but sounds too familiar to really stir the spirits. "I'm gonna send a flood, gonna drown them out," the bearded lady sings, and alas, it's an apt description of what this movie seems to be doing: Drowning us in pizazz and feel-good emotion, but not making us think, or learn. In the end, not much is happening under that circus tent. "The Greatest Showman," a 20th Century Fox release, is rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America "for thematic elements including a brawl." Running time: 105 minutes. Two stars out of four. LINCOLN, Neb. Spring turkey hunting permits for 2018 became available from the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission beginning Monday. Nebraska offers the best turkey hunting opportunities in the entire country. Nebraska offers birds in every county of the state, including the highly-sought-after Merriams in some areas. The state also offers plentiful and affordable permits, long seasons, great public access and $5 permits for youth. Wild turkey hunters in Nebraska enjoy high success rates. In the spring, hunters can purchase as many as three permits, with a bag limit of one turkey per permit. The spring archery season opens March 25, youth shotgun on April 7, and the regular shotgun on April 14. All spring turkey seasons close May 31. Visit OutdoorNebraska.org or Game and Parks permitting offices to purchase permits. For more information on turkey hunting in Nebraska, read the 2018 Turkey Guide, which is available at Game and Parks offices, or visit OutdoorNebraska.gov/wildturkey. A judge denied a former Army soldiers request for a sentence change Monday, almost two years after being sent to prison for killing a Rapid City woman in a drunken boating accident at Pactola Reservoir. Jody Kreycik, 31, of Nebraska, was given five years in prison after pleading guilty to second-degree manslaughter and boating under the influence in the death of Gabrielle Fisher, 33, in August 2015. Kreycik asked 7th Circuit Judge Jeff Davis to reissue a suspended sentence, saying this would allow him to receive full veteran benefits to treat a traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder obtained during his military service, according to court documents. Pennington County prosecutors opposed the request, with Deputy States Attorney Josh Satterlee saying Kreyciks arguments for a modified sentence were points already brought up during his sentencing in March 2016. Kreycik is serving time at Mike Durfee State Prison in Springfield and will be eligible for parole on Feb. 16. A man involved in a vehicle chase while transporting his mothers body has been charged with murder in California, as well as a jail offense in South Dakota. Tosten Walsh Lommen, 30, was charged in Californias Riverside County on Monday in the death of his mother, Michelle Walsh, according to court documents. Authorities allege Walsh Lommen killed his mother with deliberation and premeditation sometime around Dec. 30. California investigators believe both were living in Walshs home in Palm Springs, located in Riverside County, when the crime occurred. South Dakota troopers discovered her body in the back of the SUV Walsh Lommen was driving after he was arrested in a New Years Day high-speed chase on Interstate 90. The body was found wrapped in a blanket once the pursuit ended in Rapid City, local authorities said. California police have searched the victim's home, which revealed evidence of a homicide, such as bleach stains on the carpet and blood stains on the carpet, according to a Palm Springs detectives declaration in support of an arrest warrant for Walsh Lommen. A preliminary autopsy, conducted in South Dakota, showed the 58-year-old woman died from strangulation, the document states. Investigators believe Walsh was killed at her residence, Palm Springs Police Department spokesman Sgt. William Hutchinson said in an interview. The police department sent officers to talk to Walsh Lommen, who has been detained at the Pennington County Jail on charges including aggravated eluding and driving under the influence. His bond is set at $2.5 million. Tosten was interviewed and he admitted to choking his mother, Palm Springs Detective Steven Grissoms court declaration reads. He told me he freaked out and attempted to clean up the crime scene with bleach. Investigators believe he then drove to South Dakota, where troopers saw him driving over 100 mph around noon Jan. 1 and pursued him through Lawrence, Meade and Pennington counties. Hutchinson said hes not yet aware whether Walsh Lommen has any links to the state. The Superior Court of California approved an arrest warrant for Walsh Lommen on Monday, setting his bail at $1 million. His murder charge is punishable by up to life in prison, the Riverside County District Attorneys Office said. On Tuesday, Walsh Lommen reappeared at the Pennington County Courthouse on a new local charge of possessing an unauthorized article in jail. Jail officials said a correctional officer found a weapon a sharpened toothbrush Monday afternoon inside a cell that only Walsh Lommen occupied, states a sheriffs deputy report obtained from court. The item was described as a jail-issued toothbrush sharpened to a point on the handle end. Walsh Lommen apparently told the correctional officer he used it for cleaning his fingernails. The latest charge is the most serious that he is facing in South Dakota, punishable by up to 25 years in prison. He is scheduled to return to court later this month. Meanwhile, California authorities want to extradite Walsh Lommen so he can face the murder charge. Extradition proceedings will begin once his South Dakota charges have been resolved in some manner, John Hall, spokesman for the Riverside County prosecutors office, said in an interview. Hall declined to discuss possible motives in Walshs killing. PIERRE | How does Dennis Daugaard feel about his eighth, and final, State of the State address hell deliver this afternoon as the governor of South Dakota? It is something a person thinks about in this job, he said. The speech will be a mix, according to Daugaard. He wants to look back at whats happened in the seven years hes been governor and review current conditions. He also plans to outline what he still hopes South Dakota can accomplish before next January when this second, and final, term as governor ends for him and his wife, Linda. Covering those bases might run beyond the hour or so hes spoken to lawmakers in past years. Ill try to not be too windy, Daugaard said light-heartedly. The event is an opportunity for the couples two daughters and son, along with spouses and grandchildren, to gather again in Pierre. Laura and Jay Mitchell, and Chris and Emily Daugaard, are coming back to Pierre. Sara and Tony Venhuizen, who is Daugaards chief of staff, live in Pierre. Other family members also plan to be in town for the occasion. Thats gratifying, Daugaard said. His time with them, however, looks somewhat limited. Today, after the speech and a briefing for news reporters, there is a social gathering for legislators that governors have traditionally attended. In the interview, Daugaard said hes assembling a file of important matters to pass along to the next governor. Daugaard said the list covers topics such as workforce development, what he described as "money traps" and "bonuses" that might be ahead, and programs his administration has underway. A Republican, he said the file is available for the next governor to be able to make a conscious decision. Four Republicans have filed organizational paperwork to be candidates for their partys nomination in the June primary election. They are U.S. Rep. Kristi Noem, Attorney General Marty Jackley, former legislator Lora Hubbel and Terry LaFleur. Senate Democratic leader Billie Sutton is running for his partys nomination. Daugaard was a state senator when Mike Rounds, a former Senate leader, won the 2002 June primary election for the Republican nomination for governor. Later that month, Rounds asked Daugaard to be his running mate as the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor. The Rounds-Daugaard ticket won the 2002 general election. They were re-elected in 2006. As lieutenant governor, Daugaard presided over the Senate most days of the eight winters of the Legislatures regular sessions and the special sessions in 2003 and 2005. Daugaard said Rounds provided answers that helped him be an effective candidate when Daugaard ran for the Republican nomination for governor in 2010. Daugaard won the June primary and the November general election. His victory in the governors race made Daugaard the first lieutenant governor elected to another major office in South Dakota since Jim Abdnor won a U.S. House of Representatives seat in 1972. Nearly every lieutenant governor since then Bill Dougherty in 1974, Harvey Wollman in 1978, Lowell Hansen in 1986, Walter Dale Miller in 1994, Carole Hillard in 1998 and Steve Kirby in 2002 has run for governor or U.S. House. None made it past his or her primary. The current lieutenant governor, Republican former legislator Matt Michels, doesnt appear to be running for any office this year. When Daugaard ran for re-election as governor in 2014, he turned aside a primary challenge from Hubbel and won a second term that November. Daugaard said the background from Rounds during the 2010 campaign flowed naturally in part because Daugaard was already in the administration. Now Daugaard is offering the same opportunity to those who want to know more about whats happening, both in the governors second-floor office at the Capitol and throughout the two dozen state departments and bureaus. Weve tried to do that for candidates whove asked us, he said. The governor said he and his staff have tried to help potential successors work through legislative proposals, whether or not his administration supported or opposed the plans. If we cant win it on our merits, we arent going to let a technicality win the day, Daugaard said. The governor acknowledged the year remaining is a little bittersweet. He mentioned its sometimes meant passing up activities that he and Linda might otherwise enjoy. During the recent holiday season, brothers and sisters of Linda arranged for what he described as "a party bus." Daugaard said he and Linda decided against joining them because he was governor. It just creates the wrong impression, he said. You have to be cautious when youre out and about. The two turn 65 later this year. Daugaard said he plans to take at least a part-time job for a few years after his time as governor is done. He said he and Linda are especially looking forward to spending more time with their kids and grandkids. "Itll be good to be out of the fish bowl, Daugaard said. The Rapid City Police Department is creating a new unit aimed at helping vulnerable members of the community using a $750,000 grant from an international police association. The police department said its forthcoming Quality of Life Unit will bring social services to the streets, aiming to help people such as the homeless and those suffering from mental health issues or substance abuse. Officials hope this program will prevent victimization. Were hoping with this unit, we can get to people proactively, before a problem occurs and before theres a need for a law enforcement response, Assistant Police Chief Don Hedrick said. This will create a safer environment for everyone. The unit will focus its efforts in downtown Rapid City, from the areas of East Boulevard to West Boulevard and North Street to Columbus Street. It will also make social services more accessible to folks who dont know where or how to obtain them, Hedrick said in an interview. The office, to be staffed by both police officers and social workers, could become part of the Pennington County Health Facility, slated to open in June. The facility, unofficially known as the Restoration Center, will house the county Health and Human Services Department, City/County Alcohol and Drug Programs and the Crisis Care Center. Its important for the new police unit to be closely tied with the Health and Human Services Department, Hedrick said, because theres a lot of overlap between what we're doing and what theyre doing. The $750,000 grant was awarded Friday by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, a Virginia-based nonprofit organization, which the Rapid City Police Department said offered the funds under its Collective Healing Initiative. The money is a one-time grant, but Hedrick said that if the Quality of Life Unit performs as expected, the police department will be able to find other funding opportunities to keep it going. Officials plan for the unit to begin operating this summer. Abraham Lincolns mystic chords that bind us have ever been fragile. They broke asunder in 1860 but have bound us together since. As Pew Research notes in their end of year findings about 2017, were back in the political and cultural badlands. The partisan divide now overwhelms any other considerations like ethnicity. The gap in average partisan differences has grown from 15 to 36 points in just two decades and far exceeds the gap across any other demographic. Half the world still likes us, including our allies, in spite of our politics. Only three in ten Americans own guns and four in ten live in a household where someone owns a gun. Of gun owners, 74 percent say owning a gun is essential to their personal sense of freedom. More than half of all American households do not own guns and those people think guns are the problem with widespread violence. Is the news media the watchdog of democracy or the problem? About 89 percent of Democrats think the media is the watchdog. Over 42 percent of Republicans think the media is the problem. In 2016, three quarters of all of us thought the media were the watchdogs. With a 32 percent growth rate in the overall world population, its no wonder the place seems more crowded than ever except Wyoming, which is losing population. Its a good time to go buy a house in East Egypt, Wyoming or not. Muslims are the fastest growing religious group worldwide due to a younger population and high fertility rates. People who now identify as Hispanic in the U.S. lose half of that identity by the fourth generation. If you just got here from Honduras, youre Hispanic. If youve been here for 100 years, you have a 50 percent chance of having lost that connection and fully adopted our creed and culture; you know, the one we wrote down a couple of hundred years ago. Men and women have very different views about the differences between them, aside from biological factors. Women believe society and culture are the main reasons for the differences in pay and other matters, while men chalk it all up to biological differences. This goes for everything from success at work to parenting techniques to hobbies and physical abilities. Many people expect their own jobs will be automated in their lifetimes but most dont see their own jobs at risk. This was true a couple of decades ago in the timber industry. Sawmills became automated and no longer needed dozens of workers to sort lumber. The result was those same workers found new ways to make new products from sawmill waste products and increased profits and efficiency. Automation means people can find or invent more meaningful work. Colleges and universities are taking a big PR hit from conservatives, who fund lots of schools. More than six in ten Republicans have a negative view of higher learning compared to three in ten Democrats. College professors fare similarly. Immigrants will play the primary role in the growth of the American working-age population in coming decades. The gain is from arriving immigrants, and its a good thing for the economy. Without those immigrants, the working-age population would fall. Start brushing up on Spanish, the second most spoken language in the world. Over 42 percent of Americans dont have a spouse or partner today, especially among the unemployed. Kids have to come from somewhere. Eighty percent of us think we know how hard police work is; 80 percent of police officers dont think so. And, surprise, we are totally divided on climate change. Kathmandu, Nepal: A mass demonstration is organized at Maitighar Mandala and around the areas against the arrest of senior orthopedic surgeon Dr Govinda KC from early morning on Tuesday. People from different walks of life including the politician, civil society members and many others have participated at the demonstration chanting slogans against the arrest of Dr KC. The supporters of Dr KC have demanded immediate release of Dr KC. Police presented Dr. KC before the Supreme Court amid the protest in and around the areas. Dr. KC was arrested on Monday late evening on the charge of contempt of court following the order of the SC to arrest him. In the demonstration, Nepali Congress central member and former Health Minister Gagan Thapa, Naya shakti Nepals coordinator and former prime minister Dr. Baburam Bhattrai, Bibeksheel Sajha Party chairman Rabindra Mishra and many leaders of the different political parties have participated in the demonstration. The Polisario Front suffered a stinking failure in its attempts to deter the participants in the Africa Eco Race to cross on Monday (January 8) the Guerguerat border post between the southernmost tip of the Moroccan Sahara provinces and Northern Mauritania. Actually, the crossing went on smoothly under the watchful eye of the MINURSO peacekeepers, despite the Polisarios threats. The hundred or so competitors left Monaco on December 31 and are to end their race in the capital of Senegal, Dakar, on January 14, after crossing Morocco and Mauritania. After a day of rest Sunday in Dakhla, the participants, driving cars, trucks or motorcycles, began Monday afternoon a new stage linking the Mauritanian towns of Boulanouar and Chami. Since the beginning of this month, some armed elements of the Polisario, on board two pickups, have been positioned in the buffer zone of Guerguerat, in violation of the ceasefire agreement, in force since November 1991. And in a video published on January 7, a Polisario militiaman threatened to prevent the participants in the Africa Eco Race from crossing Guerguerat. However, the United Nations was not long to respond to these provocative acts. After he received Friday a letter of protest from Morocco, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Saturday that he was deeply concerned by the tensions created by the new intrusion of the Polisario in this zone supposed to be under the control of MINURSO. In this context, the Secretary-General called, in a statement relayed by his Deputy spokesman, Farhan Haq, on the parties to the conflict to show utmost restraint and avoid escalation of tensions. He warned the Polisario against obstructing commercial traffic flow between Morocco and Mauritania, and called on the front to retreat from the area. Regular civilian and commercial traffic should not be obstructed and no action should be taken, which may constitute a change to the status quo of the Buffer Strip, Guterres said in the statement. The Polisario and its Algerian mentors have thus suffered a new bitter failure. And as they continue losing ground diplomatically, they seek to drag Morocco into an armed confrontation. Thank you for reading! Please log in, or sign up for a new account and purchase a subscription to continue reading. If you are currently a print subscriber but don't have an online account, select this option. You will need to use your 7 digit subscriber account number (with leading zeros) and your last name (in UPPERCASE). The online photo contest, which is held using the hashtag #GMS25, is part of the 25th anniversary celebrations of the establishment of the GMS Programme. GMS countries are Cambodia, China (specifically Yunnan province and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region), Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. As we celebrate the 25th anniversary of the establishment of the GMS, we would like to take stock of the achievements of the regional cooperation and give a clear image of how it changed the lives of the people living along the Mekong for the better, said Nguyen Minh Cuong, an ADB Principal Regional Cooperation Specialist and Unit Head of the GMS Programme. Were hopeful that the photo contest will showcase this and provide encouragement for the future work of the GMS, he added. The contest is open to nonprofessional photographers, of any age from ADBs member countries. Images must be original and taken personally by the photographer, not previously published, and showcase daily life in the Mekong subregion and how lives have changed in the last 25 years. Contestants can submit as many photos as they like. To enter the contest, contestants post the photograph on their Instagram accounts using the hashtag #GMS25 and tag @ADB_HQ. Photos can be posted between January 8 and February 9. Winners will be announced on February 20. First prize winner will receive 500 USD, second prize winner will get 200 USD, and third prize winner will take home 100 USD. Winners will be judged on the merit of their content or on the number of Instagram likes. Established in 1992 with support from ADB, the GMS Programme helps the implementation of high priority subregional projects in transport, energy, telecommunications, environment, human resource development, tourism, trade, private sector investment, and agriculture. As of 2016, ADB has approved 7.3 billion USD in loans for 84 GMS investment projects, with GMS member countries and development partners providing 4.9 billion USD and 6.9 billion USD, respectively, according to the bank.-VNA The Seoul government said that it will also set aside its own money to help the victims heal their wounds and recover their dignity, instead of using the fund that Japan contributed to under the agreement. Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha unveiled those plans during a press conference in Seoul as a follow-up to a recent government conclusion that the deal was flawed and sufficient efforts were not made to reflect the views and opinions of victims before it was reached between the neighbors. "It cannot be denied that the 2015 deal was an official agreement reached between the governments of each country, and our government will not demand renegotiation," Kang said in a prepared statement. "We still expect Japan to accept the truth in accordance with universally accepted standards and keep making efforts to recover their dignity and heal the wounds in their minds... What the victims consistently want is a voluntary and sincere apology," she added. SINGAPORE 60's: ANDY's POP MUSIC INFLUENCE IS A PERSONAL MUSIC, MEMORY TRAIL. BLOGGER DOES NOT OWN THE RIGHTS TO VIDEOS, AUDIO TRACKS AND IMAGES. THEY ARE UPLOADED FOR FUN, EDUCATIONAL, ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES AND HAVE BEEN CREDITED. BLOG IS NOT SPONSORED IN ANY WAY WHATSOEVER. INFORM BLOGGER OF COPYRIGHT ISSUES AND POST WILL BE DELETED IMMEDIATELY. DO NOT COPY THE POSTS; GET PERMISSION N CREDIT ME IF YOU DO. ANDY LIM LA (NOVEMBER, 2008) - () Register for more free articles. Sign up for our newsletter to keep reading. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! Already a Subscriber? Already a Subscriber? Sign in Terms of Service Privacy Policy The U.S. Marshals Service Northern Iowa Fugitive Task Force is seeking the public's assistance in locating the following people: * Manuel Jesus Frias, 34. Frias is 5 feet 7 inches tall and 160 pounds. He has tattoos on his left fingers. * Maria Shantel LeClaire, 27. LeClaire is 5 feet 3 inches tall and weighs 130 pounds. She has a tattoo on her abdomen. Both Frias and LeClaire are wanted for questioning in relation to a shooting that occurred in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on Friday morning. Anyone with information can call the Northern Iowa Fugitive Task Force at 712-252-0211, email siouxlands.mostwanted@usdoj.gov or text the keyword TEN99 and the tip to tip411 (847411). SIOUX CITY | Three fugitives sought by the U.S. Marshals Service Northern Iowa Fugitive Task Force have been arrested. The task force reports Sioux City Police assisted U.S. marshals in the arrests of Holly Griffin, Melvyn Brown and Matthew Sandoval. Griffin, 33, was arrested Thursday after police received a tip. Police and U.S. marshals located her outside of a Morningside apartment complex and took her into custody without incident. Griffin was wanted for violation of her supervised release from prison. She was on supervision after being convicted of conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. Brown, 40, was arrested after attempting to elude capture by jumping out of an apartment window and running away on foot but was apprehended by an Sioux City Police K-9. He was wanted by the Iowa Department of Corrections for violation of his parole on an original charge of delivery of cocaine. Authorities did not list the date of his arrest in a news release. Sandoval, 24, was captured Sunday night after police stopped a passenger car he was riding inside. He was taken into custody without incident. Sandoval was wanted by the Iowa Department of Corrections for violation of his parole on an original charge of felony possession of drugs. OMAHA | Water releases from Gavins Point Dam remain above normal as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers continues to make room for 2018 runoff. Current releases from the dam near Yankton, South Dakota, are at 21,500 cubic feet per second. Normal winter release rates range from 12,000 cfs-17,000 cfs. The total water stored in the six Missouri River reservoirs currently occupies 0.2 million acre-feet of the flood control storage zones. The corps expects that the above-average releases will clear space so that the full 16.3 MAF of flood control space will be available for the 2018 runoff season. Once that level has been reached, releases from Gavins Point are expected to be reduced to 18,000 cfs. Based on current soil moisture conditions and plains and mountain snowpack, the corps has forecast 2018 runoff above Sioux City at 26.6 MAF, 105 percent of the average annual runoff of 25.3 MAF. SIOUX CITY | Faced with a gap in paramedic services countywide, Woodbury County officials are asking the county's rural cities to weigh whether they would financially support 24/7 paramedic service at the county level. Under a plan pitched to local leaders Monday, each of Woodbury County's 14 smaller cities would pay a proportional percentage of the $288,365 needed to fund 3 paramedic positions at the county level and medical supplies. It would come out to approximately $14.79 per capita. Of that amount, $121,861 would also come from the rural services levy in Woodbury County's budget, which is money collected from rural townships. County leaders believe such a plan would help the county fill the gap left in the rural emergency services system on Jan. 1 when Siouxland Paramedics Inc., the nonprofit ambulance service that had sent paramedic assistance to rural Woodbury County areas, ceased responding to emergency calls. Woodbury County Emergency Services, which is based in Climbing Hill, currently hires only one paramedic who works daytime hours on weekdays. Director Gary Brown said it would need the other 2 positions to reach 24/7 capacity. Paramedic assistance is necessary on calls where care on the way to the hospital is needed beyond what a basic emergency medical technician can provide, such as IVs and many medications. Woodbury County finance director Dennis Butler presented the plan Monday evening during a Woodbury County Board of Supervisors town hall meeting. Several local mayors, city council members, township leaders and emergency services representatives attended the meeting. In addition to the first plan, Butler presented two other options as comparisons. One would allow Sergeant Bluff, which has paramedics on its volunteer fire department, to opt out of the payment. But that would cause the cost for the rest of the cities to rise. "If cities drop out it could jeopardize the whole plan," Butler said. "Because when one city drops out, it raises the per capita for the rest." A third option presented would require each city to pay the same amount, $11,893, but would disproportionately affect smaller cities, such as Oto, where only 108 residents would be responsible for footing the bill. Butler said the first option provides a fair way to fund the charge and will exempt Sioux City, which began funding its own Emergency Medical Services Division on Jan. 1 to fill its own gap. If the cities take no action, Butler said, the current Woodbury County paramedic in July will be funded using the money supplied by the townships and will then only serve the rural townships, not the cities. County board chairman Rocky De Witt told attendees the board would like to know the cities' interest in participating in the plans at their proposed funding level by the first week in February. "I don't think there's any one of us on the board ... that aren't hopeful that we can still get something put together," he said. "Take this back to your councils, take this back to your neighbors, and see what we can get done." If the cities are on board, the plan would then go into effect July 1, at the beginning of the 2019 budget year. Supervisors would then be advised on paramedic services by a newly formed advisory board including mayors and emergency services representatives. Brown said a more ideal situation would be for the state of Iowa to make emergency medical services an essential service -- such as law enforcement and fire response -- and then to allow counties to establish a levy countywide that could exempt large cities, such as Sioux City, which provide their own services. WASHINGTON -- I'm almost beginning to feel sorry for him. Donald Trump, that is. Having previously posited that it's wrong to make fun of the mentally deficient, I'm reluctant to further highlight recent revelations from author Michael Wolff, whose new book, "Fire and Fury," reports on what can only be described as insanity at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Then again, Trump is the president and, therefore, rules of civility take a back seat to the nation's health and security. Besides, even a saint would be tempted to mutter, Toldja. The thing is, countless people -- and not just Democrats -- have been trying all last year and before to convey that Donald Trump wasn't up to the job. Even his inner circle concluded as much after a brief romance with the fantasy that they could make him into a useful president. His behavior, language, outbursts, impulsiveness -- all suggested that he is "like a child," as Wolff put it Friday on NBC's "Today." Worse, given those very characteristics, that he's quite possibly not mentally competent to perform his duties One needn't look far for evidence. Most recent is his taunt to North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un that his (Trump's) nuclear button is bigger than Kim's. This was Trump's response after Kim had said that his nuclear button was always at the ready. What is it about certain men who must always resort to measurements? That's a rhetorical question. Other interesting tidbits include that members of Trump's Cabinet have called him an "idiot" and a "dope" behind his back. Would the two people in the back of the room who have not used these words to describe the president please raise your hand? We're so glad you were able to join us before returning to the asylum today. More serious than gossipy is that, according to a report last week from the New York Times' Michael Schmidt, Trump ordered White House counsel Don McGahn to try to convince Attorney General Jeff Sessions not to recuse himself from the Russia investigation. Trump apparently thought this was entirely appropriate, fresh as he was in the job, but surely his legal counsel knew better? Sessions, who actually does know something about the law and the Constitution, did, of course, recuse himself. What Wolff has accomplished through more than 200 interviews and his nearly free access to the White House and the president's inner circle has been to document through notes and recordings what has long been obvious. Commentators may have insight -- though not much was needed to appraise this president -- but Wolff has tapes. That Trump quickly responded by seeking a cease-and-desist order to prohibit the book's publication is consistent with the behavioral tendencies mentioned above. Past presidents, many of whom have suffered various indictments and humiliations at the fingertips of authors, have never sought to stop a book's publication. What explains this commander in chief's impulse to quash a book's release? Either he fears what's therein, or, as is customary for him, his first impulse is to destroy what and whom he doesn't like. Said Wolff on "Today": "He has to be satisfied in the moment." Other gleanings from Wolff's reporting: The president doesn't read and instead watches a lot of TV, preferably on one of the three screens in his bedroom, where he often retires by 6:30 p.m. to eat his dinner and make calls. He doesn't listen, easily becomes bored and seems unable to pay attention. He repeats the same three stories within minutes of having just told them, and his memory loss is apparently becoming more pronounced. Even during the campaign, when some say Trump was sharper, he was easily distracted and bored. Wolff tells of campaign adviser Sam Nunberg trying to teach Trump about the U.S. Constitution. "I got as far as the Fourth Amendment, before his finger is pulling down on his lip and his eyes are rolling back in his head," says Nunberg in the book. (That amendment is the one about people being safe from unreasonable search and seizure. Perhaps Trump, rather than being disinterested in the presentation, was expressing his opinion of the amendment.) If some of the anecdotes are new, the news isn't: Donald Trump, who never wanted the job, isn't up to the presidency. His narcissism - as expressed while either playing red-button roulette with a nuclear clown or trying to kill a book - poses a danger to the country and the world. Lets make 2018 a better year than 2017 for a majority of families. If improvement is to become a reality, it means that legislative changes are needed. Positive change can start with the upcoming election in Iowa House District 6. Rita De Jong is a difference maker type of candidate. Those who know her are supporting her because we are aware of her past and how effective she has been as an educator, a community member, and a person who understands concerns relating to mental health, education and quality of life issues. Rita is a leader who has invested in future generations by uniting families, students and community. She accomplished this during her 34 years as an educator. Following retirement, she continued her efforts to improve the lives of many by leading the BOOST program and serving on the SHIP board. Remember, the best predictor of what a person will do in the future is to see what they achieved in the past. Dont just rely on my statements. Do some homework. Contact educators and community members who have worked with her on Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Boys and Girls Home and Family Services, Ballet Sioux, the Soup Kitchen, Food Bank, Siouxland Youth for Christ and Habitat for Humanity. Check out Ritas contributions to her community and make a decision to cast your ballot for her. Share your support for Rita DeJong. Lets make it happen. - Richard Owens, Sioux City President Trump insults our allies, like Great Britain, where he is no longer welcome. Insults Gold families, Hispanics and other minorities, his opponents and women. Claims protestors of white supremacy bear equal guilt with the racists, gives largest tax breaks to the most wealthy, takes health care from the most vulnerable, and is downsizing national monuments. Brags about harassing women and openly supports a candidate accused of sexual misconduct (involving, in some alleged cases, minor girls) because he would be better than any Democrat. Now he plans on raising the debt that our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren will have to pay off. This does not seem to be a good plan to make America great again." Reality TV created the myth of Donald Trump, and American voters bought into it. The Apprentice established Trump as a top-shelf business manager whose keen eye for talent was key to the Trump brands success. Just enough American voters embraced the myth to elevate a real estate developer and game show host to the presidency. A controversial bombshell book, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, outlines in great detail how woefully unprepared Trump was to take on the most important office in the world. Trump reportedly is apoplectic over the book, and White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders has denounced it as fiction. But a president to whom The Washington Post has attributed 1,950 lies is hardly someone to take seriously when he calls author Michael Wolff a liar. Whats not fiction is the trail of chaos and disaster that has followed Trump since Inauguration Day. The man behind the reality show actually has little use for top talent and tosses senior staffers overboard like ballast from a sinking ship. Recall just a few of those who fell in the battle to keep the Trump myth alive: Reince Priebus, who lasted only six months as Trumps first chief of staff; Michael Flynn, Trumps first national security adviser, who survived only three weeks in the job and is now a cooperating witness after pleading guilty to lying to the FBI in the Russia scandal; Stephen Bannon, the chief strategist who helped align Trump with the white supremacist movement; Mike Dubke, the White House communications director who lasted only three months in the job; Anthony Scaramucci, the dapper replacement for Dubke who publicly self-destructed and lasted only one week on the job; Sean Spicer, the press secretary and communications director whose disastrous first days on the job included lying about the size of Trumps inaugural crowd; Tom Price, the secretary of health and human resources who resigned after reports surfaced that he had spent more than $1 million of taxpayer money on private travel accommodations. Thats just a sample of Trumps disastrous hiring and management decisions. He is either a lousy judge of character, or he has a badly misplaced sense of priorities on what qualifies a person to serve inside the highest office in the land. For Trump, its not about talent; its about blind, unwavering loyalty and a willingness to be publicly berated if it helps elevate Trumps image. Because Trump so casually undercuts his staffers and dismisses their sacrifices, they will eventually stop giving him the loyalty he demands and grow amenable to cooperation with investigators probing possible White House connections to Russian election meddling and obstruction of justice. The exposed Trump myth is now a bestselling book. But if his already-sinking approval ratings are any indication, most Americans realized long ago that theyve been conned. BEIJING (AP) The Latest on a collision between an oil tanker and a freighter off China's eastern coast (all times local): 3:30 p.m. The South Korean coast guard says thick smoke is still billowing from a burning oil tanker in the East China Sea and bad weather is also worsening visibility. Personnel from three countries are working to find the tanker's 32 missing crew members and contain oil spewing from the blazing wreck. The Iranian tanker and a freighter collided late Saturday. Chinese authorities have said the Sanchi was carrying 136,000 metric tons (nearly 1 million barrels) of condensate, a type of ultra-light oil. By comparison, the Exxon Valdez was carrying 1.26 million barrels of crude oil when it spilled 260,000 barrels into Prince William Sound off Alaska in 1989. The size of the spill and scale of the damage may be smaller. South Korean coast guard official Kwon Yong-deok told The Associated Press on Monday that much of the light, gassy condensate from the Sanchi may have evaporated or burned immediately, unlike the thick crude that gushed out of the Valdez. ___ 1:30 p.m. Chinese state media say an Iranian oil tanker that caught fire after colliding with a freighter off China's east coast is at risk of exploding and sinking. Personnel from three countries are working to find the tanker's 32 missing crew members and contain oil spewing from the blazing wreck. State broadcaster China Central Television, citing Chinese officials, said none of the 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis who have been missing since the collision late Saturday have been found as of Monday morning. It also said the search and cleanup efforts have been hampered by fierce fires and poisonous gases that have completely consumed the tanker and surrounding waters, CCTV reported. The tanker was sailing from Iran to South Korea when it collided with the freighter in the East China Sea late Saturday. ___ 11 a.m. The U.S. Navy has joined the search for 32 missing from an Iranian oil tanker that caught fire after colliding with a bulk freighter off China's east coast. China, South Korea and the U.S. sent ships and planes to search for the 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis missing since the collision late Saturday. The U.S. Navy, which sent a P-8A aircraft from Okinawa, Japan, to aid the search, said late Sunday none of the missing crew had been found. The Panama-registered tanker Sanchi was sailing from Iran to South Korea when it collided with the Hong Kong-registered freighter CF Crystal in the East China Sea, China's Ministry of Transport said. All 21 crew members of the Crystal were rescued, the ministry said. It wasn't immediately clear what caused the collision. Where is the punishment of the Mullahs for the American blood they have shed? Bruce Thornton is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. The mullocracy in Iran is bragging that it has crushed the demonstrations against the regime that broke out on December 28. Regime change from within still remains a forlorn hope, as the theocratic police state has employed its usual brutal violence and intimidation to deny the protestors any momentum. Burning identification cards and electrical bills seem the last recourse for those brave Iranians abandoned by the so-called global community that averts its gaze from the destruction of human rights it pretends to worship. So it goes in the 40-year history of bungling, indifference, greed, appeasement, and sheer stupidity that have defined the Wests response to the most consequential jihadist movement in modern times. A lot of blood has stained a lot of different guilty hands. Start with Jimmy Carter and our terminally blinkered state department. Carters foreign policy team completely misinterpreted the Iranian revolution of 1979. Trapped in the fossilized narrative of anticolonialist resistance, nationalist self-determination, and hunger for human and political rights, our foreign policy savants missed the profoundly religious motives of the resistance to the Shah. The clerical class and the revolutions godfather, the Ayatollah Khomeini, were driven by hatred of the modernizing, anti-Islamic program of the Shah and his father, such as the relaxation of sharia laws governing women, popular culture, and religious minorities, a program that Khomeini called the abolition of the laws of Islam and an existential threat to Islam itself. And they were particularly angered at the subsequent weakening of the clerics power and authority over social, private, and political life. Indeed, the revolution was in fact a classic jihad against those modernizing apostate Muslim leaders who whored after Western idols, a dynamic that polluted the purity of the faith with anti-Koranic innovations derived from infidel culture. A cursory knowledge of Islamic history could have shown our analysts that such violent conflicts have consistently characterized Islamic history and its clash with Muslim traitors influenced by Christian rivals, from the Kharajites of the 7th century to the Wahhabis of the 18th to the Muslim Brothers of the 20th and to al Qaeda and ISIS of the 21st. Instead, we reacted in terms of our modern Western models of the inevitable progress of human rights, secularism, economic development, and political self-determination. We assumed that after the revolution, liberals, leftists, and technocrats would take over and start creating a Western-style state and integrating it into the global community on the basis of shared interests and mutual respect. But as Khomeini said, Islam is the religion of blood for the infidels and a sword for crushing the traitors who promote alien innovations. The goal of the revolution was not a Western nation-state that improves its peoples economic and political conditionsWe did not start a revolution to lower the price of melons, Khomeini made clear. Nor was integration with the postwar international system a goal, a point Khomeini made clear when he authorized the seizure of the American Embassy in Tehran and the taking hostage of its personnel, graphically demonstrating his contempt for that system and its diplomatic protocols. Rather, the destiny of Islam is to fight the world until all men say there is no god but Allah. Hence the creation of the Islamic Republic of Iran was just the beginning. We shall export our revolution to the whole world, Khomeini promised, a pledge his successors have kept for forty years. Irans next repudiation of international norms and Americas power came in the 1983 Marine barracks bombing in Beirut, at that time the largest terrorist attack against America in history. This murder of 241 U.S. troops was carried out by jihadist groups created, trained, and funded by Iran. It was an attack in Irans already declared war against the U.S., the Great Satan and infidel global hegemon standing in the way of Islams divinely sanctioned triumph. But still not grasping the context of the struggle, we did not retaliate against the jihadists, not even bombing the Beqaa Valleythe Little Tehran where Irans proxies were encamped, trained, and operated with impunity. Just as Jimmy Carter did not retaliate for the embassy seizure, the Reagan administration pulled out of Lebanon, demonstrating to the proliferating jihadist groups already inspired by Irans success that we were a weak horse too in love with our godless lives of pleasure and consumption to defend ourselves and our beliefs. Also on Reagans watch took place the Iran-Contra affair of 1985-86, a plan to arm the Contras fighting the communist Sandinistas in Nicaragua, and to ransom Americans held hostage by Iranian jihadist proxies in Beirut, by selling advanced weapons to Iran, both actions violating arms embargoes. This cock-eyed plan was also seen as a way to woo the mullahs from the Soviet Union: American emissaries brought to Iran a cake in the shape of a key, apparently a metaphor for unlocking the impediments to Iranian-American friendship. Once more our foreign policy gurus didnt get the real nature of the Islamic Republic, which had already demonstrated its contempt for diplomatic outreach and the norms of international relations, using both only to extract concessions as it pursued its jihadist policy. The Reagan foreign policy team had not, as Khomeini said about Jimmy Carter after his disastrous attempt to rescue the embassy hostages, understood what kind of people [they are] facing and what school of thought [they are] playing with. Our people is the people of blood and our school the school of jihad. Despite this long record of Irans jihadist nature and intentions, administrations from both parties have continued to do little to punish the mullahs for the American blood they have shed. Thousands of Americans have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan by munitions and weapons provided by Iran, and by jihadists financed, trained, and transported by Iran. Evidence of Irans nuclear ambitions has led only to endless diplomacy, weak sanctions, and cringing outreach manipulated by Iran, which has followed the North Korea playbook to extract concessions by making empty promises. Yes, the Cold War and the need to respond to the 9/11 attacks dominated our attention. But there were no such excuses for Barack Obama and his disastrous agreement that if not abandoned, will lead to a nuclear-armed Iran in less than a decade. Despite Irans long track record of double-dealing and weaponizing negotiations, as a Johnson advisor said of the North Vietnamese, Obama gave the worlds foremost state sponsor of terror $1.5 billion and virtual carte blanche to develop nuclear-tipped missiles. Obamas alleged reasons were to encourage Iran to join the family of nations, improve its economy, and normalize its aggressive foreign policy, preposterous goals for anyone aware of Irans history as a jihadist state, or even cognizant of Islams consistent 14 centuries of doctrine and aggression. This stubborn refusal to accept the futility of changing such a states behavior through negotiation, outreach, flattery, and bribes reveals how deeply engrained such blindness is in our institutional received wisdom. Of course, grubbier motives also lie behind this feckless policy. Diplomatic negotiation is a politically convenient smokescreen for politicians and citizens who do not want to take the risk and pay the price of using force to change state behavior, but who still need to pretend that something is being done. Economic sanctions if severe enough could be helpful, but governments and international businessmen, who operate on the ancient precept that money doesnt stink, fret at losing access to markets, resources, and investment opportunities. Reimposing meaningful sanctions on Iran will face pushback from the companies that have rushed in to do business with the mullahs after Obamas deal ended the sanctions. So were left with a Micawber foreign policy: waiting for something to turn up. A lot of the enthusiastic commentary about the recent protests has reflected this hope that the oppressed Iranian people will solve the problem by ending the theocracy. But without much more substantial aid to the opposition, and much more significant pressure on the theocrats, that outcome is unlikely. Nor can we wait for Irans manifest weaknessesendemic corruption, brutal oppression, a failing economy, and a demographic death-spiralto do our work for us. As Adam Smith said, there is a lot of ruin in a nation, even a dysfunctional one. And such a state can wreak immense damage on its way to Gotterdammerung. The Thousand Year Reich lasted only twelve, but it took at least 50 million lives with it. Do we really want to roll the dice on Iran collapsing before it acquires nuclear weapons and thus enjoys the immunity that North Korea has? That outcome will mean more blood on more hands, including our own. The gravity of the existential threat we face from Islamic Jihad is truly of epic proportions. It is essentially a battle pitting free-civilized man against a totalitarian barbarian. What is at stake is the struggle for our very soul - namely who we are and what we represent. The lives that were sacrificed for individual rights and freedoms that we've come to cherish are being chiseled away from right under our noses by the stealth jihadists. And many of us are in denial and totally clueless. The left's appeasement and pandering to evil is nothing new. What makes their utopian delusions so infuriating and unpardonable is that it is not only they who will have to pay the consequences, and deservedly, so, they are thwarting and undermining our best efforts at resistance and are thus dragging us down in the process as well. By Peter Lancz,, the head of the Raoul Wallenberg World Campaign Against Racism. The Board of Education of Calvert County Public Schools will hold an unscheduled closed meeting on January 9, 2018 beginning at 6:00 p.m. as permitted by the Maryland Open Meetings Act, Section 3-305(b)(1) and (8) of the General Provisions Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland and Section 3-103 of the General Provision Articles of the Annotated Code of Maryland.The meeting will be held at the Brooks Administration Building, 1305 Dares Beach Road, Prince Frederick, MD 20678.WORK SESSION - 9:00 a.m.CLOSED SESSION - 9:05 a.m.The Board of Education of Calvert County will hold a Closed Session As permitted by the Maryland Open Meetings Act, Section 3-305(b)(1), (7) and (9) of the General Provisions Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland and Section 3-103 of the General Provision Articles of the Annotated Code of Maryland.BUSINESS MEETING - 10:00 a.m.1. Pledge of Allegiance and Moment of Silencea. CCPS Mission Statement2. Election of OfficersCONSENT AGENDA1. Adoption of Agenda2. Adoption of Minutes3. Financial Reportsa. Restricted Fundsb. Construction Fundsc. Child Nutrition Funds4. Personnel Reports5. Enrollment Report6. Policy for Approval7. Approval of Ed Specs for BESACTION ITEMS1. Equity Quarterly & Strategic Plan Update2. Seal of Biliteracy Presentation3. Policy for Review4. General Funds5. Construction Report6. Legislative Update7. Approval of Snow Make-up Days8. Appeal 17-03CLOSED SESSIONThe Board of Education of Calvert County will hold a Closed Session As permitted by the Maryland Open Meetings Act, Section 3-305(b)(1), (7) and (9) of the General Provisions Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland and Section 3-103 of the General Provision Articles of the Annotated Code of Maryland. HUGHESVILLE, Md. (January 09, 2018)During the January 3 meeting of the Southern Maryland Agricultural Development Commission (SMADC), Chairman Yates Clagett, SMADC Director Shelby Watson-Hampton and Tri-County Council for Southern Maryland Executive Director John Hartline, presented checks totaling $125,000.00, to four regional entities for agricultural enhancement projects. Representatives from Anne Arundel Economic Development Corporation, Calvert, St. Mary's and Charles' County governments, the Prince George's County Soil Conservation District and University of Maryland Extension received the funding awards on behalf of their counties for Regional Agriculture Projects (RAP) that benefit their respective Southern Maryland farming communities. The Regional Agriculture Project (RAP) initiative was conceived by SMADC to further its mission to support farms and farmers in order to sustain the future of agriculture in Southern Maryland. All five Southern Maryland counties collaborated with their county Farm Bureaus, Soil Conservation Districts and Economic Development/county governments, to identify much needed enhancements for their agricultural communities. Every county provided matching funds to their projects for a total regional investment of $980,000. Resulting projects and partnerships offer potential to boost economic viability for all types of farming enterprise and strengthen cross-county relationships. Projects (expected to commence in 2018 and completed within three years) address specific issues or needs expressed by the counties, include the restoration of an historic dairy barn in Anne Arundel County for agriculture education programs and meeting space, an online infrastructure and content management system for Calvert County to provide opportunity for all producers to have a presence on the internet, a soil health demonstration project for Prince George's County to help educate the farming community on best management practices that improve soil health, and a new enclosed farmers market building for St. Mary's County that provides utility services to allow the expanded sale of refrigerated value-added products. Charles County is supporting the St. Mary's County market project with their share of RAP funds as the market offers opportunity for vendors/farms from both counties. The Pride Centers Coffee and Conversation social was in full swing when it convened on the morning of Jan. 9. The holidays are over; the snowbirds have returned to South Florida; and 185 gay seniors and their friends gathered for a morning of friendship, networking, pastries and coffee. Bruce Williams, organizer of these and other events at the center on behalf of South Floridas LGBT seniors, was once again in charge, starting out the informational part of the morning with one of his (in)famous jokes. Williams asked if there were any virgins people who were attending C&C for the first time. He then proceeded to remind the assembly that representatives from Broward Property Appraiser Marty Kiar and CapTel were present, ready to help whoever needed help with their property appraisal or with captioned phone service. Williams introduced a series of speakers, who spoke about a variety of community groups or events of interest to gay seniors. Kristofer Fegenbush, the Pride Centers Chief Operating Officer, spoke about upcoming Center events. Tom Katt Pence (I love you the most.) from Celebration of Friends spoke about his groups Saturday mornings Coffee Klatch in Palm Aire. Patti Lynn from the Broward Sheriffs Office discussed the BSOs upcoming Shredathon. Lisa Peters from SunServe reminded the group of SunServes lunch program Friday at ArtServe. Ed Sparan from the World AIDS Museum gave a shpiel about Heroes: Fighting the AIDS Trenches, two one act plays by Michael Shayne. Heroes, which features Michael Perry as Vito Russo and Marcie Hall as Ruth Coker Burks both champions of the fight against AIDS - will be performed on Friday, January 19, at 7 p.m., at the Broward County Main Library Auditorium. (The real Ruth Coker Burks will be present.) Tickets are $30 though Sparan promised CC participants a senior discount - and it will benefit the World AIDS Museum. Finally, the group heard from sponsor of this weeks Coffee and Conversation, Julie Peterman of the Health Coverage Solutions (hcsinsured.com), who gave an informative talk about health insurance and Medicare advantage plans. At the Jan. 4 mayoral forum, Vice Mayor Bruce Roberts rejected the idea that a series of anti-Dean Trantalis mailers were homophobic. The mailers depict Trantalis, who is openly gay and the current Dist. 2 commissioner, as a puppet and in flamboyant makeup and clothing. They were created by the Florida Community Alliance PC, a Political Action Committee with a Tallahassee mailing address. Roberts did not deny he was associated with the PAC and defended the mailers. He said they were not meant to be homophobic. Other people may interpret it that way . . . If you look at my record [which includes a vote in 2014 to support gay marriage in a city resolution and protections for LGBT individuals in the citys procurement process] you will see that I am completely the opposite [of homophobic], said Roberts at the forum. Related: Fort Lauderdale Mayors Race Turns Nasty in Debate Sun Sentinel reporter Brittany Wallman said she was told by quite a few voters that they viewed it as homophobic. Interviews with some LGBT activists and Fort Lauderdale residents found mixed opinions on whether or not the ads were homophobic. Activist Michael Rajner said he does not view the mailers as homophobic. But given the issue of homophobia is now being raised, I challenge Commissioners Bruce Roberts and Dean Trantalis to team up at the Jan. 23rd commission meeting and finally request for the city commission to codify in city ordinance, the mayor and commissions commitment to non-discrimination that explicitly list sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classifications. Back in October, the commission amended their procurement process to mandate vendors doing business with the city to demonstrate such, but the city itself only has a managers policy on non-discrimination and hasnt gone the full mile to enact the protections citywide by a vote of the mayor and commission like many other cities around the nation, wrote Rajner. He called upon the city commission to push for non-discrimination in everything it does. Ed Leuchs, a Fort Lauderdale resident and director with the Dolphin Democrats, said its hard to believe anyone who puts out these mailers professionally would not know how depicting a gay man in makeup would be perceived. If your running against a black candidate, you dont do certain stereotypes. He could have just been a puppet like Pinocchio, I suppose. But the makeup was the over the top part. Its a stereotype associated with gay men. Most of us dont wear makeup, Leuchs said. Related: 2017 SFGN Achievements in Excellence Award - Fort Lauderdale City Commissioner Dean Trantalis Fort Lauderdale resident Bill Henning wrote that he was shocked to see the mailers. When I saw the anti-Trantalis mailer sent out by the PAC backing Bruce Roberts, frankly, I was shocked to see such blatantly homophobic imagery poisoning an election campaign here in a city that boasts such a large and vocal LGBT community, a city that is frequently praised for its LGBT-friendliness. I was appalled. This kind of crap would never fly back in New York City. I hope it's not acceptable in Fort Lauderdale either. Roberts, Trantalis, and former city commissioner Charlotte Rodstrom will face off in the mayoral primary on Tuesday, Jan. 16. If no candidate gets 50 percent plus one of the vote, a runoff between the top two vote getters will be held Tuesday, March 13. The Broward County Commission unanimously passed an ordinance prohibiting the practice of conversion therapy on minors. Commissioners voted 8-0 at Tuesdays meeting to make it illegal for licensed therapists to practice conversion or reparative therapy on minors. Broward County now joins Palm Beach County as the two Florida counties to ban conversion therapy. Conversion therapy is the practice of changing a persons sexual orientation or gender identity. For many many years this was thought of as a corrective process, said Commissioner Barbara Sharief. Its about time we did take a stand that we are supportive of our LGBTQI youth. It is archaic, barbaric and needs to be stopped. Thirty people signed up to speak on the issue during the public hearing portion of the meeting with a vast majority voicing approval of the ordinance. Not only is it negligent and untruthful to tell anyone that their identity can be changed, more importantly it is unjustifiable and cruel to promote the idea that it needs to be or should be, said Jessica Gottsleben, a Broward County resident and representative of the Trevor Projects 50 Bills, 50 States project. Eight states have outlawed conversion therapy on minors. Michael Rajner, Vice Chair of Broward Countys Human Rights Board, called conversion therapy a crock of you-know-what. Rajner encouraged commissioners to act because we dont have the courage in Tallahassee to take this up. Therapist Robert Otto spoke against the ordinance saying it removes the opportunity for youth to come talk to him about unwanted or romantic feelings. Otto said the county has been put on notice by the Liberty Counsel and preempted by the state. He said the ordinance violates his first amendment rights. Commissioner Mark Bogen said he was outraged by Ottos remarks, adding people claiming to be doing therapy dont know what they are doing. Rajner said there is nothing voluntary about conversion therapy. These youth are given an ultimatum and threatened to be cast aside, Rajner said. Commissioner Chip LaMarca, the lone Republican on the commission, asked county attorney Andrew Meyers for his opinion before the vote. Meyers said the county was not risk free and aware of challenges but similar laws have been upheld in the Ninth and 11th U.S. circuit courts. LaMarca eventually voted for the ordinance, prompting commissioner Tim Ryan to remark, youve been in political conversion since Ive been here. LaMarca said it was a tough decision. Try being a Republican in Broward County that supports his gay friends, he said. Its very clear to me that this is good policy, Ryan said. Stratton Pollitzer, Deputy Director of Equality Florida, said the threat of a lawsuit from the Liberty Counsel is nothing to fear. This is not a civil rights issue, Pollitzer said. This is about licensed therapists lying to their patients and scaring them. Conversion therapy is a deceptive and utterly discredited practice that targets minors against their will. What we are talking about is a matter of survival. Commissioner Dale Holness said he was glad to see the process play out in a public hearing broadcast live over the internet. This is the democratic process at work, listening to all sides, Holness said. This is in the best interest of our community. Comic books, anime, video games, cosplay. No matter what gets your geek side going, chances are youll find it at Paradise City Comic Con this weekend. Like most large-scale fan conventions, Paradise will be filled with events, vendors, artists and more. And plenty of them come with an LGBT twist. LGBT and Allied Guests Special guests include Andy Dick of "The Andy Dick Show" and "Dancing with the Stars." Dick came out as bisexual in 2009 jokingly self-proclaiming himself as a try-sexual. Dick will be at the event all three days, though autograph and photograph information has not yet been provided. He will be in various panels and events throughout the weekend, including an open bar karaoke V.I.P. party at the Doubletree Hotel. Also making an appearance will be openly gay actor Wilson Cruz, known for his role in television series Star Trek: Discovery, as well as portraying a gay high school student in My So-Called Life." He is also known for his long-standing advocacy of gay youth of color. Attendees can find Cruz on Saturday and Sunday at his booth signing autographs and taking selfies. He will also have his own professional photo op session. He will join in on a Star Trek: Discovery panel on Saturday with co-star Shazad Latif. Cecil Baldwin of the Welcome to Night Vale audiobook is openly gay, as is his character in the show. Attendees can find him during Saturday and Sunday at his booth doing autographs and photo ops. He will also attend various panels throughout the weekend. Actress Virginia Gardner, who plays lesbian superhero Karolina Dead on Marvels Runaways, will also be at the event on Saturday and Sunday to take photos and sign autographs for fans. She will also be in three Runaways panels throughout the weekend. Events and Panels For fans interested in LGBT-themed panels and events, Friday has sassy cosplay drag queens on stage with a pitcher of mojitos. Drag queens Matty, Tommy and Magda hit the stage for an 18+ drag queen event titled Okamas in Pajamas. This panel runs from 10:15 through 11:15 p.m. Saturday features Lets Make it Gay, an 18-and-up panel where the audience takes clips from their favorite shows and dub over the voices with their own gay twists. The panel runs between 1 and 2 a.m.. The convention will be held at the Miami Airport Convention Center for a three-day weekend event, starting on Friday, Jan. 12 through Sunday, Jan. 14. Tickets start at $30 but vary depending on the day (or amount of days) attendees wish to participate. The Miami Airport Convention Center is at 711 NW 72nd Ave in Miami. For more information on tickets, event scheduling and more, visit ParadiseCityComicCon.com. (WB) Shakeups in the U.S. Senate led to news Tuesday that two prominent Republicans and former presidential candidates who have anti-LGBT records Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann may run in 2018. Following passage of tax reform legislation, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) announced hed retire after four decades in the Senate, opening the door for Mitt Romney, who had publicly mulled the idea of running for the seat. Meanwhile, former Rep. Michele Bachmann said on the Christian Broadcasting Network shes considering a run for the seat in Minnesota being vacated by Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) amid allegations of sexual misconduct against him. Bachmann, however, said shes not certain and would consult God on whether shes being called to pursue the open seat. If youre going against the tide in D.C., if youre trying to stand for biblical principles, and you stick your head up, the blades come whirring and they try to chop you off, Bachmann said during the interview. Were trying to be wise. Should we do this? Shouldnt we do this? Both Romney and Bachmann have extensive anti-LGBT records as public officials. As Massachusetts governor, Romney most famously sought to limit the 2003 Goodridge decision at the Massachusetts Supreme Court making the Bay State the first with marriage equality and became a national spokesperson in favor of the Federal Marriage Amendment, which would have banned same-sex marriage nationwide. According to MassEquality, Romney abolished the Governors Commission on GLBT Youth and rescinded an executive order prohibiting sexual orientation discrimination in the state workforce. True to his reputation as a flip-flopper, Romney has also stated contradictory positions on LGBT issues. As a U.S. Senate candidate in 1994, Romney told Log Cabin Republicans hed co-sponsor the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and would seek to expand it to include housing and credit, but later in 2006 said he doesnt support ENDA and in 2007 called it a state issue. A longtime favorite of social conservatives, Bachmann has an anti-LGBT record that has animated her career as far back as 2004 when she also championed the Federal Marriage Amendment and said Gays live a very sad life and its part of Satan. In the course of her career in Congress, Bachmann voted against hate crimes protections legislation, repeal of Dont Ask, Dont Tell, and a version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. She was elected to Congress too late to have voted on the Federal Marriage Amendment in either 2004 or 2006. In 2012, both Romney and Bachmann in pursuit of the Republican presidential nomination staked out anti-LGBT positions and continued their push for a U.S. constitutional amendment that would have banned same-sex marriage nationwide. Bachmann ended up losing the nomination to Romney, but Romney came up short in his bid to unseat President Obama, who went on to serve a second term. Both candidates signed a pledge with the anti-LGBT National Organization for Marriage committing themselves to back a Federal Marriage Amendment; defend the anti-gay Defense of Marriage Act in court; support legislation allowing D.C. residents to vote on its same-sex marriage law; and appoint a presidential commission to investigate harassment of traditional marriage supporters. But after his defeat in the 2012 election, Romney made some surprising statements that struck a different tone in contrast to his anti-LGBT record. Romney recommended Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer veto a religious freedom bill seen to enable anti-LGBT discrimination. (Brewer took that advice and vetoed the bill, unlike Mike Pence, who as Indiana governor signed a similar measure and was forced to sign a fix amid criticism from the LGBT community and business advocates.) After the mass shooting in 2016 at the gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., that killed 49 people and wounded 58 others, Romney took to Twitter to say he and his wife would say a special prayer for the LGBT community that was the focus of this attack. But Romney hasnt publicly turned around from his opposition to same-sex marriage. In 2014, Romney said he still opposes same-sex marriage and it could be generations before the negative impact of marriage equality is determined. Fred Karger, a gay consultant to Republican presidential candidates and himself a candidate for president in 2012, said Hatch is retiring to make room for Romney because the Mormon Church pushed out the former in favor of a more obedient Mormon Church member. Mormon Church leaders have been on a full-time mission for over a year to do just that, Karger said. Noting the history of antagonism between President Trump and Romney, who has called him unfit to serve in the White House, Karger predicted friction between the two if Romney is elected. Its a case of the Mormon Church trumping Trump and his desire to keep Mitt Romney 2,000 miles away from Washington, Karger said. It will be fun to see Romney try and take on President Trump as he has in the past, only to be annihilated by the far more savvy politician. Bachmann hasnt changed her tune at all. Earlier this year, Bachmann said President Trump was elected to the White House despite the odds against him because the Obama administration issued guidance requiring schools to allow transgender kids to use the restroom consistent with their gender identity, or as she put it just issued a sheet of paper and said, overnight, every single public school in the country would have to have the girls bathrooms open to the boys and the boys bathrooms open to the girls. The advancement of transgender rights, Bachmann said, was too much for God, whom she answered the prayers of believers beseeching him, and hes given us a reprieve. Both Romney and Bachmann would be running in a mid-term when Democrats have considerable momentum amid discontent with Trump. But Romney might be a shoe-in to win in the conservative state of Utah. Bachmann would likely run against Minnesota Lt. Gov. Tina Smith, whom Gov. Mark Dayton tapped to succeed Franken on an interim basis. Lucas Acosta, director of LGBT media for the Democratic National Committee, said voters wont forget the anti-LGBT records of Romney and Bachmann as they head to the polls in the congressional mid-terms. Americans have already rejected the anti-LGBTQ extremism of Republicans like Michele Bachmann and Mitt Romney, Acosta said. Not only are their hateful views out-of-step with the country, but with a majority of Utahns and Minnesotans alike. Voters deserve candidates who will fight to protect their freedom to serve, work and love whomever they choose regardless of gender. Chris Johnson, Washington Blade courtesy of the National LGBTQ Media Association. NASA Space Station On-Orbit Status 5 January 2018. NASA Today Amyloid: Today the crew retrieved the final set of Amyloid samples from the measurement experiment unit on the Cell Biology Experiment Facility (CBEF) and placed them in a Minus Eighty Degree Celsius Laboratory Freezer for ISS (MELFI) where they will remain until they are returned on SpaceX-13. Amyloid fibrils prepared in the microgravity environment of the ISS are returned to Earth for analysis through Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and electron microscopy. Amyloid fibrils are the peptide or protein aggregates known to be associated with various diseases, including Alzheimers disease and diabetes. It is expected that this study will provide additional insight into the mechanism of amyloid fibril formation. Microbial Tracking-2 (MT-2): A 52S crewmember collected surface and air samples to characterize the different types of microbial locations on the ISS. The samples were placed inside a MELFI in support of the Microbial Tracking-2 investigation. MT-2 monitors the different types of microbes that are present on ISS over a 1 year period. After the samples are returned to Earth, a molecular analysis of the RNA and DNA will be conducted to identify the specific microbes that are present on ISS in order to understand the microbial flora diversity on the ISS and how it changes over time. Circadian Rhythms: The 53S subject removed and stowed the Double Sensors and Thermolab Unit equipment that was used to complete a 36-hour Circadian Rhythms session that began on Wednesday. Circadian Rhythms investigates the role of synchronized circadian rhythms, or the biological clock, and how it changes during long-duration spaceflight. Researchers hypothesize that a non-24-hour cycle of light and dark affects crewmembers circadian clocks. The investigation also addresses the effects of reduced physical activity, microgravity and an artificially controlled environment. Changes in body composition and body temperature, which also occur in microgravity, can affect crewmembers circadian rhythms as well. Understanding how these phenomena affect the biological clock will improve performance and health for future crewmembers. Human Research Program (HRP) Collections (Biochemical Profile, Repository): A 52S subject conducted his Flight Day (FD) 120 blood sample collections to support the Biochemical Profile and Repository experiments. The samples were placed in MELFI. The Biochemical Profile experiment tests blood and urine samples obtained from astronauts before, during, and after spaceflight. Specific proteins and chemicals in the samples are used as biomarkers, or indicators of health. Post-flight analysis yields a database of samples and test results, which scientists can use to study the effects of spaceflight on the body. Repository is a storage bank used to maintain biological specimens over extended periods of time and under well-controlled conditions. This repository supports scientific discovery that contributes to our fundamental knowledge in the area of human physiological changes and adaptation to a microgravity environment and provides unique opportunities to study longitudinal changes in human physiology spanning many missions. At Home in Space: A 53S crewmember completed an At Home in Space questionnaire this morning. This Canadian Space Agency experiment assesses culture, values, and psychosocial adaptation of astronauts to a space environment shared by multinational crews on long-duration missions. It is hypothesized that astronauts develop a shared space culture that is an adaptive strategy for handling cultural differences and they deal with the isolated confined environment of the spacecraft by creating a home in space. At Home in Space uses a questionnaire to investigate individual and culturally related differences, family functioning, values, coping with stress, and post-experience growth. Combustion Integrated Rack (CIR) Igniter Tip Alignment for Advanced Combustion via Microgravity Experiments (ACME) Operations: To properly align the ACME igniter tip with the ACME coflow burner, the crew removed the chamber insert from the CIR combustion chamber and restrained it to the maintenance work area, before aligning the igniter tip to the coflow burner. The crew then reinstalled and connected the chamber insert into the CIR combustion chamber. The ACME investigation is a set of five independent studies of gaseous flames to be conducted in the CIR. ACMEs primary goal is to improved fuel efficiency and reduced pollutant production in practical combustion on Earth. Its secondary goal is to improve spacecraft fire prevention through innovative research focused on materials flammability. Transparent Alloys Cartridge Installation: After the installation of the cartridge into the Transparent Alloys hardware in the Microgravity Science Glovebox (MSG), there was poor contact between the Transparent Alloys hardware and the cold plate in the MSG that resulted in the inability to properly control the heating of the cartridge. Ground teams are working a plan to resolve this configuration issue. The experiment run for this investigation will be deferred until after the configuration is corrected next week and then will run for a month. The aim of this experiment is to study the morphological instabilities of directional solidified, transparent binary eutectic alloys under purely diffusive conditions. It is planned to observe real-time the dynamics of eutectic front structures with a micron-scale resolution, over a large (centimetric) space scale, and over long periods of time. Such observations would be strongly sensitive to convective motions in the liquid, which, in ordinary conditions on earth, entail a detrimental redistribution of the solute on a scale comparable to the container size. Such convective motions are suppressed in microgravity. The specific goals of the experiment is: to study the formation and the relaxation of topological defects in rod-like structures, to study the rod-to-lamellar transition of eutectic growth patterns, to study the forcing effects of the distortions of the thermal gradient. Space Headaches: The crew completed the weekly questionnaire for the ESA Space Headaches investigation. The Space Headaches investigation collects information that may help in the development of methods to alleviate associated symptoms and improvement in the well-being and performance of crewmembers in space. Headaches during space flight can negatively affect mental and physical capacities of crewmembers that can influence performance during a space mission. ZBook Transitions: Today the crew finished the transition of laptops in the Russian segment from the T61P model to the newer ZBook model. Cargo operations: Today, the crew continued working to pack cargo into the SpX-13 Dragon capsule for return to Earth. Hatch closure is planned for January 12th. Todays Planned Activities All activities were completed unless otherwise noted. HRF Generic Frozen Blood Collection HRF Generic Refrigerated Centrifuge HRF Generic Sample MELFI Insertion HRF Generic Frozen Blood Collection Conclude And Stow Replacement of SSC2 laptop (SM) with Zbook Transparent Alloys Cartridge Installation Total Organic Carbon Analyzer (TOCA) Water Recovery System (WRS) Sample Analysis Polar Desiccant Swap ACME MWA Prep Download Pille Dosimeter Readings Circadian Rhythms Deinstrumentation w. Armband Microbial Tracking-2 Environmental Sample Collection Cleaning MRM1 Fan Screens (group C) Cargo Transfer to Dragon Circadian Rhythms Downlink Audit of spacers for 1,2 power supply MERLIN 1 Desiccant Swap IMS Tagup Personal CO2 Monitor iPad Data Collection At Home In Space Questionnaire DAN. Experiment Session. Microbial Tracking-2 Sample MELFI Insert Public Affairs Office (PAO) Event in High Definition (HD) JEM Circadian Rhythms Armband Stow Total Organic Carbon Analyzer (TOCA) Sample Data Record MELFI 1 Ice Brick Insert 3 Repairing and Testing LF Data Receiver ( ) Ethernet cables JEM Camera Robot Activation Amyloid Sample Detachment Final Amyloid sample Insertion into MELFI -95 degrees C. Amyloid Video Taking In Flight Maintenance (IFM) Waste and Hygiene Compartment (WHC) Full Fill JEM Camera Robot Deactivation Health Maintenance System (HMS) ISS Food Intake Tracker (ISS FIT) Combustion Integrated Rack Doors Open Preventive Maintenance of SM Ventilation Subsystem. Group 2 Regenerative Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS) Recycle Tank Leak Check Space Headaches Weekly Questionnaire Combustion Integrated Rack Front End Cap Open ACME Igniter Alignment ACME Igniter Align Assistant Combustion Integrated Rack Front End Cap Close Combustion Integrated Rack Rack Doors Close Combustion Integrated Rack Hardware Return maintenance Dragon Cargo Operations Conference Water Recovery and Management Condensate Pump Gather IMS Update Water Recovery and Management Condensate Pumping Init HRF Generic Urine Collection Setup Water Recovery and Management Condensate Pumping Term Water Recovery and Management Condensate Pumping Restow Extravehicular Mobility Unit (EMU) Long Life Battery (LLB) Terminate Completed Task List Activities None. Ground Activities All activities were completed unless otherwise noted. ZBook transitions. Nominal commanding. Three-Day Look Ahead: Saturday, 01/06: Weekly Housekeeping, Crew Off Duty, HRF Collections, Petri Plant, Personal CO2 Monitor, Sunday, 01/07: Crew Off Duty, HRF Collections Monday, 01/08: Airways Monitoring, EVA preps, Dragon cargo ops, EMU Checkout, APEX-5, Dragon LiOH install QUICK ISS Status Environmental Control Group: Component Status Elektron On Vozdukh Manual [] 1 SM Air Conditioner System (SKV1) Off [] 2 SM Air Conditioner System (SKV2) On Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly (CDRA) Lab Operate Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly (CDRA) Node 3 Standby Major Constituent Analyzer (MCA) Lab Idle Major Constituent Analyzer (MCA) Node 3 Operate Oxygen Generation Assembly (OGA) Norm Urine Processing Assembly (UPA) Process Trace Contaminant Control System (TCCS) Lab Full Up Trace Contaminant Control System (TCCS) Node 3 Off Titan's surface Cornell University Using the now-complete Cassini data set, Cornell astronomers have created a new global topographic map of Saturns moon Titan that has opened new windows into understanding its liquid flows and terrain. Two new papers, published Dec. 2 in Geophysical Review Letters, describe the map and discoveries arising from it. Creating the map took about a year, according to doctoral student Paul Corlies, first author on Titans Topography and Shape at the End of the Cassini Mission. The map combines all of the Titan topography data from multiple sources. Since only about 9 percent of Titan has been observed in relatively high-resolution topography, with 25-30 percent of the topography imaged in lower resolution, the remainder of the moon was mapped using an interpolation algorithm and a global minimization process, which reduced errors such as those arising from spacecraft location. The map revealed several new features on Titan, including new mountains, none higher than 700 meters. The map also provides a global view of the highs and lows of Titans topography, which enabled the scientists to confirm that two locations in the equatorial region of Titan are in fact depressions that could be either ancient, dried seas or cryovolcanic flows. The map also revealed that Titan is a little bit flatter more oblate than was previously known, which suggests there is more variability in the thickness of Titans crust than previously thought. The main point of the work was to create a map for use by the scientific community, said Corlies; within 30 minutes of the data set being available online, he began to receive inquiries on how to use it. The data set is downloadable in the form of the data that was observed, as well as that data plus interpolated data that was not observed. The map will be important for those modeling Titans climate, studying Titans shape and gravity, and testing interior models, as well as for those seeking to understand morphologic land forms on Titan. Other Cornell authors on the paper are senior author Alex Hayes, assistant professor of astronomy, doctoral candidate Samuel Birch and research associate Valerio Poggiali. The second paper, Topographic Constraints on the Evolution and Connectivity of Titans Lacustrine Basins, finds three important results using the new maps topographical data. The team included Hayes, Corlies, Birch, Poggiali, research associate Marco Mastrogiuseppe and Roger Michaelides 15. The first result is that Titans three seas share a common equipotential surface, meaning they form a sea level, just as Earths oceans do. Either because theres flow through the subsurface between the seas or because the channels between them allow enough liquid to pass through, the oceans on Titan are all at the same elevation. Were measuring the elevation of a liquid surface on another body 10 astronomical units away from the sun to an accuracy of roughly 40 centimeters. Because we have such amazing accuracy we were able to see that between these two seas the elevation varied smoothly about 11 meters, relative to the center of mass of Titan, consistent with the expected change in the gravitational potential. We are measuring Titans geoid. This is the shape that the surface would take under the influence of gravity and rotation alone, which is the same shape that dominates Earths oceans, said Hayes. The papers second result proves a hypothesis that Hayes advanced in his first paper, in graduate school: that Titans lakes communicate with each other through the subsurface. Hayes and his team measured the elevation of lakes filled with liquid as well as those that are now dry, and found that lakes exist hundreds of meters above sea level, and that within a watershed, the floors of the empty lakes are all at higher elevations than the filled lakes in their vicinity. We dont see any empty lakes that are below the local filled lakes because, if they did go below that level, they would be filled themselves. This suggests that theres flow in the subsurface and that they are communicating with each other, said Hayes. Its also telling us that there is liquid hydrocarbon stored on the subsurface of Titan. The papers final result raises a new mystery for Titan. Researchers found that the vast majority of Titans lakes sit in sharp-edged depressions that literally look like you took a cookie cutter and cut out holes in Titans surface, Hayes said. The lakes are surrounded by high ridges, hundreds of meters high in some places. The lakes seem to be formed the way karst is on Earth, in places like the Florida Everglades, where underlying material dissolves and the surface collapses, forming holes in the ground. The lakes on Titan, like Earths karst, are topographically closed, with no inflow or outflow channels. But Earth karst does not have sharp, raised rims. The shape of the lakes indicates a process called uniform scarp retreat, where the borders of the lakes are expanding by a constant amount each time. The largest lake in the south, for example, looks like a series of smaller empty lakes that have coalesced or conglomerated into one big feature. But if these things do grow outward, does that mean youre destroying and recreating the rims all the time and that the rims are moving outward with it? Understanding these things is in my opinion the lynchpin to understanding the evolution of the polar basins on Titan, said Hayes. The research was supported by grants from NASA and the Italian Space Agency. Linda B. Glaser is a staff writer at the College of Arts and Sciences. Malcolm 'Mac' Cripps passed away peacefully on New Years Day at the Saint John Regional Hospital after a short battle with cancer. He was 66 years old. Mac grew up in Norton, New Brunswick and caught the harness racing bug at an early age, helping his father, Eddie, and brother, Dan, with a small family stable racing at Exhibition Park in Saint John and Brunswick Downs in Moncton. Mac went to Ontario for a period in the '80s to work for his good friend Carl Jamieson. In later years Mac always looked forward to meeting up with Carl and Debbie to reminisce and talk racing during his yearly visit to PEI with his family for Old Home Week. Mac will be dearly missed and always remembered as a loving son, brother, uncle and friend. Funeral proceedings took place on Monday, January 8 at Sherwood's Funeral Home in Midland, New Brunswick. Please join Standardbred Canada in offering condolences to the family and friends of Malcolm 'Mac' Cripps. It has been reported that the pending sale of Scarborough Downs has gone firm, and that the Terry family will continue to operate live racing at the facility and will retain the tracks 60 employees for at least the foreseeable future. According to an article by the Bangor Daily News, the $6.7-million deal for the Maine facility closed some time after the calendar flipped to 2018. The deal includes the property and the buildings that currently exist on it. The report also states that the Terrys racing business has been sold to the buyer, Crossroads Holdings, but that the purchase price has not been disclosed publically. Trot Insider ran an item early last month stating that a deal for the property and buildings was in place and that Cross Roads Holdings which includes longtime area residents William, Marc and Rocco Risbara III, and Peter and Richard Michaud was the buyer in question. This is a defining moment in Scarboroughs history, Rocco Risbara has been quoted as saying via statement. We look forward to creating something that brings people together, creates economic growth and builds a sense of hometown pride. When news of the pending sale became public in early December, Risbara was cited as saying that a lease agreement with the Terrys could preserve 60 jobs. He also said at the time that there were no plans for the racetrack, and that the lease would be in place for the foreseeable future. Scarborough Downs, which has hosted live racing as far back as 1950, had been the subject of many failed deals over the years the most recent of which fell through earlier in 2017. (With files from the Bangor Daily News) Tanzania Hosts WCC Conference on World Mission and Evangelism Contact: Media Office, World Council of Churches, +41 79 507 6363 GENEVE, Jan. 9, 2018 /Standard Newswire/ -- Under the theme "Moving in the Spirit called Transforming Discipleship," the World Council of Churches will host a major conference on World Mission and Evangelism in Arusha, Tanzania, 8-13 March. The WCC Conference on World Mission and Evangelism is held every decade and draws together churches from every denomination to share knowledge and engage in interfaith, secular and ecumenical dialogue. Held in Tanzania, the conference will particularly look at the challenges and seeds of opportunities for Africa today. How can Africa shape mission theology and future practice and how can Africa enhance the understanding of mission in a unique and innovative way, are questions raised. When: 8-13 March 2018, plus WCC Pre-conferences: 5 7 March Where: Ngurdoto Mountain Lodge & Conference Centre, Arusha, Tanzania Livestreaming: www.youtube.com/user/WCCworld About the programme: www.oikoumene.org/en/mission2018/. A special three-day exposure programme in accompaniment of the CWME, Global ecumenical theological institute study programme (GETI) is held 5-7 March. More information: www.oikoumene.org/en/mission2018/geti-2018. Media contacts: Please contact WCC director of communication Marianne Ejdersten; e-mail: mej@wcc-coe.org, cell phone: +41 79 507 63 63, or Claus Grue, WCC media coordinator; e-mail: clg@wcc-coe.org, cell phone: +46 70 611 0977. Media accreditation and practicalities: Please contact WCC communication planner, Lara Takache; e-mail: media@wcc-coe.org; office number: +41 22 791 67 04 Media accreditation: Arusha Media accreditation application (pdf form, 93 kb) Arusha media interview request (pdf form, 178 kb) Arusha media information sheet (pdf, 101 kb) A slew of recent studies have found scary amounts of arsenic in baby food, frightening many new parents already stressed out by all-night feedings and endless diaper changes. In a world where environmental dangers seem to lurk in every corner, here is a simple piece of advice. As the Independent reported, since rice cereal is often a babys first solid food but it often has very high levels of arsenic, one advocacy group is suggesting that the easiest switch for parents trying to avoid this potentially hazardous substance is to switch it up and pick cereals made with other grains such as oatmeal, barley and quinoa. A new report from Healthy Babies Bright Futures, a group of scientists, nonprofit groups and private donors aiming to reduce childrens exposures to chemicals that may harm developing brains, advises that since rice cereal contains more than six times the inorganic arsenic than other cereals, it should be a no-brainer. According to the World Health Organization, arsenic has been linked to developmental defects, cardiovascular disease, neurotoxicity, diabetes and even cancer. Parents have a lot of easy ways to reduce their babies exposure now, because there are so many new cereal options on the market; many are fortified with iron that babies need, and many are just as affordable as rice cereal, said Jane Houlihan, research director for Healthy Babies Bright Futures, noted the Independent. The Food and Drug Administration has proposed limits for the amount of arsenic allowed in infant baby cereals, but the regulations have not yet been put into effect. In 2016, the FDA proposed a recommendation of no more than 100 parts per billion of arsenic in infant cereal but that is by no means a requirement. The Environmental Protection Agency does limit inorganic arsenic in public drinking water, for the record. Jennifer Lowry, pediatrician and toxicologist at Childrens Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., and chairwoman of the American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Environmental Health, said the FDA standard on arsenic is completely ineffective. As the report alludes, it isnt working as there are too many baby foods that continue to have too high of levels, Lowry, who is not affiliated with the study, said in an email, as USA Today noted. The Healthy Babies Bright Futures organization commissioned Brooks Applied Labs in Bothell, Washington, to test more than 100 samples of infant cereals, including 45 products made by nine different companies. The alliances report, which has not been published in a journal and has not been peer-reviewed, found that overall, oatmeal, barley, buckwheat, organic quinoa, wheat and rice-free multigrain baby cereals contained much lower amounts of arsenic than rice cereals. The bottomline is that the study found 85 parts per billion of arsenic in the rice cereals tested on average. One product tested registered at 235 ppb, as USA Today reported. We welcome the data provided by Healthy Babies Bright Futures and will review it in its entirety to inform our efforts in reducing inorganic arsenic in infant rice cereal products, the FDA said in a statement as USA Today reported. The FDA continues to advise consumers to feed infants and toddlers a variety of fortified infant cereals, rather than relying solely on infant rice cereal. The Healthy Babies group is calling on the FDA to more strictly regulate arsenic levels in baby food even as it advises parents to take their own precautions. When parents ask me the question what is the best brand of baby food to feed my baby, my answer is home-made, says Dr. Keith Fabisiak, assistant chief of pediatrics at Kaiser Permanentes Campbell Medical Center. Even the baby foods that are labeled as organic or all natural can still contain significant amounts of contaminants like lead and arsenic, so the best baby food is the one that you make yourself. Although this takes some additional effort, it is easier than most people think and is the only way you know exactly what is in your babys food. Fabisiak suggests that parents invest in a simple food processor to make the chore easier. He advises you make a batch of baby food and then freeze it overnight in an ice cube tray. The next morning you can pop out the frozen cubes of baby food into a larger freezer container for storage. Each cube will contain about one ounce of homemade baby food, so all you need to do is take a few cubes out of the freezer to thaw for each meal. The American Academy of Pediatrics counsels that parents reduce the risk of arsenic exposure by also limiting fruit juices, avoiding brown rice syrup in processed foods and avoid using rice milk as a dairy substitute. It should be noted that arsenic is often absorbed into rice from the environment and it cant be completely removed. A citizens committee supporting the Kalama School Districts $64.3 million bond is hosting a forum from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Community Building at 216 Elm Street. Kalama School District Superintendent Eric Nerison will present details and answer questions about the proposal, which will appear on the Feb. 13 special election ballot. The plan would include rebuilding Kalamas overflowing elementary school, give middle schoolers additional classrooms, upgrade Kalama High Schools science labs and enhance vocational training facilities at the high school. The 25-year bond would cost the owner of a home valued at $200,000 an extra $38 per month, or $456 annually, according to the districts estimates. The measure needs to win at least 60 percent support to pass. It is the first school bond the district has asked voters to approve since 1992. Cowlitz County Democrats packed into the Longview Womens Club building Monday to get their first look at Carolyn Long, a WSU Vancouver professor who formally declared her candidacy for the 3rd Congressional District in November. About 90 people filled the small meeting hall, where Long spent about an hour fielding a wide range of questions. The robust turnout exceeded the venues capacity, and roughly a dozen people were forced to stand at the back of the room to hear Long speak. A man named Rich cut to the chase with his first question. Are you going to be a full-time campaigner? he asked. Because in the past, weve seen people declare and then thats basically the last time we see them. It was a question alluding to the scant opposition incumbent Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler has seen since first winning election in 2010. The fourth-term Republican congresswoman has won each of her re-election campaigns by more than 20 percentage points. In the 2016 race for the 3rd District, state Rep. Jim Moeller (D-Vancouver) won the Democratic nomination but did little to fundraise or campaign. But Long, a seasoned professor with a strong teachers voice, exuded confidence Monday. I decided to run because I know I can win, Long said. Long said shes reducing her workload at the university over the next 16 weeks and will take a leave of absence to campaign full-time in the spring, when the primary season kicks into high gear. Shes one of three Democrats vying for the partys nomination. Long also noted that Swing Left a progressive organization that aims to flip the U.S. House of Representatives back to Democrats announced last month that its targeting Herrera Beutler in this years midterms. Long sought to draw a contrast with Herrera Beutler, who has not held an in-person town hall event with constituents since January of last year. (Herrera Beutler has conducted five telephone town halls since winning re-election in November 2016.) I really think one of my strengths in terms of the current incumbent is the fact that Im willing to come here into your community at your invitation, Long said. Im here to look you in the eye and tell you about my positions. Long said her top three priorities are increasing funding for rural infrastructure, finding ways to provide more family wage jobs, and improving access to health care. On health care, Long said she favors shoring up the fragile individual marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act before pursuing a more ambitious health care model such as Medicare for All or single-payer. When pressed on her position regarding veterans health care, Long said she favors the Veterans Access, Choice and Accountability Act, which gives select veterans access to private medical care. As a constitutional law professor, Long said also supports a constitutional amendment to overturn the U.S. Supreme Courts Citizens United decision, which held that political spending is a protected form of free speech under the First Amendment. Throughout the event, attendees peppered Long with questions about how she would weigh job creation and economic growth against environmental protections. Long said shes still researching Millennium Bulk Terminals proposed $680 million Longview coal dock and Northwest Innovation Works $1.8 billion Kalama methanol plant. (Congress has virtually no direct say about either projects.) I think the challenge with both projects is when you have a county like Cowlitz, where your poverty rate is lower than other counties in the state and where you used to have a lot of industrial jobs, the allure of good family paying jobs that we can offer people who are struggling is really enticing, she said. Long said shes also bringing herself up to speed on Pacific Coast Fertilizers $1 billion ammonia plant at Longviews Mint Farm Industrial Park. Toward the end of the event, a woman standing in the back encouraged participants to focus on the national political agenda. Were talking about a federal position, and I would like people to think about the harm thats being done right now by the Republican Congress and how important it is to flip that Congress, she said to a round of applause. I hope we can all, as Democrats or potential Democrats, rise above some of the local issues that divide us or separate us. Kelso resident Carla Tolle, a former student of Longs, said shes confident Long can win. But one of her biggest challenges, she said, will be uniting the Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders wings of the party. Sanders made a strong showing in Cowlitz County in 2016, beating Clinton 255 to 76 in the March caucuses. It was the third town hall event Long has held since meeting with voters in Vancouver and Klickitat County. Her next event is in Skamania County on Jan. 15, followed by a town hall in Centralia on Jan. 22. Close Get email notifications on {{subject}} daily! Your notification has been saved. There was a problem saving your notification. {{description}} Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items. Six Rainier residents are accused of stealing $13,000 in collectibles from a Rainier home and pawning some of them in Longview, according the Columbia County Sheriffs Office. The pawn shop notified the sheriffs office on Dec. 27 about suspicious transactions. Using shop records and social media posts offering the stolen merchandise, deputies found and arrested Rainier residents David Glenn Barker and Daniel Fredrick Gomez on Jan. 2, according to a press release. Deputies found more than $10,000 worth of stolen collectibles at Gomezs house in the 73000 block of Lindberg Road. Two additional suspects were arrested at the scene and a 3-year-old juvenile was placed into child welfare. An additional $3,000 to $4,000 worth of stolen items were recovered from a vehicle on the scene, according to the sheriffs office. Also, two more suspects arrested in connection with a drug case on Dec. 28 were later linked to the Lindberg burglary, according to the sheriffs office. In all, six people were arrested on suspicion of a wide range of offenses: Daniel Fredrick Gomez, 43, first-degree burglary, two counts of first-degree aggravated theft, second-degree burglary, first-degree theft, unlawful possession of Methamphetamine, unlawful possession of a controlled substance and endangering the welfare of a minor. David Glenn Barker, 33, first-degree burglary, two counts of first-degree theft, second-degree criminal mischief, second-degree burglary and first-degree theft. Vanessa Jeanette Zamora, 33, first-degree theft, unlawful possession of a controlled substance and endangering the welfare of a minor. Rebecca Lynn Wynn, 30, two counts of first-degree theft. Desiree Kristine Kauffman, 27, first-degree theft, endangering the welfare of a minor and a felony fugitive warrant out of Washington State. Bruce Dylan Arquette, 22, first-degree theft. Editors note: Todays guest editorials originally appeared in The Seattle Times and The Walla Walla Union-Bulletin. Editorial content from other publications and authors is provided to give readers a sampling of regional and national opinion and does not necessarily reflect positions endorsed by the Editorial Board of The Daily News. Threatening moves by Attorney General Jeff Sessions against states that legalized marijuana are ill-informed, destructive and a distraction from far more important issues. Sessions last week rescinded two Obama-era U.S. Department of Justice memos that had established a fairly hands-off approach to legalized medical and recreational marijuana. The memos provided clarity for federal officials by prioritizing enforcement of serious offenses such as interstate trafficking, cartel involvement and distribution to minors. They also helped reduce conflict between archaic elements of federal drug law and state laws that increasingly legalize and regulate marijuana. President Donald Trump should explain how this apparent move toward heavy-handed federal regulation and attack on state rights squares with his governing philosophy. Trumps administration must also provide its rationale to the public and guidance to law enforcement and a marijuana industry thats approaching $20 billion a year in regulated sales. Uncertainty and the risk of regressing to prohibition a failed policy that sapped law-enforcement resources, disproportionately targeted people of color and failed to rein in consumption should prompt Congress to advance proposals to regulate, rather than prohibit, marijuana. Recreational use is now legal in eight states including Washington, Oregon and California, and medical use is legal in 29 states. Additional states have decriminalized possession of small quantities or authorized use for particular illnesses. State and local officials are right to defend enlightened marijuana laws that reflect the will of the people. This is precisely the sort of policy challenge that made former U.S. Attorney Jenny Durkan a wise choice for Seattle mayor. Seattle and Washington will no doubt play a large role in any legal response by Western states to the Sessions move, but this cant distract from more pressing issues. Dreadful shortcomings in Washingtons mental-health system, for instance, cry out for the impassioned response and spotlight that Gov. Jay Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson gave to Trumps latest offense. Regional officials must resist being accomplices in Trump administration misdirection efforts. It appeared to use this hot-button issue to divert attention from new allegations of Trump misbehavior and investigations into Russian meddling. Sessions is wrong to pull the nation backward on marijuana policy. Regardless of the motive and the timing, its terrible governance to sow uncertainty and confusion for states, a nascent industry, law enforcement and tens of millions of consumers. Initiative process reserved for rare public outrage The initiative process in Washington state is an important one. Its a safeguard to ensure that if the Legislature doesnt act on an issue of critical importance to the people, then citizens can literally take lawmaking into their own hands. Yet, over the years, the initiative process has been hijacked by special-interest groups to push their often narrow agendas and bypass the legislative process. Initiatives are no longer springing from grass-root outrage. Tim Eyman, who has made a name for himself as an anti-tax crusader on the strength of his success using the initiative system to change state policy, found last week that even he is having trouble traversing the new landscape of the initiative process. Tim Eymans latest initiative, which would eliminate car-tab taxes for the Puget Sound areas transportation system and then tax every vehicle in Washington at a flat rate of $30, failed to collect enough signatures to make the ballot this year. Why didnt we make it this time? Eyman wrote to his supporters last week. It boils down to money. We just didnt raise enough funds to hire paid petitioners to supplement our volunteers. Nowadays, its near essential to hire paid professionals. While its unfortunate the system has become dependent on paid signature gatherers, which runs contrary to the systems design as a check to the Legislatures power, its also heartening that voters have become stingy with their signatures. The signature-gathering process is supposed to weed out lousy initiative proposals before they get on the ballot. It forces those who write initiatives to take the crafting of the proposal seriously and take steps to ensure the potential pitfalls have been addressed. Some elected to the Legislature have shown disdain for the initiative process in the past, sometimes proposing legal hurdles that would make it harder to qualify a measure for the ballot. We generally oppose such efforts. In those cases, we have stood firmly with Eyman in his effort to gain access to the ballot for his proposals. But when the proposal isnt embraced by the public, as was the case with Eymans latest effort, it shows the initiative system works. Initiatives should only make the ballot when the people feel they have no other option but to go around the Legislature to solve a problem. WASHINGTON Why was President Trump so frantic to ensure that his attorney general would shield him against the inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 election? For all the unsettling questions swirling about Trump in recent days, this may turn out to be the most important and, for the president, the most ominous. The more information that emerges about Trumps mania to keep Jeff Sessions in control of the investigation and his fury when the attorney general chose to step aside, the more perilous the presidents legal situation appears. In that sense, a report by The New York Times Michael Schmidt may end up being more damaging for Trump than his portrayal in Michael Wolffs new book. If Schmidts reporting is accurate, three consequences follow: First, White House counsel Don McGahn must go, because, at Trumps direction, he improperly pressured Sessions not to step aside from the Russia probe. That Sessions resisted McGahns lobbying is laudable but irrelevant. The White House counsel represents the office of the presidency. He isnt the presidents personal pit bull his Roy Cohn, in Trumps reported lament. Leaning on the attorney general to remain in charge of a criminal investigation that touches on the president is not part of the White House counsels job description. Second, Sessions may need to go, because he oversaw or directed a public smear campaign against the sitting FBI director, James Comey. Schmidt writes that Sessions wanted one negative article a day in the news media about Mr. Comey, according to a person with knowledge of the meeting between a congressional staffer and a Sessions aide seeking dirt on Comey. The Justice Department flatly denies this account. But if it turns out to be true, that conduct is so far beyond what is appropriate for the nations chief law enforcement officer. Third, the Schmidt report edges Trump himself even closer to having obstructed justice. Whether or not special counsel Robert Mueller would bring a criminal case on those grounds, there is no doubt that obstructing justice can be the basis for impeachment. Lets back up. There are two possible explanations for Trumps persistent refusal to acknowledge the reality of Russian meddling and his anger over the resulting criminal investigation. The more benign is that he is so insecure that he cannot tolerate any insinuation that his victory is tainted and his presidency illegitimate. The more worrisome is that Trump knows he or those around him have something to hide. Schmidts depiction puts another thumb on the scale of that interpretation. As Schmidt writes, after Sessions recusal, the president erupted in anger in front of numerous White House officials, saying he needed his attorney general to protect him. Mr. Trump said he had expected his top law enforcement official to safeguard him the way he believed Robert F. Kennedy, as attorney general, had done for his brother John F. Kennedy and Eric H. Holder Jr. had for Barack Obama. Which raises the question: protect him from what? Perhaps merely the stain of an ongoing criminal investigation; see explanation one, above. Some support for this interpretation comes in the form of Trumps evident disdain for the proper boundaries between a president and his Justice Department. In the most charitable interpretation, Trump felt aggrieved at being investigated for made-up problems like Russian collusion and counted on Sessions to make that go away. But the more persuasive interpretation, based on the totality of the amassed evidence and the new revelations, is that Trump understood Muellers investigation as an existential threat. The ferocity of his opposition, as underscored by the new report of ordering McGahn to help keep Sessions in place, lends credence to this view. So do other aspects of Trumps conduct: demanding Comeys loyalty; asking him, on the investigation of fired national security adviser Michael Flynn, to let this go; drafting a misleading statement about the purpose of Donald Trump Jr.s 2016 meeting with a Russian lawyer peddling dirt on Hillary Clinton. And, of course, firing Comey, based on the laughable justification that his public statements during the campaign were unfair to Hillary Clinton. Now, with Schmidts story, we learn that the initial letter that Trump drafted to justify Comeys firing notwithstanding previous denials by the White House began by explicitly pointing to the fabricated and politically motivated Russian investigation. The lengths to which Trump seems willing to go to shut down this probe and to hide his tracks suggest that something more than his fragile ego is at stake here. About me I'm Avi Green From Jerusalem, Israel I was born in Pennsylvania in 1974, and moved to Israel in 1983. I also enjoyed reading a lot of comics when I was young, the first being Fantastic Four. I maintain a strong belief in the public's right to knowledge and accuracy in facts. I like to think of myself as a conservative-style version of Clark Kent. I don't expect to be perfect at the job, but I do my best. 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You are experiencing technical issues. Please contact our support to get more information. Temirbek Erkinov, honorary consul of Kyrgyz Republic, discussing about bilateral issues with Md Siddiqur Rahman of Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) at the latter\'s office on Monday. Now Madrasa teachers on hunger strike Now Madrasa teachers are on hunger strike in front of Jatiya Press Club demanding for nationalising their institutions. This photo was taken on Tuesday. Staff Reporter : The teachers of Ebtedayee madrasah on Tuesday started an indefinite hunger strike demanding nationalisation of all the registered Ebtedayee madrasa under Bangladesh Madrasa Education Board. Before them, the non-MPO schools, colleges and madrasa teachers observed hunger strike unto death for six days. Bangladesh Independent Ebtedayee Madrassa Teachers' Association (BIEMTA) began the strike after concluding their nine-day sit-in programme in front of the National Press Club. The BIEMTA submitted two memorandums separately to the Education Ministry and Finance Ministry to fulfil their demands, including nationalisation of madrasa. Kazi Mokhlesur Rahman, Secretary General of BIEMTA said, they will continue their hunger strike until the announcement is made from Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Education Minister Nurul Islam Nahid and Primary and Mass Education Minister Mostafizur Rahman that the Ebtedayee madrasa will be nationalised. He alleged that the Ebtedayee madrasa teachers are being deprived of proper pay and allowances despite working as much as government primary school teachers. An agitating female teacher wishing anonymity told this correspondent that the teachers had been rendering services to build a skilled future generation for long. "We do not get any honourium or salary. We are passing our life through critical juncture. Our life will be more miserable if the government doesn't meet our demand," she said. The teachers had been on a sit-in programme as part of their ultimatum since January 1. Meanwhile, the assistant teachers of state-run primary schools earlier on December 22 went on an indefinite hunger strike demanding upgradation of their salary scale. Four days later, on December 25, they ended the strike upon assurance from Primary and Mass Education Minister Mostafizur Rahman that their demand would be met. Female student on hunger strike, ousted from hall by BCL activists Mymensingh Correspondent : Activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League, Bangladesh Agricultural University unit, drove out a student from Begum Rokeya Hall on Monday night for her refusal to take part in procession. Afsana Ahmed Eva, a first year student of Agricultural Faculty and resident of the hall, alleged that the hall unit BCL leaders and activists drove her out of the dormitory as she did not take part in a BCL procession on the campus on January 4 marking its founding anniversary. Protesting the incident, Afsana stayed the whole night in front of the hall gate and began hunger strike since the morning, our Mymensingh correspondent reports quoting campus sources. Afsana alleged that the BCL leaders and activists have been threatening her to leave the hall since January 4. "Later, I informed the provost about the matter on January 5 and submitted a written complaint on January 7," she said. On information, Proctor Atikur Rahman Khokon went to the hall around this noon and sent Eva back to her seat in the hall assuring her of taking administrative measurers based on a probe report. A three-member body has also been formed to investigate the matter, the proctor said. Denying the allegation, Sinthi, a leader of the hall unit BCL, said Eva is an "arrogant and ill-mannered student". "As the hall inmates wanted to shift her to another place, we just asked her to shift to the Health Care Centre (A temporary dormitory for the female students)," she said. BAU unit BCL President Sabuj Kazi said BCL men were not involved in the incident. But Israt Jahan Shapla, secretary of the university unit Chhatra Front and also a resident of the hall, said the BCL activists misbehaved with Eva. She also called upon the university authorities to investigate the matter properly and demanded punishment to those involved in the incident. Rohingya refugees live miserably in cold: UN representative must act fast The Rohingya crisis has taken a critical turn as repatriation of refugees, which was scheduled to start by January 22, is likely to be halted due to reluctant mood of both Bangladesh and Myanmar. As per an agreement, signed between Dhaka and Naypyidaw on November 23, the repatriation process was fixed to begin in 60 days. But the joint working group [JWG] tasked with the process has not yet held its first meeting. Commissioner for Refugee, Relief and Repatriation Mohammad Abul Kalam on Monday told media that it needs more time for repatriation. 'It is not possible to do everything within a stipulated time frame. So, I think it is unlikely that we can start the repatriation by January 22,' he said. A nine-member technical committee, formed to collect data about Rohingyas, could not start work as the government departments have yet to send their representatives' names, he said. The 30-member JWG, however, will meet on January 15 in Myanmar. And strangely, the UNHCR has not yet been informed, the media reports said. In this context, the human rights groups have cautioned saying that 'confusion and lack of communication' will not bring any good for a repatriation process. The delay was announced at a time when more Rohingya refugees continued to straggle across the border into Bangladesh. Besides, ARSA [Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army] said it had carried out an attack on Friday to retaliate for Myanmar's atrocities. The Rohingyas, entered Bangladesh after August 25, have brought with them bloody accounts of what appears to be state-sponsored genocide. Apart from burning three Rakhine townships - Maungdaw, Buthidaung and Rathedaung -- the Myanmar military also targeted Rakhine capital Sittwe, which forced an exodus of Rohingyas across the 271-km border with Bangladesh. Day by day the situation is deteriorating. Presently, the Rohingya refugees are passing their days in miseries in Cox's Bazar, where prevailing cold has made their lives difficult due to lack of warm clothes. The cold wind has also increased the risk of diseases such as pneumonia, cough and fever, especially among the children and elderly people. Local and foreign doctors are now fighting to save lives from a rapid and deadly outbreak of diphtheria in the camps. Undoubtedly, the current crisis is a big challenge to the government as about 1.2 million Rohingyas are sheltering in Bangladesh. So, the government must not overlook the negligence of its officials concerned who failed to send their representatives' names for the technical committee. At the same time, the Foreign Ministry will also have to take responsibility for the unprecedented delay of repatriation. No country must be allowed to disown its people living for ages as outsiders and forced them to live so. The crime committed by Myanmar army is international and international community cannot ignore the urgency of its responsibility. Missouri is in the company of Myanmar and Cuba on a travel guides list of places to not visit in 2018. Fodors No List 2018 places Missouri at No. 7 among places to be avoided. Missouri is the only state on the list, which includes places where swarms of tourists have triggered a backlash (Venice, Amsterdam) or done environmental damage (the Galapagos), and destinations with health, safety and ethical issues. Missouri seems to fit in the safety and ethics category, with the travel guide pointing to laws it deems unfair and startling headlines about the state. A spokesperson for the Missouri Division of Tourism wasnt available for comment Monday. Fodors explains its list this way: Travelers must decide how and where we can concern our efforts to observe and preserve the splendor of life around us, and we do that with everything from our currency to our presence. Fodors No List is a reflection of those considerations: where should we go or not go that best reflects our courtesy and concern for this wonderful world. Because sometimes you have to say no to the ones you love in hopes that they can recover, reconsider, or reform. Under a stock image of the Gateway Arch, Fodors starts off by pointing out some of the Missouris good qualities. It says Missouri is full of wonders that belong on anyones travel bucket list. It mentions positives such as limestone caves, the Budweiser Clydesdales, Kansas Citys barbecue, jazz and Silver Dollar City. But Fodors then blasts Missouri as the place where SB 43 was passed making it more difficult to sue employers for discrimination, a state representative argued that homosexuals werent human beings, a tourist who got lost and ran out of gas was later found murdered in his jail cell without ever being put under arrest, and two men were hunted down and shot on suspicion of being Muslim on the outskirts of Kansas City. (The shooting in the Kansas City area actually took place in Kansas.) The legislation Fodors refers to makes it harder for employees to make a case for workplace discrimination. Gov. Eric Greitens said the law brought Missouri in line with 38 other states and the federal government, and supporters of the law say it has nothing to do with travel. The Missouri chapter of the NAACP passed a resolution for a travel advisory last July, recommending tourists to avoid Missouri. The site quotes the head of Missouris NAACP chapter as saying the state has a separate standard of laws that are only applicable to some people. In August, the head of the regions tourism and convention agency, Explore St. Louis, said the hotel industry was being used as a weapon politically by the NAACP over the legislation and that several area hotels said they had lost meeting groups because of the advisory. When we found out about this nearly two months ago, we were deeply saddened to hear that Fodors made this comment about our state, Kitty Ratcliffe, president of Explore St. Louis, said in a statement Monday. The fact is that St. Louis remains a diverse, cosmopolitan and welcoming region. Explore St. Louis fully supports nondiscrimination, equal rights, and fair and just due process for everyone, regardless of the color of their skin. Be assured that the more than 88,000 dedicated employees of the St. Louis metropolitan areas hospitality industry remain committed to serving and welcoming people from all backgrounds and experiences to our community. The list was first released in November. The Associated Press contributed to this report. This story originally ran on stltoday.com, a sister publication of The Southern. MARION Lake Egypt Water District has issued a boil order for customers in Apartments located at 1942 Hudspeth Road units 1 through 7; and Sneed and Little Wolf roads, from Sneed Road going south on Illinois 148 to Southfork Subdivision. The Carterville man arrested Sunday outside of his apartment complex while in possession of an AR-15 rifle and wearing a green Army helmet and a ballistic vest will not be formally charged with unlawful use of body armor. Carterville Police Chief Heather Reno said Monday the police were called by a neighbor who saw Gregory Martin, 23, with an AR-15, wearing the vest and helmet, at about 7 a.m. Sunday morning. Reno said the incident wasn't related to an altercation and the weapon was not fired. Also, she said when officers arrived, he was wearing what was described, but he did not make a scene and did not say anything before being ordered to the ground and arrested. At the time of the arrest, he was charged with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, unlawful use of body armor, aggravated assault and disorderly conduct. He was transported to Williamson County Jail. Court records show Martin posted bond of $1,000 Tuesday. Those same records also indicate Williamson County State's Attorney Brandon Zanotti is not charging Martin with unlawful use of body armor and disorderly conduct. Although Martin was not formally charged with unlawful use of body armor, there has been some confusion as to why this is even a crime. According to Illinois statute, a person commits the offense of unlawful use of body armor when he or she knowingly wears body armor while in possession of a dangerous weapon. The body armor can be described as a military-style flak or tactical assault vest made of Kevlar or similar material basically, anything designed to be worn over ones clothing for the intended purpose of stopping fire from rifles, machine guns and other explosives. Additional descriptions of body armor can be found in the Illinois General Assemblys criminal code. The term 'dangerous weapon' means a Category I, II, or III weapon as defined in the code. An automatic rifle is defined as Category I. The next meeting of the Four County Highway Coalition will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 23, at the Perry County Government Building, at 3764 State Routes 13-127, just south of Pinckneyville. The meeting begins at 9 a.m. The coalition was formed to regenerate interest and plans for constructing a highway from Southern Illinois into the St. Louis area. According to a news release by Marc Kiehna, chair of the Coalition, State Sen. Paul Schimpf will report on conversations he's had with staff in the governors office, the director of the Illinois Department of Transportation, and Sen. Sandoval, who chairs the Senate Transportation Committee. Schimpf is asking for help as he introduces legislation this spring to place this project on the IDOT plan. The senator needs letters of support for the proposal and wants a name for this project, Kiehna said. Kiehna said Congressman Mike Bost plans to join the meeting remotely and answer questions about infrastructure dollars now that the tax bill has been passed and signed into law. The Southern Three Holly Hill businesses erupted into flames early Monday morning. The cause of the blaze remains under investigation. A firefighter first noticed smoke at the rear 8608 Old State Road, which is home to Joys Touch of Class. The fire spread to the businesses on either side of it, Goldsteins and Super 10. The buildings were completely destroyed. Officials say arson has not been eliminated as one of the causes. Agents with the S.C. Law Enforcement Division were on the scene and the agency is investigating the circumstances that led to the fire, SLED spokesman Thom Berry said Monday afternoon. We have a number of agents on the scene continuing their work on the case, he said. A Holly Hill firefighter noticed smoke from the buildings as he was on his way to an accident scene. Dispatchers called firefighters to the 8600 block of Old State Road at around 12:30 a.m. As units came en route, we ended up calling an entire battalion five response, which would give us an additional five departments, Holly Hill Fire Chief J.R. Bunch said. As firefighters began to attack the blaze at Joys Touch of Class, it spread to Super 10 and Goldsteins, he said. No firefighters were injured, but they were cold. Temperatures remained in the 20s. Bunch said the following departments responded to the fire: Holly Hill, Vance, Eutawville, Santee, Elloree, Bowman, Providence, Four Holes, Wolfton, Orangeburg County Fire District, Dorchester County and Berkeley County. The Orangeburg County Office of Emergency Services, Holly Hill Police Department and law enforcement officers from other agencies also arrived at the scene. Throughout Monday, traffic on Old State Road was blocked off from Railroad Avenue to Gardner Boulevard. Holly Hill Police Chief Josh Detter said that section of downtown Holly Hill will remain blocked for at least 48 hours. Concerns arose on Monday afternoon about the safety of the exterior front walls of the businesses. Something good will happen Joy Wilson-Singleton and her husband Gregory Singleton own Joys Touch of Class, an event planning business. Wilson-Singleton, a Holly Hill native, said she hadnt been home long from a visit to Florida when a friend reached out to her on Facebook at 12:55 a.m. Monday. Joy, your stores on fire, is what her friend said. So, I jumped up and made my way to town. On my way out, I called 911 and the operator told me they were already there, she said. She said once she got to downtown Holly Hill, she became physically sick and vomited. We were just getting ready to reopen back up for Valentines, she said. We went through the flood (2015) and the hurricane (Matthew), so we just finished remodeling it and it was getting ready to open. The Singletons began renting the building in 2010 and eventually bought it. All of my rental equipment was in there, she said. We used our money from savings, to keep the business going, her husband said. But something good will happen out of it, he said. Orangeburg City Councilman Jerry Hannah opened a Holly Hill branch of Goldsteins in 1989. We know a brighter day will come for the city of Holly Hill, he said. We just have to stay prayed up, as they say, he added. The people of Holly Hill have been good to us. Theyve provided spiritual guidance, financial assistance, a pat on the back and weve been grateful no one lost their life in this tragedy. Other businesses are suffering too, he said. I had a brother that lost his life in a house fire in the early '80s. I had a second brother who lost his life in Orangeburg in a house fire about seven years ago. Fires just do something to you, he said. Hannah said in the wake of the historic flood of 2015, Goldsteins was undergoing renovations such as raising the floor a foot and a half. The store wasnt operating on a daily schedule, but the storewide renovations were nearing completion. Holly Hill Town Councilwoman Jan Cauthen Wiles, owner of building leased by Super 10, said she received a call about the fire from Holly Hill Mayor William Johnson. When she first arrived at the scene of the fire, she felt devastated. Now Im heartbroken, she said. Wiles father, Bob Cauthen, managed Pooles 5 and 10 store and ultimately purchased it from E.H. Poole. Wiles said she bought the business and building from her father in the 1980s after he had a brain aneurysm. She kept it open until the mid-1990s, but ultimately rented it out. Super 10 moved in about 15 years ago, she said. Wiles said she remembers in 1963, when she was a child, Poole renovated the building to modernize it. I worked there all throughout high school, she said. A.B. Bennett built the structure in 1920, according to a marble header at the top of the building. From the buildings early years, when it was used as a car dealership, it had a freight elevator. Wiless father restored a 1926 Model-T Ford, which he featured in parades. The restored Model-T Ford was in safe keeping on the second floor of the building, having been hoisted up there by the freight elevator. After the fire, only its metal parts remain. Wiles said firefighters told her they saw what was left of it. My heart is broken Gail Courtney Brubaker of Awendaw, who grew up in Holly Hill in the 1950s and 1960s, remembers the smells and original wooden floors of the buildings that burned on Monday. Goldsteins was once home to Kennerlys, a grocery store owned and operated by Joe Kennerly. They had fresh vegetables displayed on the outside of the store on the sidewalk, Brubaker said. And I remember those wooden floors and the most incredible smell. I think it was coffee, she added. She described it as a true mom-and-pop grocery store. It was a wonderful comfort. Joys Touch of Class was once a clothing store owned by Bobby Griggs. Brubaker said the store offered clothes for the entire family men, women and children. It was a small-town, locally owned department store. And then Pooles. Her favorite. They had the best candy selection, she said. Brubaker said penny candy was a favorite among her peers -- hard candies, Squirrel Nut Zippers, Mary Janes and more. Ida Folse worked there and she was always so nice to everybody. She was a fixture there, she said. Brubaker hasnt lived in Holly Hill since the mid-1970s. When she learned of Mondays fire, she felt a sense of loss, but clung to her memories. It is so dear to me. My heart is broken. Ive always had a tender place in my heart for Holly Hill and always will. Its home regardless of where I live, she said. Martha Matheny Solomon of Charleston is a great-granddaughter of John Walker J.W. Matheny, who originally built and owned the structures that housed Goldsteins and Joys Touch of Class. Matheny originally built the corner building as a dry goods store, which he managed along with his son Newman William Matheny. Solomon, who grew up in Holly Hill, said her upcoming visit to the town will be heartbreaking. Shed been planning to come on Wednesday to pick up wreaths she left in the Holly Hill Cemetery. She said shell also visit the old buildings again, whats left of them, and say goodbye. As President Donald Trump's first year in office comes to a close, Congressman Joe Wilson says he supports the administrations economic agenda. "I have been very pleased with his economic policy, which is very clear: jobs, jobs, jobs," Wilson said. "I am also pleased with his turnaround on defense. We are adding troops to protect our country." During an interview last week, Wilson said the stock market has hit record highs nearly 90 times since Trump became president. "When people think of the stock market, they think Wall Street. No," Wilson said. "It is average citizens who have retirement accounts who have substantially been enhanced." Wilson said his confidence in Trump's election caused him personally to move his low-risk retirement account, which was losing 2 percent a year in bonds, to a more volatile account. "I had no faith in the prior administration," Wilson said. I just wanted my money back." Wilson also noted Trump's international efforts have impressed him, including his speaking out against Islamic terrorism. Wilson praised Trump's July visit to Warsaw and his expression of solidarity with countries of central and Eastern Europe. He also supports Trump's efforts to improve the U.S. relationship with Israel. Wilson was initially concerned about Trumps stance toward the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. "What he was calling for is that the NATO countries should be spending 2 percent of their GDP on defense," Wilson said. "That was not against NATO." Wilson also praised Trump's authorization of the sale of defensive weapons to Ukraine to help stop Russia's aggression. "A lot of times things are being reported but when it actually gets to implementation, I agree," Wilson said. Wilson toured the 2nd Congressional District last week to share his views on a variety of issues as Congress returns to work. Government funding Wilson said Congress will ensure the government is funded and a government shutdown on Jan. 19 will be avoided. Wilson, who serves as the chairman of the readiness subcommittee of the U.S. Armed Services Committee, said he wants to make sure the nations defense is adequately funded. "Sequestration has been catastrophic for our military," he said. "A real problem is the inability to have multi-year contracts by the military. That means that costs actually skyrocket because a company can't depend on a contract." Citing the loss of 17 sailors on the USS John S. McCain and the USS Fitzgerald, Wilson said there are real problems to address in the military. "We have problems with our equipment, with our training, with the hours of training for military personnel, for pilots," Wilson said. "The good news is that the president supports lifting sequestration." DACA Wilson said he agrees with the president that immigrants covered by the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals should be given legal status only if a bill also eliminates so-called chain migration and makes other changes. "We need to enforce the laws we have," Wilson said. He said the U.S. welcomes immigrants who enter legally. Wilson says he does not support Sen. Lindsey Graham's path to citizenship plan. North Korea Wilson says he has faith Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis and generals will respond appropriately to North Korea. "I trust in their judgment," Wilson said. "With Kim Jong Un, we have a circumstance of a person who is irrational." Wilson agrees with former Gov. Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, that, all options should be on the table. "We should work for more sanctions and they should be enforced," Wilson said. Wilson has sponsored legislation that would bar tourist travel by Americans to North Korea as tourists help finance the dictatorship. The State Department has since forbid using U.S. passports for travel to North Korea. Obamacare Wilson wants a complete repeal and replacement of Obamacare. "We see the consequences of Obamacare with skyrocketing premiums, the lack of availability of insurance itself. The number of providers in South Carolina has been reduced to one, he said. "We need to provide for a free market process of buying insurance across state lines, association health plans," he said. He said a safety net can be provided for those who dont qualify for care and we will maintain support for health centers for those who are poverty stricken." New tax law Wilson said the new tax law is not a tax cut for the wealthy. It will help the middle class, he said. Wilson said he was contacted by Nephron Pharmaceuticals in the Cayce area, which told him that all 640 employees will be receiving a pay raise of 5 percent because of the tax bill. "They are working people," he said. Aflac, which employs about 1,500 in Columbia, is providing a pay increase and bonuses to its employees, he said. American Airlines said it will also provide a pay increase. Small businesses are also benefiting, Wilson said. Mooneyhan's Auto Service in West Columbia will be expanding by adding another bay, which is directly related to the reduction in taxes. Wilson noted that 86 percent of Americans will receive more money due to the reduction in adjustments and withholding taxes. 2018 challengers The Republican has been a congressman since 2001. Two Democrats are planning to run against him: Sean Carrigan and Annabelle Robertson. "It is the peoples' seat," Wilson said. "I look forward to a positive campaign." The primary is June 12 with the election in November. Wilson said his service over the years gives him the background needed to lead. "I see my service as a positive rather than a negative," he said. 2018 goals Wilson hopes to accomplish four goals in the new year: * Create jobs and economic growth. Wilson praised Wanli Tire Company's plans to invest $1 billion and create 1,200 jobs in the Orangeburg County area. * Reduce regulations for small business * Promote the nation's alliances for fair trade and job growth with foreign investments; promote public/private partnerships to grow free economies globally; and support caucuses for international relationships. * Support the military and veterans. The focus has been on the impact of new federal tax legislation, particularly with regard to the change in deductions beginning with the 2018 tax year. While most Americans use the standard deduction on their federal income taxes, the change in deductions for expenses such as state and local taxes, and mortgage interest will impact many. The year will become a test of how effective the new law is in simplifying the filing process by making the standard deduction appealing to nearly all. As the need to track a seemingly endless trail of expenses for tax purposes may lesson for federal taxes, South Carolina is giving people a reason to get serious about doing so in 2018. A new income tax credit went into effect on Jan. 1, and the South Carolina Department of Revenue has released guidance to help taxpayers. The credit was approved by the General Assembly as a way to offset the increase in the state gas tax, which is to fund infrastructure repairs. The state's 16-cent-per-gallon gas tax will increase by 12 cents over six years, to 28.75 cents in 2022. The first 2-cent increment took effect July 1, 2017. Taxpayers may claim the motor fuel income tax credit when filing their state income tax returns beginning in 2019. The key is tracking expenses in 2018. The South Carolina Department of Revenue is committed to keeping taxpayers informed on this new legislation and how it can benefit them. We are here to assist all South Carolina taxpayers in understanding and easily complying when claiming the new motor fuel tax credit, said Hartley Powell, SCDOR director. Some things you need to know: The refundable credit is on up to two vehicles per resident taxpayer. To calculate and claim the credit amount and for personal tax records, taxpayers must save receipts and invoices from fuel purchases beginning Jan. 1 and vehicle preventative maintenance costs beginning in January 2018. Taxpayers receive a credit on the lesser amount paid for either the motor fuel user fee increase or the vehicles preventative maintenance. Taxpayers will calculate and claim the credit on Form I-385 when filing state income tax returns in 2019. The form will be available in January 2019. During the legislatures long battle to approve an increase in the gas tax to fund road and bridge improvements, critics of the tax credits for the gas purchases and/or vehicle maintenance called the plan a token gesture. The belief is that while all motorists will pay the increased gas tax, few will offset the cost by tracking gasoline expenses for a year and keeping track of vehicle preventative maintenance costs. Doing so is worth considering unless you are among those just wanting to contribute even more to roads than you are paying at the pump. Think about it the next time you decide to punch the no button when asked about a receipt. Banks in the GCC are expected to see improved financial stability in the year ahead, said S&P Global Ratings in a new report. Barring unforeseen events, 2018 will mark the stabilization of the financial profiles and performance of GCC banks, after two years of significant pressure, according to the report titled "GCC Banks Should See A More Stable Financial Footing In 2018. What's more, GCC banks will have recognized most of the impact of the softer economic cycle on their asset quality by mid-2018. Relatively sluggish economic conditions will also keep lending growth muted, as we do not expect oil prices to rebound significantly, the report said. GCC banks' cost of risk is expected to increase in 2018 because of the adoption of IFRS 9 and the higher amount of restructured and past due but not impaired loans sitting on their balance sheets. However, we also think that the general provisions that GCC banks have accumulated over the years will help a smooth transition to the new accounting standard. GCC banks' liquidity improved in 2017, and we do not foresee a major change in 2018. Continued debt or sukuk issuance by the GCC governments in 2018 will absorb some of the liquidity without a major change in GCC banks' risk appetite. Finally, we think that GCC banks' profitability will stabilize at a lower level than historically, underpinned by an increased cost of risk and the introduction of value added tax, some of which banks will pass on to their clients, the report said. Supporting the ratings, banks in the GCC continue to display strong capitalization by global standards, albeit with signs of quantitative and qualitative deterioration. We have taken a few negative rating actions, most of them on banks in Bahrain, Oman, and Qatar. Overall, 28 per cent of our rated banks in the GCC currently have a negative outlook. They are concentrated in Qatar, due to the potential effect of the boycott on Qatari banks' funding profiles, asset quality, and profitability, but there are a few banks in other GCC countries where idiosyncratic reasons drive our negative outlook, said S&P Global Ratings. TradeArabia News Service Gemalto, a world leader in digital security, has launched the worlds first EMV biometric dual interface payment card for both chip and contactless payments. Using fingerprint recognition instead of a PIN code to authenticate the cardholder, customers place their fingerprint on the sensor and a comparison is performed between the scanned fingerprint and the reference biometric data securely stored in the card. The biometric sensor card is powered by the payment terminal and does not require an embedded battery; this means there is no limit from battery life nor on the number of transactions. The Bank of Cyprus is the first institution to adopt this technology for its customers. Gemaltos biometric sensor payment card is based on the principle that biometric data should always remain in the hands of end users. Bank of Cyprus customers will complete the swift enrolment process at the banks branches, using Gemaltos tablet designed for the solution. The biometric personalization and card activation process is designed to avoid transmission of biometric data over the air to ensure that users data privacy is protected. The fingerprint template captured during the enrolment process is stored only on the card. Customers using this technology will be first in the world to enjoy biometric convenience on a contactless payment card. Gemaltos biometric sensor payment card is designed to provide maximum security and data privacy, said Nassir Ghrous, SVP Banking & Payment for CISMEA Region. Using biometrics for contactless payments is a natural move as it fits in naturally with the gesture used to pay. It allows a better user experience, enabling higher transaction amounts without entering a PIN while benefiting from the convenience of contactless. In order to bring seamless authentication to the banking sector, Gemalto has leveraged its extensive expertise from secure government documents and leadership in biometric applications, said Stelios Trachonitis, card centre manager from Bank of Cyprus. Our customers will benefit from this innovative payment solution with the peace of mind that their biometric data never leaves their hands. TradeArabia News Service Investcorp, a leading global manager of alternative investments, has appointed Phil Yeates as managing director to head its European Credit Funds business, a newly created business vertical for Investcorp Credit Management (ICM). Yeates will be based in London and will oversee the structuring and fundraising for closed ended credit funds and separately managed accounts in Europe. Yeates will report to Jeremy Ghose, head of Investcorp Credit Management, the firms global credit investment business. Yeates joins ICM following 24 years at Rothschild & Co, where he was instrumental in establishing and developing the Global Credit Management business. He brings with him over three decades experience in debt capital markets having started his career in Corporate Debt at Hill Samuel Merchant Bank and NatWest Markets. Jeremy Ghose, head of Investcorp Credit Management, said: We are delighted to welcome Phil Yeates to the team, who has extensive market experience and a strong track record. Since our business was acquired by Investcorp in March, 2017, ICM has continued to show stability and growth as a well-established, diverse global alternative credit manager. We look forward to expanding our platform and product offering, creating new opportunities for our investors as part of Investcorps long-term growth strategy. TradeArabia News Service Al Wasleh, a subsidiary of the Offtec Holding Group (OHG) - a regional provider of innovative technology and loyalty services - said it has signed an agreement with Ayyad Ceramic and Porcelain to provide instalment payment solutions pertaining to the products it offers. The agreement was inked at Ayyad Ceramic and Porcelain's headquarters in the presence of its CEO Ahmad Ayyad and Dr Nabil Al Nasser, the general manager of Al Wasleh. As per the agreement, Ayyad Ceramic and Porcelains customers will be able to acquire all the products and various brands on offer, including ceramics, porcelain, sanitary ware and electrical appliances, through convenient instalments and without any banking mediation, said a statement from OHG. In addition, representatives from Al Wasleh will be present at the Ayyad Ceramic and Porcelain locations to ensure that individuals have easy access to these payment services, it stated. Established in 2011, Al Wasleh became the first company in Jordan to make numerous products readily available through instalment payment plans, for the benefit of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and to employees of public and private companies in the country. The wide range of products and services made available include cellular devices, home appliances, sporting goods, electronics, furniture, touristic excursions and car insurance. On the deal, Dr Al Nasser said: "We are pleased to be partnering with the prestigious Ayyad Ceramic and Porcelain. This step forward will enable us to expand the network of companies we deal with, thereby reaching as many customers as possible and meeting their needs through our financing solutions, without the mediation of banks." Ayyad said the company was proud of this partnership, as it will facilitate the purchase of its products by anyone who wants to obtain them, through flexible and guaranteed instalment payment solutions. "Ensuring that the needs of numerous customers from different walks of life are met, while exceeding their expectations is what we aspire to," he added. Dubai's real estate market registered solid growth in 2017 with the total transactions surging to more than Dh285 billion ($77.5 billion) through 69,000 real estate transactions, said the annual transactions report released by the Dubai Land Department (DLD) recently. The figures were up six per cent in terms of number, and four per cent in terms of value when compared to Dh275.8 billion for 2015, and increased by 14 per cent in number, and six per cent in value compared to Dh269 billion for 2016, stated the report, which summarizes the market activity over the past year. Commenting on the report, Sultan Butti bin Mejren, the director general of DLD, said: "The figures disclosed in the report for total transactions including sales, mortgages and others, confirm the current strength of the Dubai real estate market, in particular when compared against the past two years - 2015 and 2016." "The 2017 report sends reassuring messages of renewed cycles of growth in the coming years, especially when we take into account the modern-day infrastructure that exists in Dubai," remarked Bin Mejren. "The numbers and figures contained in the report confirm the strength of the Dubai real estate market and its ability to grow from year to year. Among the positive signs of the report is the lead UAE nationals have in investments, as well as the diversity of the investor base which reflects the attractiveness of the Dubai real estate market to global investors," he added. Unveiling the details, Bin Mejren said the sales of land, buildings and units in the Dubai real estate market totaled Dh114 billion through 49,000 transactions, while mortgages for the same three categories surged to Dh138.5 billion through 15,700 transactions. "There were approximately 4,000 other transactions valued at approximately Dh33.3 billion, where the total turnover last year was Dh285.562 billion from 69,000 transactions," he added. Throughout 2017, Dubais real estate market was a star attraction for investors from across the globe, including Gulf nationals, Arabs and foreigners, with a total of 39,480 investors making nearly 53,000 transactions worth more than Dh107 billion. According to the DLD report, more than 9,790 GCC nationals made investments worth more than Dh37 billion through 14,381 transactions. The Dubai real estate market attracted nearly 7,000 Arab investors who closed 8,644 real estate transactions worth over Dh14 billion. There was also a high level activity among foreign investors throughout the year, with nearly 23,000 investors making approximately 30,000 transactions worth Dh56 billion in 2017. Womens activities According to the DLD report, a major highlight of 2017 was the solid contribution from women to real estate investment which is on a higher trajectory. Their trust in the Dubai real estate market was reflected when 11,773 women entered the market through a total of 14,316 transactions worth over Dh27 billion. The UAE investors continued to top the list of nationalities pumping money into the Dubai real estate market with their investments surging to Dh25.307 billion followed by Indians with Dh15.6 billion investments and then the Saudis with Dh7 billion investments. The others in the list include British investors with Dh6 billion followed by Pakistanis with Dh5 billion, and the Chinese, Jordanians, Egyptians and Canadians. Thanks to an active investment climate, brokers too benefited from an increase in demand for Dubais properties and built up Dh1.77 billion for their role in completing sales of land, buildings and residential units, stated the DLD report. Their share included Dh840 million from land sales, which came close to Dh42 billion. They also earned Dh133 million from sales of buildings, which exceeded Dh6.6 billion, and with commissions amounting to Dh794 million from sales of units worth Dh40 billion.-TradeArabbia News Service The Dubai Land Department (DLD), is set to organise a three-day sales and purchase event at the Dubai World Trade Centre from April 9 to 11, to further stimulate the emirates buoyant real estate sector. The Dubai Property Festival (DPF) is expected to generate considerable buying and selling activity by hundreds of participants including property developers, brokers, lenders, mortgage providers, investors and home buyers. The three-day show coincides with a series of events in Dubai aimed at attracting global investment to the UAE, said the organisers. Unveiling the details, Sultan Butti bin Mejren, the director-general of DLD, said: "This festival initiative is in co-operation with the "International Property Show," and part of our ongoing efforts to support the real estate sector and provide an ideal environment for all relevant parties." With DLD playing a vital role in the reshaping of Dubai's real estate sector, it is their duty to ensure that growth and prosperity continue in this sector and helps more buyers, investors and tenants to benefit from overall economic growth, as well as contribute to the activity of economy, stated Mejren. "We are confident that with this festival and beyond, the real estate sector will continue to grow and contribute to strengthening our economy," he added. Majida Ali Rashid, the assistant director-general and head of the Real Estate Investment Management and Promotion Centre, the investment arm of DLD, said: "We are delighted to launch DPF that will showcase Dubai as one of the top real estate investment destinations in the world. The festival will provide an excellent opportunity for investors, developers and buyers for strategic networking and do business in a safe and secure environment." "The Real Estate Investment Management and Promotion Centre seeks to encourage investor confidence in the real estate market, attract investments to the Dubai real estate market and launch a variety of initiatives for investors," observed Rashid. "For example, our latest initiative was signing an agreement with a real estate brokerage office in China to promote the real estate sector in Dubai that will reach more than 1,000 Chinese real estate brokers, with the aim of promoting Chinese investment in the real estate sector in Dubai. Recently, we have also signed a similar agreement with a company in India," she said. Dawood Al Shezawi, the head of DPF Organising Committee, said the upcoming festival will be a game-changing initiative that will help a large number of tenants turns owners of Dubai homes. "On an average, a Dubai tenant can own his home by spending eight years of rental expenses on his property instead of paying them to a landlord," explained Al Shezawi. "DPF will help the end-users make such a transition by encouraging property developers and brokers to offer the best deals and help the tenants to buy properties instead of continuing to rent," he added.-TradeArabia News Service Deutsche Lufthansa AG will hire more than 8,000 new employees in 2018, the airline group said, noting that the majority of them will be flight attendants who will work for various Lufthansa Group airlines. Lufthansa, Germany's largest airline, will be hiring around 2,500 flight attendants alone at its hubs in Frankfurt and Munich; overall, the Lufthansa Group airlines will employ more than 4,000 new recruits. Last year, besides its conventional application processes, Lufthansa carried out 11 "flight attendant castings", which aroused great interest among the target group. Over 4,500 candidates have so far attended the various auditions and nearly 6,000 the regular applicants' days in Frankfurt. Almost every third applicant received a job offer. However, employees are also being hired in other areas of the Group. Around 500 new hires are, for example, being planned for Lufthansa Technik at various locations. Austrian Airlines is also hiring a total of more than 500 new recruits, including flight attendants for the check-in and the cockpit, among others, and is also looking for employees in other business areas. With 38,000 employees, Lufthansa is the largest employer in Frankfurt and the federal state of Hesse. The training of young people has special significance for the aviation group. In the 2017/18 training year, 250 new recruits will begin training or studying in the Lufthansa Group across Germany. A total of ten study programs and 30 apprenticeships such as tool mechanic, systems catering, forwarding agent and logistics services are available, a statement said. "Lufthansa is still one of the most attractive companies in Germany and is the ideal employer for many applicants. Last year, over 100,000 applications were submitted to the career portal www.Be-Lufthansa.com. We're very proud of that. We are very pleased that we are able to hire more than 8,000 employees again this year," said Dr Bettina Volkens, member of the Executive Board and head of HR & Legal Affairs at Deutsche Lufthansa AG. TradeArabia News Service Precision medicine, genomics research, lifestyle management and Artificial Intelligence (AI), are some of the topics that will be discussed at the Dubai Health Forum in January 2018, said a top health official. Humaid Al Qutami, chairman of the Board and director-general of DHA, earlier announced that the forum will be held from January 15-16 featuring over 33 international speakers from 22 countries. The forum is in alignment with the goals of the Dubai Health Strategy 2021 and will showcase new technology and innovations in health care delivery. We are very focused on using the latest in technology to better patient care. In medicine particularly, it is important to keep up-to-date with the latest in technology because it has a direct impact in improving the lives of patients. Key speakers include top global experts in the field of healthcare and information technology. Speakers include 14-year-old Tanmay Bakshi Algorithmist, Author, Watson & Cognitive Developer, YouTuber; Eric Brown, director, Foundational Innovation, IBM Watson Health; Thomas Bornemann, director, Mental Health Program, The Carter Center; Juan Enriquez, co-founder, Synthetic Genomics Inc, managing director, Excel Venture Management and co-author, Evolving Ourselves; Amitabh Chandra, professor of Public Policy, director of Health Policy Research; Chiecko Asakawa, IBM Fellow and visiting faculty member at Carnegie Mellon University; Ruben Meerman, Scientist, Australian Television Science presenter and public speaker. Dr Manal Taryam, head of DHAs Primary Health Centres, said: This year, we will focus on genomics, AI and how AI can be used in diagnostics and radiology. Globally artificial intelligence companies are discussing how the technology can be used from population health management, to digital avatars capable of answering specific patient queries. They believe this is possible before 2025. IBM Watson Group-backed Pathway Genomics has recently started a research study for its new blood test kit, CancerIntercept Detect. The company will collect blood samples from high-risk individuals who have never been diagnosed with the disease to determine if early detection is possible. So the possibilities with AI are endless. Last year at the forum, we discussed the implementation of 3D printing and within one year we have already conducted some surgeries using 3D printing at DHA hospitals and we have introduced the technology in the field of dentistry across DHAs dental clinics. Therefore, I am confident that the technology showcased will be put to use. We will display both existing technology as well as technology that is being researched at the moment. She added that the authority will focus on the use of robotics in heart, eye and other organ surgeries; and the implementation of Block Chain in health care delivery; and the use of smart technology and sensors in geriatric care. She added that in geriatric and emergency care particularly, telemedicine and distance care is of vital importance. The authority is the first government health organization in the region to implement telehealth. This year, RoboDocs have been placed at Hatta Hospitals emergency department and DHAs 24-hour primary healthcare centres- Al Barsha and Nad Al Hammar and they are linked to Rashid Hospitals Trauma Center. In geriatric care, we have home-care programs and over the next few years, we are increasingly focusing on providing this group of patients with telehealth solutions. Dr Taryam added: As telehealth plays an even greater role in global health care delivery, it will be increasingly important to develop a strong evidence base telehealth solutions and programs that can lead to scalable and improve the lives of patients, their caregivers and health care facilities. Remote patient monitoring will definitely transform care delivery. Dr Taryam discussed an emerging field of health care lifestyle medicine, to tackle non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, obesity, hypertension, cancer and even mental health in a holistic way. Through lifestyle medicine, we can identify high-risk groups and use a variety of methods such as involve family counselling, lifestyle training and education to handle the condition. This is a new approach and we will consider how we can apply this in our health system. She added that the forum will discuss the use of precision medicine in cardiac disease and cancer specially where new targeted therapies now focus on the patient rather than on the disease. Individualised care will take centre-stage in the years to come. At the end of the day, all these technologies are aimed to improve the lives of patients better. - TradeArabia News Service Alesayi Motors, official distributor of Mitsubishi vehicles in Saudi Arabia, recently hosted a ceremony launching the Mitsubishi Attrage, a new eco-friendly compact Sedan. The ceremony was held in the presence of Masahiko Takahashi, president of Mitsubishi Motors Middle East & Africa FZE (MMMEA), said a statement. Bandar Saeed Alesayi, CEO of Alesayi Motors, said: The Attrage is a compact eco-friendly car, currently manufactured at the Mitsubishi Motors operation in Thailand. Along with its very lightweight components and distinguished design, it boasts a frugal and efficient performance, which amounts to a combined class-leading fuel consumption of 22km/l, he added. Thanks to its distinctive features in the compact car range, the new model is aptly positioned to achieve unprecedented success in the Saudi market for consumers looking to buy a car with such high-quality specifications under the Mitsubishi brand, he continued. The Attrage features a short nose, which delivers an outstanding forward field of view; it also enjoys superior manoeuvrability, with a class leading minimum turning radius of 4.8m making it easy to make U-turns & cut corners on tight and narrow road conditions. The vehicle features well designed flowing side proportions, which balance aerodynamics and interior space are among the most generous in its class, as well as sleek aerodynamics, with a dynamic character line, which kicks up towards the rear. Takahashi said: The new Attrages lightweight and solid RISE body constructed with high tensile steel enhances driving safety, by effectively absorbing and dispersing crash energy. Power comes from a responsive 1.2-litre three-cylinder MIVEC petrol engine that produces 78 hp, which is coupled with a five-speed manual gearbox or an automatic continuously variable transmission, which maintains optimal rpm for high performance and fuel economy, with a top speed of 170 km/hr, he added. It is noteworthy that Mitsubishi celebrates its centennial year as being the first Japanese automotive brand having introduced its first mass-production car in Japanese history in 1917. Towards the end of the ceremony, Takahashi lauded Alesayi Motors efforts to enhance consumers confidence in Mitsubishi vehicles in the Saudi market, it stated. TradeArabia News Service The new Rolls-Royce Phantom has arrived in Bahrain following its global debut in London. The new flagship of the luxury car manufacturer was presented at Euro Motors, the sole dealer of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars in the kingdom. The New Phantom features a spectacular Bespoke advancement with The Gallery. An unprecedented new concept in luxury, The Gallery reinterprets the motor cars dashboard for the first time in 100 years. Owners will be able to commission a truly individual work of art that spans the width of The Gallery and sits behind a single pane of glass in their New Phantom. Phantom is the epitome of effortless style, an historical nameplate that occupies its very individual space in the luxury constellation, said Brett Soso, regional director at Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Middle East and Africa, at the unveil. He continued: Every one of our customers each a connoisseur of true luxury was asking for something even more individual to them, and we are proud to present New Phantom as a modern yet timeless masterpiece which allows to make your motor car truly as unique as your fingerprint. New Phantom offers a wholly new, contemporary design interpretation of Rolls-Royce Phantom DNA. The all-new aluminium Architecture of Luxury underpinning the New Phantom is lighter, stiffer, quieter and more technologically advanced. The many years of engineering ensure the architectural and proportional lineage of Rolls-Royce while delivering a whole new level of Magic Carpet Ride. When you enter the New Phantom, one experiences The Embrace of the worlds most luxurious motor car. The space enhances the sense of occasion and effortlessness of entry as the patron settles into the car, he said. An all-new 6.75 litre twin-turbo V12 engine is the silently beating heart of New Phantom, providing a perfectly tuned level of power and performance. Engineers have also discreetly applied Satellite Aided Transmission, rear-wheel steering and a myriad of behind the scenes technology to provide an effortless experience. The New Phantom is the most technologically advanced Rolls-Royce ever. From the moment Sir Henry Royce introduced the Rolls-Royce Phantom in 1925 it was judged The Best Car in the World by the cognoscenti. As a result, it has conveyed some of the worlds most influential and powerful men and women to the most defining historical moments over the last 92 years. Commenting on the new Phantoms arrival, Majed Al Zayani, general manager of Euro Motors, said: With this new car a new benchmark has now been set. The eighth generation of its nameplate, the 2018 Phantom heralds a new luxury business model, demonstrating that Rolls-Royce operates in the luxury goods industry like no other. As this new chapter in the Rolls-Royce story begins, it is the new Phantom that points the way forward for the global luxury industry. - TradeArabia News Service Luxury retailer Saks Fifth Avenue, Bahrain, today celebrated the launch of its niche fragrance department in the presence of social media celebrity Fouz Al Fahad, at a red carpet event held at its retail store in City Centre Bahrain. The function was attended by many perfume enthusiasts, members of the press and social media personalities. The newly unveiled department carries niche and limited collections from international brands that are exclusively available at Saks Fifth Avenue, Bahrain, such as Acqua di Parma, TOM FORD Private Blend, Prada Olfactories, Maison Lancome and Roberto Cavalli Gold Collection. Emirates Group Security and Etihad Aviation Group (EAG) have signed an agreement for cooperation to effectively exploit joint synergies to enhance efficiency and security for the benefit of both groups customers. The memorandum of understanding (MoU) was signed by Sir Tim Clark, president Emirates Airline, and Tony Douglas, Group chief executive officer of Etihad Aviation Group, in the presence of Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, chairman and chief executive, Emirates Airline & Group, Hamad Abdulla Al Shamsi, vice chairman, reported state-run news agency Wam. The cooperation is also in keeping with the spirit of the Year of Zayed which celebrates the vision and leadership of the founding father of the UAE. One of the key areas of cooperation outlined in the MoU involves the sharing of information and intelligence between Emirates Group Security and Etihad Aviation Group on critical aspects of aviation security. The two entities will also work together on operational areas both within and outside the UAE. Sheikh Ahmed said: "Security is one of the foremost priorities of the global aviation industry. Over the years, Emirates Group Security has built strong expertise and capabilities to successfully navigate the complex landscape of security risks and threats in aviation. Through this agreement, Emirates Group Security will collaborate with Etihad Aviation Group to share know-how and extend aviation security services in order to better handle shared challenges, which ultimately benefits travellers." Hamad Abdulla Al Shamsi said: "This is a landmark partnership and one which is as important symbolically as it is strategically. As the national airline of the UAE, we have a responsibility to seek and develop greater collaboration with our major aviation partners in the UAE for the continued safety and convenience of millions of travellers worldwide. "Security is our utmost priority and given the current sensitive climate we operate in, it should never be underestimated. The signing of an MoU between the two largest aviation groups in the country will have a positive impact on local and international operations by significantly enhancing aviation security measures. By working closely together, and pooling our expertise and resources, Etihad Aviation Group and Emirates Group Security will build a stronger platform from which to share best practice and knowledge, allowing us to provide the safest travelling environment for our customers, he added. Under the MoU, Emirates Group Security will also extend its security training and education programmes to Etihad Airways and will support the Abu Dhabi-based airline in the development of its own security escort capability. In the longer term, Emirates Group Security will also share the content and structure of its extensive security development curriculum and work with Etihad Aviation Group in setting up a structured in-house security education programme with possible university level accreditation. The recent Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (Gopio) convention, held at the Gulf Hotel in Bahrain, served as the perfect platform for the kingdon's tourism ministry to showcase its diversity in an extensive destination promotion and awareness push. More than 400 delegates from 40 countries attended the event, which opened on January 6 and concluded today (January 9). It was hosted by the world body Gopio and held for the first time in the Middle East. Over the four-day event, several topics were discussed, some of which included India 2030: An Economic Powerhouse, Opportunities for Business and Investment in India, India: The Healthcare Destination India Healthcare Challenges & Opportunities, Innovation, Entrepreneurship & Start-Up India, Empowering Women Globally, Rehabilitation of Returning NRIs. Among the participants at the convention was chief executive officer of Bahrain Tourism and Exhibitions Authority, Shaikh Khaled bin Humood Al Khalifa, who said: We are proud to participate in the first Gopio conference which is being held in the Middle East for the first time and which will serve to promote Bahrain in India, further strengthening bilateral relations between the two countries. Through our representative office in India, we have been able to successfully promote Bahrain as well as collaborate with Indian travel agencies to create inbound packages into the kingdom. We also look forward to attracting further investments and increasing the influx of tourism which will contribute to the growth and development of this sector as well as to the national economy, he added. Shaikh Khaleds participation and support comes in line with the BTEAs overall strategy that aims to develop and strengthen the tourism sector under the slogan of Ours. Yours., and contribute towards the kingdom's economy and the 2030 Economic Vision. - TradeArabia News Service A recent disagreement between Casper and Natrona County officials about how to divvy up a certain form of state funding has left some Council members calling for changes. Consensus funding is intended to help communities with various infrastructure issues. In Natrona County, all municipalities must agree on how to disperse the money before it can be used. But some city leaders want the money to be distributed based on the size of each municipality meaning Casper would get a bigger piece of the pie than its smaller neighbors. I think that we have to base it on population and on tax payer participation [next time], Councilman Dallas Laird said Friday. Given that Casper pays more taxes than other municipalities in the county, Laird said its reasonable that the city should receive more of the funds. The councilman said he would also prefer that the state specify exactly how the money should be handed out to prevent disputes. I dont want to be arguing with my neighbors, he explained. Casper would have received about $6.5 million of the most recently allotted consensus money if it were divided on a per capita basis, City Manager Carter Napier told the Council last week. Instead, the city received about $3.4 million. Councilwoman Amanda Huckabay said Tuesday that she understood the argument for dispersing the funding based on population, but was concerned that Caspers smaller neighbors would then never be able to afford needed infrastructure repairs. Thats a matter of public safety, she said. Vice Mayor Charlie Powell, who noted at the meeting that Casper citizens havent been getting their fair share, said Thursday that he would like the citys size to be taken into consideration the next time local leaders are tasked with dispersing consensus funds. Casper has about 75 percent of the countys population, but only received about 35 percent of the most recent allotment, he explained. Although he understands that smaller towns need support, Powell said he felt the existing distribution was too disproportionate. Deciding how to give out consensus funding is always a challenge, Napier said Thursday. Some counties in Wyoming do divide up the funding on a per capita basis, but that has never been the standard practice in Natrona County. Casper doesnt want to alienate the smaller towns, he said, adding that the city recognizes that its especially challenging for tiny municipalities to generate revenue. Given the states current economic challenges, the city manager added that its unlikely the county will be receiving more consensus funding anytime soon. If consensus funding is provided again, local leaders will need to discuss the possibility of factoring in the size of all the involved municipalities, Mayor Ray Pacheco said Monday. I would like to see Casper certainly have its fair share but at the same time we still have to work together [with other towns], he said. City and county leaders disagreed last month over how to divide up $1.8 million of consensus funding, which was leftover after previously being slated to build the Amoco Reuse Convention Center, which never panned out. City Council initially asked for $600,000 for new seats and metal detectors at the Casper Events Center, and $185,646 to replace the Casper Ice Arena ice plant, but the new plan nixes the request for the ice plant and also eliminates funding for Mills to repair park equipment. Instead, Natrona County will receive $200,000 to fix the drainage system in the stalls and stables at the Central Wyoming Fairgrounds. City staff is now drafting the formal new proposal, which will require official approval from council. Heavy rains unleashed destructive rivers of mud and debris in Southern California on Tuesday -- leaving at least 13 people dead, destroying homes and spurring rescues as the flooding forced heavily traveled roads to close. Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said the death toll could rise. Officials said many of the deaths are believed to be in the coastal Montecito area, where mudflows and floodwater have inundated areas downstream from where the Thomas Fire burned thousands of acres last month. At least two dozen people were unaccounted for and authorities rescued at least 50 people in the Montecito area. The Santa Barbara Sheriff's Department is working toward determining whether those "missing" were accounted for in other locations or among those who are deceased. "It looked like a World War I battlefield," Brown said of the destruction. "It was literally a carpet of mud and debris everywhere, with huge boulders, rocks, down trees, power lines, wrecked cars -- lots of obstacles and challenges for rescue personnel to get to homes." Latest developments Thirteen storm-related deaths were reported in Santa Barbara County, Sheriff Brown said. The 101 Freeway in parts of Montecito and Santa Barbara, will remain closed for at least 48 hours after muddy, debris-filled water flooded parts of the seaside roadway, according to Capt. Cindy Pontes with the California Highway Patrol. By early Tuesday afternoon, more than 5.5 inches of rain had fallen in parts of Ventura County over two days, the National Weather Service said. In Carpinteria, nearly 1 inch fell in just 15 minutes, the agency said. The weather forced the closure of several theme parks, including Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia and SeaWorld in San Diego. 'Call after call' from stranded residents Before the storm hit, Santa Barbara issued mandatory evacuations for more than 6,000 people, including living in those parts of Carpinteria, Montecito and Goleta, located below areas scorched by wildfires, including the Thomas Fire, county spokeswoman Gina DePinto said. Voluntary evacuation warnings were in effect for another 20,000 people, including others in those same communities, she said. Brown said deputies and search and rescue team members went door-to-door Monday conducting evacuations in the mandatory evacuation areas. Those notifications were all made by nightfall, Brown said. "While some residents cooperated with the evacuations, many did not. Many chose to stay in place, "Brown said. The sheriff said the storm hit hard around 3 a.m. Tuesday. Between 3 and 6 a.m., dispatchers with the sheriff's office handled more than 600 telephone calls for assistance. "They received call after call from people who were distressed, stranded in their homes or vehicles and were in need of immediate rescue," Brown said. He added: "Once daylight came, we had a very difficult time assessing the area and responding to many of those areas to assist those people." Brown said the mud was "knee-deep" in many places on the roadways and even deeper in the canyons. Teenager trapped for hours in Montecito The rain fell in areas charred by recent wildfires, triggering warnings of flash flooding and mudslides because vegetation that otherwise would hold hills together and make the terrain flood-resistant has burned away. In Montecito, six homes were "wiped away from their foundations" by mudflow and debris, Santa Barbara County fire spokesman Mike Eliason said. Eliason said firefighters rescued a 14-year-old girl, who had been trapped for hours in a collapsed Montecito home. The girl, coated head to foot in mud, was led by firefighters from the pile of wood and debris that was once a house, a photo from the county fire department shows. In another part of Montecito, Eliason said he saw "utter devastation." "There were three houses that were completely knocked off their foundations. Debris and wood everywhere, looking like matchsticks," he said. Eliason recalled looking at the red band on a radar, indicating heavy rainfall. "When that hit those hillsides, it just came rushing down," Eliason said. "Time and time again, I found myself waist deep in floodwater. The mud and debris left roadways and neighborhoods in Montecito unrecognizable. 'Mud came in an instant, like a dam breaking' Ben Hyatt said a river of mud had crashed through a neighbor's house in Montecito, a community of about 8,000 east of Santa Barbara, "Apparently, one of their cars ended (up) in their backyard. We have neighbors at (the) top of the street that evacuated to their roof," Hyatt said. Hyatt said his Montecito house was "surrounded by mud," and a washing machine had drifted into his front yard. Hyatt said he was awake when power went out during heavy rain around 2:30 a.m. Eventually, he heard a loud swish and banging on the exterior of his house. "Mud came in an instant, like a dam breaking. (It) surrounded the house, 2 to 3 feet," he said. "Seems calm now. We feel safe. But definitely stuck here for a bit." There were several glimmers of hope, as emergency officials rescued stranded residents. Eliason, the Santa Barbara County fire spokesman, posted photos of firefighters leading people through mud and floodwater to safety. Also in Montecito, a ruptured gas line led to a fire that consumed a building, Eliason said. Surveillance camera video appears to show an explosion connected to that fire, said Eric Trautwein, who posted the footage on Twitter. Cars mired in the muck Photos of vehicles stuck in mud in Los Angeles County and nearby areas dotted Twitter feeds. One post showed a California Department of Transportation crew trying to help a trapped motorist. In another, a Los Angeles police squad car was mired in the muck. "Officers were responding to help with evacuations. Within seconds their vehicle was consumed by the mud," the post reads. 'Praying' for Santa Barbara Oprah Winfrey, who has home in Montecito, said she was "praying for our community again in Santa Barbara." "Woke up to this blazing gas fire," she posted on social media. Winfrey also showed photo of mud in her backyard. "Helicopters rescuing my neighbors. Looking for missing persons. 13 lives lost," she wrote. More than 1 inch of rain per hour The rainfall rate of more than 1.5 inches per hour in parts of Southern California overwhelmed the landscape. About a half inch per hour is enough to start mudslides, said Robbie Monroe of the National Weather Service in Oxnard. The downpour is overpowering a terrain especially vulnerable in the wake of recent fires. The Thomas Fire -- the largest wildfire in California's recorded history -- has burned more than 281,000 acres in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties since it began in early December. It was 92% contained, and officials don't expect full containment until later this month. Montecito and Carpinteria are vulnerable to mudslides because the steep terrain in some places goes from thousands of feet above to sea level to sea level in "a matter of just a few miles," said Tom Fayram, a deputy public works director with Santa Barbara County "That's definitely at play here. It's just a mess," he said. Fayram said crews working to clear mud and debris from roadways saw "boulders the size of trucks that came rolling down the hillsides." "This is a disaster, much worse than the mudslides of 1995," Fayram said. We're trying to get help from federal and state officials." The region has suffered from years of drought, and officials say they need the rain to regrow plants and trees that help keep the hillsides together and floodproof. Mudslides are not uncommon to the area and can be deadly. In January 2005, a landslide struck La Conchita in Ventura County, killing 10 people and destroying or damaging 36 houses. CNN's Judson Jones, Darran Simon and Paul Vercammen contributed to this report. CHEYENNE Wyomings lone U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney said she is proud of her the first year in Congress. Of three big successes that come to mind, federal tax reform rose to the top for the first-term Wyoming congresswoman. Weve already begun to see the economic impact of that, and I think youll see even more in terms of cutting peoples taxes, increasing economic growth and, hopefully, bringing jobs back, Cheney told the Wyoming Tribune Eagle recently. The GOP tax reform was the first major legislative victory for Republicans after taking control of the House and Senate in the 2016 elections. It was a much-needed victory for Republican President Donald Trump and his party members in Congress heading into 2018, as Democrats are hoping for upsets in the midterm elections. Tax reform legislation tied with deregulation, Cheneys second big Republican victory in 2017. Cheney said the combination should reap a greater degree of economic benefits in Wyoming. Cheney cited increased revenue in oil and gas lease sales in the state as an indication of whats happening because of reduced regulation. Thats something weve seen both because of action by the president and also action in Congress through the Congressional Review Act, she said. Market forces drove Wyoming into an economic downturn that resulted in two consecutive years of cuts to government spending in the state Legislature. Even with a somewhat improved economic outlook in late 2017, most economists arent expecting a boom in the state anytime soon under the current conditions. But Cheney said tax reform and deregulation will provide significant relief nationally and in Wyoming. While critics of the tax legislation characterize it as mostly benefiting the wealthiest individuals and corporations, Cheney said its a cut to everyones taxes. Taxes are too high, people know how to spend their money better than the government does, and our president and leadership in the House was really focused on making sure this was relief for the middle class, she said. Cheney said she had not yet had a chance to examine how the tax reform would benefit her family compared to other tax brackets in Wyoming, but was certainly hopeful it will provide the same kind of benefit for every Wyomingite. The plan lowers tax rates for each income level and doubles the standard deduction, but critics are skeptical whether individual tax cuts will be retained after 2025. In order to extend those tax cuts past that year, Republicans are counting on increases in revenue to offset deficits. Some fear it could also result in cuts to federal spending on health-care and poverty programs, such as Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security. Candidate Trump promised none of those programs would be cut, but House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said in December that Republicans could aim to reduce spending on certain welfare programs. Ryan also said last month Republicans would not look to make significant reforms to Social Security. Cheney said she did not anticipate cuts to any of the programs, period. She anticipates the tax cuts would yield the anticipated revenue necessary to keep the lowered individual rates and avoid making cuts to the aforementioned federal entitlements. However, Cheney did say there is a need to make fixes to the programs to prevent abuse, especially in Medicaid. The problem with the abuse you see in Medicaid is you get people who draw on Medicaid who dont need it and end up pushing off the people who do need it, she said. The third success story for the GOP in 2017 related to increases in spending for national security, Cheney said. As a member of the House Armed Services Committee, she pointed to the National Defense Authorization Act and measures in the appropriations bills to start increasing resources for the military, including nuclear modernization at F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Cheyenne. Its a busy time in Washington, D.C., however, and there was no shortage of areas to ask for Cheneys perspective. The coming months are sure to yield several high-interest matters for her constituents to keep an eye on. Bipartisanship and health care Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is a close ally of Cheneys colleagues in the other chamberSens. John Barrasso and Mike Enzi, both Wyoming Republicans. McConnell started off the new year by calling for a higher degree of bipartisanship, as did Trump. Cheney said its hard to tell whether congressional Democrats would be willing to work with Republicans on policy matters such as immigration, infrastructure and more. Its hard to tell, she said. I think it depends on the issue. ... I havent served in Congress during an election year, but I would imagine things get more partisan, not less. Before tax reform received Trumps signature, Republicans were carrying an albatross of repeatedly failing to pass health care reform. It passed in the House with strong support from Cheney, but the GOPs slim majority in the Senate saw it fail on multiple occasions before Republicans threw in the towel. Cheney said it was regrettable to see attempts to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, fail in the Senate. While Congress has a hefty agenda before the 2018 elections really start to heat up, Cheney said she expects health care reform will rise back to the top of the Republican agenda. Thats got to be at the top of the list this year as we return to Washington to make sure we provide relief, she said. Im hearing from people all over the state that theyre seeing their premiums skyrocket, and we have an obligation to address that. The Mueller probe Controversy around former FBI director Robert Muellers investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election, and potential collusion between Trumps campaign and foreign agents, came and went in waves in 2017. Near the end of the year, more congressional Republicans became increasingly skeptical of the tone of the investigation, characterizing many on Muellers team as partisans bent on ousting the unconventional president. Cheney said she wouldnt speculate as to how shell react if Trump were to remove Mueller. She praised the firing of former FBI Director James Comey in a tweet that was subsequently deleted. Muellers investigation and people at the FBI were yielding troubling developments as the process dragged on in 2017, Cheney said. Emails, tweets and other exchanges between FBI agents indicated a potential trend of opposition to Trump, she said. While she expects Mueller will treat Trump fairly, Cheney said a complete, professional, objective investigation would not overlook real abuses seen by the FBI during the 2016 campaign. I think there are serious questions that have been raised about the nations law enforcement, she said. Its really important for people to be confident in our law enforcement agencies, so I support the idea weve got to have an investigation to understand what kind of investigation the FBI was conducting. North Korea threats As hes known to do, Trump shocked many earlier this week by tweeting about his willingness to launch a nuclear attack against the totalitarian regime in North Korea. The president tweeted he had a bigger button to press at his desk than the North Korean dictator had, leading many to question Trumps approach to communicating with foreign nations. Cheney backs Trump's aggressive stance on North Korea Wyomings lone U.S. House Rep. Liz Cheney is backing the aggressive statements made by Presi However, Cheney said she fully supported the administrations approach to foreign relations with North Korea. The only way to avoid armed conflict with North Korea was to lean on China to step up and get in line with U.S. policy, she said, adding that Trumps unabashed approach to exchanging nuclear threats was accomplishing that. Were on the right track, she said. Its important for our allies and adversaries to know were going to defend ourselves. Sixth annual Tucson Desert Song Festival What: Bernstein at 100: A Celebration of the Life and Music of Leonard Bernstein." Featuring: Artist-in-Residence Jamie Bernstein and Leonard Bernstein Scholar-in-Residence Dr. Matthew Mugmon; curated by festival director George Hanson. Performances by: Arizona Early Music Society, Arizona Opera, Arizona Friends of Chamber Music, Ballet Tucson, New York Festival of Song, True Concord Voices & Orchestra, Tucson Guitar Society, Tucson International Jewish Film Festival, Tucson Jazz Festival, Tucson Symphony Orchestra, University of Arizona Fred Fox School of Music and UA Presents. When: Jan. 16 through Feb. 4. Where: At venues throughout the city including Tucson Music Hall, 260 S.Church Ave.; Centennial Hall, 1020 E. University Blvd. on the UA campus; and the UA School of Music, North Park Avenue and East Speedway. Tickets: Vary by organization. For links to the ticketing websites, see tucsondesertsongfestival.org Coming up: Arizona Opera recital: mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnson Cano and her pianist husband Christopher Cano at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 17, at the UA's Holsclaw Hall; $10 to $20 through azopera.org Diane Schuur Quartet featuring Ernie Watts with the Bill Charlap Trio performing Somewhere, the songs of Leonard Bernstein, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 18, at Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St. Part of the Tucson Jazz Festival; $35 to $90 through foxtucsontheatre.ticketforce.com Learn more: For a complete schedule and more, see next week's Caliente. PHOENIX Saying he wants "a more aggressive approach," Gov. Doug Ducey wants legislators to put new limits on opioid prescriptions. "Since I last stood at this podium, we've lost more than 800 Arizonans to opioids," the governor said. "These are real lives and real people," he continued. "Gone." "Families, marriages and lives torn apart, tragically and unexpectedly because of a potent drug misprescribed, overprescribed, and then, before you know it, it's too late," he said. He promised more details when he calls for a special legislative session. But Dr. Cara Christ, the state health director, already has provided some specifics. She wants Arizona law to spell out that "opioid naive" patients should get no more than five days' worth of pills at any one time. She said there is usually no need for anything more than that. Christ added there is medical evidence that the chances of addiction increase sharply once patients take the pills for six or more days. And the governor himself said that 75 percent of those addicted to heroin nationally got hooked with prescription opioids. Whether lawmakers are willing to go along remains to be seen. There is no evidence that the medical community has agreed to strict state-imposed limits on their prescription-writing privileges. The governor, in his proposal, acknowledges that a strict five-day limit may not make sense in all cases, especially for people with chronic pain for whom opioids provide the only relief and who already have been taking them for a long time. His legislation would provide exceptions for such patients. But Ducey suggested he will do more than seeking restrictions on doctors. "This much I commit: All bad actors will be held accountable whether they are doctors, manufacturers or just plain drug dealers," the governor said. That goes to Christ's recommendations that the law be changed to allow prosecutors to go after manufacturers and distributors who unfairly and improperly market their drugs to doctors, allowing them to be charged as drug dealers. At this point prosecutors are largely limited to civil remedies. That's what is occurring now with the lawsuit by Attorney General Mark Brnovich who is charging that Chandler-based Insys Therapeutics effectively bribed doctors to recommend and prescribe their spray fentanyl, a powerful artificial opioid far more potent than the original. His lawsuit, pending in Maricopa County Superior Court, also goes after the doctors who took "speaking fees" and other financial compensation which Brnovich said amounted to a kickback for writing prescriptions when not medically necessary and in dosages higher than appropriate. Christ also wants a limit of the amount of the initial dosages that can be given to patients who are getting the drug for a specific condition, like surgery. She said dosages should be limited to less than 90 "morphine milligram equivalents." The Centers for Disease Control report that the risk of overdose doubles above 50 MME a day. By way of comparison, that 90 MME figure is the same as 90 milligrams of hydrocodone or 60 milligrams of oxycodone. Christ has acknowledge there are probably some patients already getting a higher dosage. She said that should be resolved with a requirement to taper off the 90 MME figure, albeit over a period of years. She also said there should be certain exceptions. PHOENIX Gov. Doug Ducey is proposing to give a small tax cut to military retirees as a method of fulfilling his 2014 campaign promise to propose lower taxes every year he is in office. Current law exempts the first $2,500 of military pensions from state taxes. Ducey said that figure has not been updated since 1989. The governor did not spell out in the speech how much he wants that increased. But in a separate press release, Ducey said he wants that raised over the next two years to $10,000. How much of a difference that might make would depend on how much the retiree is getting in pensions. Arizona's tax rates vary from 2.59 to 4.54 percent for amounts of income above $150,000 for individuals and $300,000 for couples. Assuming a middle blended rate in the 3.3 percent rate, each $1,000 reduction in taxable income translates to a $33 savings in state taxes owed. Ducey said there are about 52,000 Arizonans getting federal pensions who would be affected. PHOENIX Gov. Doug Ducey promised Monday to put more money into K-12 education. But voters will need to wait to find how much and how quickly. In his fourth State of the State speech, the governor acknowledged that Arizona has had a history of increasing spending on the state prison system even as it cut education funds during the recession. "Not any more," he promised. "For the second year in a row, my budget will add no new prison beds," Ducey said. "All of this while fighting crime and improving public safety." The governor remains adamantly opposed to increasing taxes. He also will not consider rescinding some of the previously enacted tax cuts which have yet to take effect. " My cabinet continues to identify millions in wasteful spending, opportunities for consolidation and streamlined services," he said. Ducey put those savings at "tens of millions of dollars combined." That is unlikely to be enough to satisfy education advocates and even some elements of the business community who say state aid to schools has been cut by more than $1 billion. Yet the governor clearly does not want to see his plan measured by money. "Before we talk dollars and cents, let's address something," he told lawmakers. "Some folks think the best argument for a greater investment in our public schools is to claim that our schools are failing," the governor said. "They are wrong." He said the record shows that schools are improving . "You wouldn't always know it from picking up the newspaper or turning on the TV, but Arizona public schools are showing real, measurable signs of progress," he said. As proof, Ducey said four of the top five public high schools in America are in Arizona. What Ducey did not mention, though, is that all four are charter schools. And while they technically are public schools, they have come under increased scrutiny for admission policies that some say are exclusionary. There are gains among traditional public schools, Ducey said, specifically citing the progress made in the Chandler Unified, Peoria Unified and Washington Elementary school districts. "We know how to educate a child in the state of Arizona," the governor said. "We need to do it more often in more locations across our state." The governor did mention the hot-button issue of teacher salaries. There are studies that show teachers here, on average, are paid less than their counterparts in virtually every other state. And Ducey said that some additional dollars that have been made available, including a 2016 voter-approved measure to tap a special education trust fund, have resulted in 9 percent more being spent on teacher salaries since the 2014-2015 school year. Teachers will get an additional 1 percent pay hike this year, though that was not necessarily of the governor's doing. Last year Ducey asked legislators to boost teacher pay by 0.4 percent. That proved too little, with the Republican-controlled Legislature responding with a 1 percent pay hike and a promise of an additional 1 percent for the coming school year. It looks like Rep. Martha McSally has acquired a new political target Jeff Flake's Senate seat. Campaign staff for the Tucson Republican and former fighter pilot has set up a number of "special announcements" on Friday. It includes two that are outside of her Congressional District, one in Prescott and another in Phoenix. A spokeswoman refused to discuss the announcement, but all signs point to the launch of her Senate campaign. McSally has shied away from discussing her plans for the last two months, despite Rep. David Schweikert, a Republican colleague in Congressional District 6, telling reporters that the retired Air Force colonel said she was planning to enter the race. The campaign has repeatedly had to sidesteped the issue, with McSally telling a Fox News host Neil Cavuto in early November that her plan to run for Senate is not announced yet," and telling reporters at an official event that ethic rules prevented her from answering direct questions about her campaign plans. Just before Christmas, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told the Washington Examiner that McSally as one of his top recruits for the Senate in 2018. If McSally announces on Friday, she will face several candidates in a GOP primary, including former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who on Tuesday announced his candidacy for the post through Twitter. The presumed front-runner has been Republican Kelli Ward, a well-known conservative candidate best known for challenging Sen. John McCain in 2016. Ward has been campaigning for the better part of a year, criss-crossing the state to discuss her platform. Kelly Fryer has spent most of her life helping people as a pastor, a political activist and most recently serving as CEO of the YWCA Southern Arizona but now shes stepping onto the political stage. Fryer announced on Monday night she would seek the Democratic nomination to challenge Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, this fall. Less than an hour before Ducey made his State of the State speech in Phoenix, Fryer said she has been thinking about running for the states top office for about a year. A speaker at the local version of the Womens March on Washington last year, Fryer said people starting approaching her after the protest. Ive had folks in the community really encouraging me to consider this as far back as last years womens march, she said. She believes the Ducey administration has done nothing to help some of the states most-vulnerable populations. Frankly, I am tired of watch people struggle because of the things our legislators are doing, she said. It is time for us to take the reins and turn things around. And Fryer believes she has unique talents to lead Arizona in a new direction. Ive spent my entire career, especially these last years in Arizona, working with and beside people in our community women, people of color, LGBT folks, people who have been sidelined. People whose voices are not being heard, people who are not being taken seriously, Fryer said. Friends and family all have been supportive of Fryers decision to enter the race. The first person she told was her spouse. Her reaction was It is about time, Fryer said. Some, however, were concerned for her well-being. They are afraid to get involved in politics, they are afraid to get involved in their own government because of how mean-spirited it is, Fryer said. Dark money, she predicts, will continue to be a problem in politics as it gives her would-be political opponents opportunities to spread lies about her and to do it anonymously. But Fryer stresses that she isnt a single-issue candidate. I happen to be a mom, I happen to have a wife and I happen to be a woman and I happen to have spent my career with folks whove been left on the sidelines, she said. I care about a lot of issues. I am not running on one particular issue. Fryer faces competition within her party for the nomination.In April, Arizona State University professor David Garcia announced he was a candidate for governor and would seek the Democratic nomination. Garcia may be best-known as a candidate for state schools superintendent in 2014, when he lost to Republican Diane Douglas. In June, public-artist-turned- politician state Sen. Steve Farley formally threw his hat into the 2018 governors race. The Tucson Democrat has been a state senator since 2013. A Tucson woman accused of intentionally scalding her 5-year-old daughter will be going to trial later this year. Samantha Osteraas trial is to begin Oct. 9 and last for eight days, according to a court spokeswoman. The trial will be presided over by Pima County Superior Court Judge James Marner. Osteraas is facing two charges of child abuse, after her daughter suffered third-degree burns to 80 percent of her body in December 2016. When Osteraas called 911, she told dispatchers she didnt realize she was bathing her daughter in hot water. When police arrived at the home, they noted serious burns on the childs whole body, extending from her upper chest down, according to a Pima County Sheriffs Department incident report. The morning after the child was brought to Banner-University Medical Center, doctors told detectives that the girls burns could have been inflicted up to six hours before Osteraas called 911, according to a search warrant return. In June, a conservator firm representing the child filed a lawsuit against the Arizona Department of Child Safety, Department of Economic Security, multiple adoption agencies and two sets of foster and adoptive parents for the years of abuse that the girl endured while in the system, according to the Pima County Superior Court lawsuit. The child was adopted by Samantha and Justin Osteraas in the summer of 2016, despite warnings from Justin Osteraas brother that Samantha had mental issues and had a breakdown in the past, Star archives show. The man told detectives that he advised the adoption licensing agency, Christian Family Care, that his sister-in-law had been physically and emotionally abusing his brother for years. Before she was adopted by the Osteraases, the child was living with foster parents David and Barbara Frodsham. In 2016, Frodsham was arrested after federal authorities accused him of sexual misconduct with children and of providing at least one child to an alleged child pornographer, according to Star archives. Police arrested a 51-year-old woman Monday morning after she intentionally rammed her car into a gate at a Tucson Police Department substation, authorities said. At about 5:40 a.m., a TPD community service officer was in a secure lot at the Westside Substation, located off West Miracle Mile and North Flowing Wells Road, when he noticed a vehicle speeding towards one of the gates, according to a news release. The vehicle crashed into and significantly damaged the gate, knocking it off track and sending it flying into the parking lot, the release said. The officer was not injured and was able to direct responding officers to the scene, where they took Michele Murphy into custody, the release said. Detectives with the neighborhood crimes unit, traffic unit, aggravated assault unit and mental health support team all responded to the scene to investigate and were able to determine that the crash was not accidental and was intentional. The tricks of the multibillion-dollar drug business include using drones, submarines, ultralight planes and even frozen sharks to transport product across the US-Mexico border. Just consider that in 2016, US Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine Operations agents attempted to seize a submarine in the Pacific Ocean with nearly $194 million worth of cocaine. And yet President Trump argues that his proposed border wall, a throwback to a bygone era, will "stop much of the drugs from pouring into this country and poisoning our youth." As he said last July, he is worried that smugglers will throw "large sacks of drugs" over the wall and hit US citizens on the head -- a preoccupation that led to his request for a transparent border wall. Should he get funding from Congress to build such a wall, Trump will be faced by an even bigger problem -- the geographical reality of the border itself. Any wall will have to navigate floodplains, international treaties and the rights of landowners who refuse to sell their land. Simply put, Trump does not understand the dynamics of the US-Mexico border. But more importantly, the wall will be a gift to the drug cartels. In interviews with a New York Times contributing writer, drug dealers and human traffickers have preemptively thanked Trump for his border wall. Smugglers see the wall as a quaint distraction, because it has little practical application in a world where they harness the latest technology to move drugs and people into the US. If anything, they believe the wall will increase their profits, strengthening criminal networks. And they might not be far off. According to a 2015 report by the US Drug Enforcement Administration, 95% of drugs coming into the US were entering via container ships and other vessels. In addition to drones and submarines, drug dealers and human traffickers rely on the trucking industry to move drugs and people via the 52 legal crossing points along the US border. In July, eight dead migrants were discovered inside a tractor-trailer parked in a Walmart parking lot in San Antonio, Texas, while two more died at the hospital and dozens were injured. The incredible quantities of money generated by smuggling are often used to grease the palms of border agents and others who inspect vehicles entering the US. None of this would be stopped by a wall. And the truth is: US citizens provide a constant demand for drugs from Latin America. According to the 2015 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 27.1 million people aged 12 or older had used drugs within the past 30 days -- the equivalent of 1 in 10 Americans in that age group. Americans also rely on the labor of undocumented migrants who often cross the US-Mexico border. A 2017 Pew report shows that more than 11 million undocumented immigrants live in the US. And they comprise roughly 5% of the US workforce. But even undocumented migrants don't fear Trump's wall. While interviewing migrants from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador during the past year for a project at Longreads, I've found that they see the wall more as a symbol of racism than a functional barrier. Many of them laugh at the wall, mentioning the unparalleled tunnel architecture of Mexican smugglers. This architecture even extends to underwater tunnels manned by scuba diving smugglers. These same migrants, ironically, are also fleeing unprecedented violence, much of which is caused by the US demand for drugs. According to Trump, "The drugs are pouring in at levels like nobody has ever seen. We'll be able to stop them once the wall is up." As a businessman, Trump should understand that the laws of supply and demand apply equally to selling Ivanka's clothing line as they do to the drug trade. As long as demand exists in the US, suppliers, whether in Mexico or Afghanistan, will find creative ways to meet that demand. And until Trump addresses the illegal drug epidemic as a public health issue rather than criminalizing it, the demand for drugs from Central America will only continue to grow. In Trump's reality, narcos smuggle drugs in sacks, and only a transparent multi-billion dollar wall will stop them. The truth is, the wall is just a symbol. It is a physical monument to the idea of returning to a more homogenous white past -- a past that ignores the contributions of undocumented migrants and the fact that they have raised our children and fed our families. Yelling, interruptions and scathing criticisms were hurled at the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Wednesday, during the boards first meeting following a midterm election whose administration has been called into question locally and across the country. Nearly two dozen spoke during the public comment portion of the Wednesday morning meeting, most of them there to [] The post Maricopa County supervisors defend the 2022 election against public criticism appeared first on Arizona Mirror. Re: the Jan. 8. article Sen. Jeff Flake seeks end to Mexican gray wolf protections. A recent bill introduced by Sen. Jeff Flake would potentially threaten recovery of the Mexican gray wolf. This bill goes against the will of the majority of Arizona and New Mexico voters who support a healthy wild population of Mexican gray wolves in their home states. My peers and I believe wolves are a vital part of Americas wilderness and natural heritage, with the potential to bring great economic benefit to the recovery area as a result of visitors who come to experience wolves. Senator Flakes proposal goes against the wishes of my fellow wolf supporters as well as the science backing the actions needed to recover threatened and endangered species. After 40 years of struggling to reestablish this population, they are still not at a stable number. Its time to listen to the science and the will of the people and work towards the protection of this most rare of North American land mammals. Jody Inman Pinetop Re: the Jan. 5 guest column "ACLU misses mark: Charter schools provide critical alternative." Choice is a natural buzz word, with appeal for many looking for something better than our struggling Arizona public schools. After decades of experience in education, I agree that "choice" is a nice-sounding word, but it becomes pretty empty for the poor and handicapped. As critical tax funds go to support charters, truly critical choices left to poor or children with special needs become either tolerate a terrible school day or drop out. Charter schools accept public money without the same standards that hold public schools accountable to all in our pluralistic society. As responsible citizens it is critical that we choose to finance more adequately the conventional American public school system that has contributed so mightily to our pluralistic democratic society. Until we citizens make that caring choice, we will continue to let down our poor and unfortunate while contributing to prison crowding. Stephen Uhl Oro Valley My name is Sherry Graham-Potter and I am the surviving spouse of Deputy Tim Graham of the Pima County Sheriffs Department, who lost his life in the line of duty in 2005. I am also the wife of Tucson police pilot Chris Potter. For 15 years, my life has been enmeshed with law enforcement. Ive seen the deep commitment to the job, Ive seen the determination not to allow the current climate to sway their dedication, but mostly Ive seen men and women who deeply care about their communities and the people in them. That is why I am asking our Tucson communities to join me Tuesday, Jan. 9, in thanking our officers on Law Enforcement Appreciation Day. Conceived by Concerns of Police Survivors, or C.O.P.S., Law Enforcement Appreciation Day is a way to set aside a national day in which we can recognize and support officers of the law across the country. There is a need to show law enforcement officers that we recognize the difficult and sometimes impossible career they have chosen in public service to us all. Police work is not a career choice that garners high accolades and swooning praise. It is a thankless job of lofty expectation and very little appreciation. In my humble opinion, we, the general public, owe these fine men and women acknowledgment of their sacrifice, of the risks they face on a daily basis, of the respect and loyalty they possess for the letter of the law and their willingness to face, solve and deal with the unspeakable horrors this broken world has to offer. As a board member of C.O.P.S., I have the privilege of attending National Police Week most every year, and without exception, each time my breath is taken away while witnessing officers from all walks of life, from every corner of our nation and beyond, stand shoulder to shoulder in honor of their fallen brethren. Etched on these officers faces I witness their strength, their sacrifice and the unmistakable love and respect they have for their fellow brothers and sisters in blue. How can you show your appreciation on this special day? Here are some ideas: Change your profile picture on social media to the image provided at www.facebook.com/COPSArizona Wear blue clothing in support of law enforcement. Send a card of support to your local police department or state agency. Share a story about a positive law enforcement experience on social media. Ask children in your community to write letters in support of law enforcement. Participate in Project Blue Light and proudly display your blue light in support of law enforcement. Organize an event or a rally in support of your law enforcement officers. Advertise your support through local media outlets. Post the public service announcement supplied by C.O.P.S. (copsarizona.org) to your organizations web page or social media pages. But perhaps most importantly, if you see a police officer, thank a police officer. To current or retired officers, I offer my humble gratitude to all those who wear the badge, and to those that love them. Your job is not merely a career, it is a calling, one for which you deserve the utmost respect and admiration. Thank you, every one of you, for answering the call and for your commitment to the communities in which you serve. It's been almost a month since Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi was released, so if you haven't watched it yet,I feel sorry for you. There are spoilers. Duh. It was pretty with great action sequences, and all those fluffy things, blah blah blah. I'm not here to talk about the movie and how wonderful it was to see the franchise get some non-slapstick humour in for a change. I'm here to talk about the beautifully accomplished women and the inadequate men of The Last Jedi. Let's start with this era's Han Solo; Poe Dameron. He's good-looking, suave, and ever ready to "hop in an X-Wing and blow something up". He's the bravery and charm everyone loved in Han. Except Han Solo was a man's man. A typical bad boy and reluctant hero who was the ultimate dude that every man wanted to be and all the women wanted to be with. Poe, in all his sleepy-faced adorability, is the poster boy for masculinity that every cool guy is allowed to get away with. Except, he isn't getting away with it this time. Heroism isn't about action In his very first interaction with General Organa in this film, he's demoted. Poe gets told to stand down many times, and his mansplaining gets shut down by both Organa and Vice Admiral Holdo. Even Brad with the good hair can sometimes be left out of critical planning and strategy carried out by women. That's not to say poor Poe isn't still a nice guy. I mean, he's likeable and relatable on many levels. But the film does very well to show why he's not a leader in the resistance and why he probably needs to start growing the hell up before he does become one. Instead of deifying his heroic machismo and hyper-masculinity in wanting to save the world by blowing stuff up, the film firmly sides with Leia and Holdo in their slow and measured manner of waiting things out. In Holdo sacrificing herself, Leia tells Poe that "she cared more about protecting the light than seeming like a hero". It was the moment the film built up to; a rejection and subversion of the tired narrative of the alpha male being the hero, and a kick in the nuts to every geek fawning over all those brainless bravado stunts that barely got the golden trio of the first three movies out alive. No, dudes. Jumping into an X-wing and blowing stuff up is really not the only solution. Facing demons The Last Jedi holds its men to much higher standards than the franchise has ever done before and subtly chastises them for not being able to healthily deal with their emotions. Luke Skywalker - whiney, lonely Luke, waiting his days out because he screwed up - runs away to a remote island, abandoning his family and fight because he can't face his failure. He ignores and then chides Rey for her belief in him (which, to be fair, is pretty darn accurate) because he doesn't want to come to grips with his role in creating Kylo Ren. He says to Rey: "Why did you think I chose the hardest location to find in the entire galaxy? I came to this island to die." He would rather die than face his demons. For Kylo Ren, his toxicity comes from not being able to deal with Luke's betrayal or the fact that he murdered his father. He cannot face the things he has done and would rather kill his master and try to take over the galaxy (as one does) than face his own inadequacies and be held accountable for his actions. He and his followers are the epitomai of the Tiki torch-bearing neo-Nazi who knows that the world holds what Darth Vader did as abominable but still dive headfirst into the wrong side of history due to a toxic mix of emasculation and inevitable equality feeling much like oppression. Boo-effing-hoo. However fun it is to mock Kylo Ren (and those men marching with Tiki torches), it doesn't detract from his power; he is scary because he reminds us of these real-world men whose anger and frustration have caused them to seek further oppression at those they perceive to have taken what they think they solely deserve. Basically, hypertoxic masculinity is the true villain in this episode, and the fanboys who wish to hold on to the old narratives need to sit down. Because this is a new era, where women are no longer going to be left behind as plot devices and love interests. It is telling that the old guard wants The Last Jedi stripped from canon because it's the first film where we see real women come to the fore and not only take control, but strip away the smoke and mirrors of men's bravado as being just that. (Don't get me started on how a chubby Asian woman - who many young girls can relate to - saves Finn from certain death.) You guys are no longer getting away with mediocrity. So STFU. US President Donald Trump was furious when Michael Wolffs new book, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, was published. Hed had his lawyers send a letter to the publisher to tell them not to, and they went and did it anyway. The book proposes that the President might not be mentally stable enough to run the country and that his declining mental health may be a threat to US national security. Trump says he is like, really smart Trump very quickly returned fire on Wolff with an angry series of tweets in which he referred to himself as a very stable genius and defended his mental condition, saying that his two greatest assets in life have been, in his own words, mental stability and being, like, really smart. Actress and comedy writer Mindy Kaling responded by posting a meme featuring Kelly Kapoor, her character from The Office, accompanied by the quote, You guys, Im like really smart now, you dont even know it. Kalings account is not among the 542 Twitter accounts followed by the US Armys page. A spokesperson for the Army said that one of the accounts operators inadvertently liked a Tweet whose content would not be endorsed by the Department of the Army. Calm down, mate. Robert Mueller may just be our only hope for bringing down US President Donald Trump. Mueller is in charge of the FBI probe thats investigating the possible links between the former Apprentice stars 2016 Presidential campaign and the Russian government. Trump himself has vehemently denied any links, despite the fact that his son was caught having met with a Russian lawyer in order to gather dirt on Hillary Clinton that he could use in his fathers campaign and a number of Trump staffers confessing to Mueller that they did have ties to the Russian government and had lied to the federal government about it. According to one of Trumps closest friends, he was apparently considering firing Mueller, shortly after he had fired James Comey, the Director of the CIA (which, by the way, is everyones best bet at grounds for impeachment, since its technically obstruction of justice). However, he didnt do that probably got some good advice from a level-headed aide so Mueller is still working the case, hes still kicking ass and taking names, and now, he wants an interview with the President himself to really get to the bottom of things. Its Robert Muellers Day On If you imagine Ferris Buellers Day Off, except its Robert Muellers Day On, and Mueller takes the place of Ferris and Trump takes the place of the school principal whos chasing him through the city, then you might have some idea of the Tom and Jerry-esque relationship that the two share. Mueller is working away, gathering all this dirt to present to the Supreme Court, while Trump is desperately scrambling to stop him and getting attacked by dogs and losing his shoes to piles of wet mud in the process. Its very amusing to watch, but Mueller also has a very good reason for doing it he wants to make sure that the sitting President of the United States was elected democratically by the people and that he hasnt committed any treason (and he doesnt like what hes found so far). Trumps lawyers have been declining to comment on this situation, but the President has continued to deny that his campaign had any collusion with Russia (even though its literally been proven that it had at least a small collusion, because of the Trump, Jr. thing). His lawyers have been very eager, however, to comment on Michael Wolffs new book, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House. They tried to get the publishing house to call off the books release, which ended up getting the publication date moved forward, so hah. When Trump gave an impromptu interview to the New York Times, one of his least favourite newspapers, he managed to fit in the words no collusion a grand total of sixteen times over the course of the 30 minutes that the interview lasted for. But there obviously is a collusion, because Donald Trump, Jr. met a Russian lawyer during the 2016 campaign trail in order to get dirt on his fathers closest rival dirt that she didnt even have! There are no details about the interview as of yet At the moment, the Mueller investigators interview with Trump is but a mere prospect, with no firm date set, so there arent any major details to report. However, Muellers people are talking with Trumps people to try and make something happen and arrange this thing. If Mueller manages to pull this off, then he could crack this whole thing wide open. An interview with Trump, under oath, would determine once and for all whether the President did collude with Russia. Maybe he didnt. Maybe its all hearsay and Trump just has a very idiotic son. But there is that chance that all these rumours are true, and if Mueller landed an interview with Trump, he could find out definitively if that is true. Air conditioning, as anyone who lives in more tropical climes, is not so much a luxury as it is a necessity. Without the ability to keep homes and other enclosed spaces during the summer months cool, people are not only uncomfortable and sweaty but are often in grave danger of dying of heat stroke. Unfortunately, central air conditioners are not only energy intensive but also come with certain environmental costs and risks. Modern Air Conditioner systems work by transferring heat from an enclosed space and passing it outside, using expensive and toxic refrigerants to do so. Environmentalists, especially those who live in northern parts of the world, hate air conditioners and would like to see their use curtailed. Fortunately, a group of researchers has developed what may be a cheaper, more environmentally friendly air conditioner that can be scaled from a hand-carried unit to one that can cool a building. As a bonus, the technology provides Drinkable Water. The water-cooled air conditioner The team at the National University of Singapore have developed an air conditioner unit that eschews the expensive refrigerants and costs much less to run. The process starts by passing air through a paper-like membrane that removes the moisture. Then the air is passed through a dew-point cooking system that uses the extracted water to cool a series of metal plates, thus cooling the air as it passes through. This step works on the same principle as human sweat does to cool the body. The air that comes out the other end is cooler and drier. The water-cooled air conditioner takes 40 percent less energy to operate than the conventional kind. The experimental unit creates 12 to 15 liters of drinkable water a day. Taking the technology to the real world The team from NUS is currently refining their technology and are looking for commercial partners to market it to customers. The water-cooled air conditioner can be scaled up to cool private homes or even clusters of apartments or commercial buildings. Smaller units can take care of enclosed spaces that need to be kept at a constant temperature such as hospital operating rooms, wine cellars, tents in refugee camps, and so on. Indeed, since each unit also produces drinking water, the technology will have the side benefit of addressing another problem in the developing world, lack of potable water. Retrofitting homes and buildings, which have been designed around conventional air conditioners that have inside evaporators and outdoor compressors, will be quite a challenge. However, since the most significant energy expense for most people is running the air conditioner, the expense might well be worth the effort. The U.S. has its Bomb Cyclone, but Europe is also feeling the chill. Many Spaniards left it late to go home after celebrating the Epiphany holiday over the weekend and became trapped in their cars overnight on Saturday by heavy snowfall. 250 soldiers from the Spanish Army were deployed Sunday to rescue hundreds of motorists, including families, who had been forced to spend the night in their vehicles in freezing conditions. Trying to go home from the holidays Saturday saw the end of the festive season in Spain as people celebrated Epiphany, or the Day of the Three Kings. The holiday tends to be more popular than Christmas Day in Spain and families had been traveling to visit relatives and friends for the event. However many left it late to return home and got caught in the unusually snowy conditions. The heavy snowfall on Saturday led to several roads being blocked and hundreds of vehicles being stuck on the AP6 highway between Segovia and Madrid. As reported by The Local, around 250 soldiers, along with firefighters, attempted to clear the road with snowplows, while handing out hot drinks, energy foods and blankets to the stranded motorists. The army posted on Twitter to say they were clearing the road kilometer by kilometer to get people to safety as soon as possible. Travelers complain about being stranded overnight Many of the travelers headed to social media to complain about their plight, saying they had been stuck on the highway since Saturday night. The Local quotes Sara Ramos as telling Spanish television that she had her husband were trapped by the snowy conditions on Sunday, along with their two children, aged six and two years. They had reportedly had no food since lunchtime Saturday. Ramos said they were beginning to worry, as some cars had already run out of gas, necessary to keep the heating going in the vehicles. Reportedly on Sunday there were still around 1,000 vehicles stuck on the highway and the road safety authorities had recommended drivers keep their engines running for warmth. Meanwhile, severe weather alerts are still being issued by the weather office for areas all over Spain due to risks from heavy rain, snow, and strong winds. Southern Spain hit by icy weather As reported by Euro Weekly News, even the south of Spain which normally experiences reasonably mild weather has been badly affected by freak weather, with a number of roads in the Malaga province closed by heavy snowfall. Teams are out with snow plows to clear the roads, but more than 30 calls for help had been received by the emergency services from people stuck in the snowy conditions. Many roads were then closed to allow snow plows to work unimpeded. Ironically even the Sierra de las Nieves Natural Park, named for the snow that falls there during the winter months, has also been closed due to the heavy snowfall. Meanwhile, on the Costa del Sol, where residents are normally only likely to see snow on distant mountain tops, several beaches have been affected by light snow and hail. Many shared images and videos of the previously unheard of event. The spacecraft Juno, which was deployed to Jupiter by NASA in 2011, reached the gaseous orb on July 4, 2016. Its mission is to journey to Jupiter in the hopes of gaining information into the complex planet by attempting to see beyond the clouds that coat the planet's atmosphere. NASA expects to learn more about how the planet was formed and how it has changed. Recently, NASA released imagery of storm clouds over Jupiter's surface, wowing the world with the unexpected beauty of the planet. Juno's mission to Jupiter a raging success. The information gleaned from the spacecraft has given scientists a phenomenal peek into the mysterious planet. Juno's most recent round of amazing photos knocked the socks off scientists and citizens alike. So far, most of the images of Jupiter show a planet that seems to have layers of colors, much like a marble. But the more recent ones depict Jovian clouds that glow with a beautiful blue tint. The following tweet from NASA gives an up-close look at the complicated, yet gorgeous, Jovian clouds. NASAs Juno spacecraft was a little more than one Earth diameter from Jupiter when it captured this mind-bending, color-enhanced view of the planets tumultuous atmosphere. https://t.co/Nur6W7CQrS pic.twitter.com/VjkLTzPbAC NASA360 (@NASA360) January 8, 2018 "Jovian clouds in striking shades of blue in this new view taken by NASAs Juno spacecraft" https://t.co/PHFszfoj9m pic.twitter.com/zKQspIpD8a pourmecoffee (@pourmecoffee) December 4, 2017 Jupiter and Juno in mythology Interestingly enough, Juno gets its name from Greek and Roman mythology. For the Romans, Jupiter was a god of the sky, and Juno was his wife. According to NASA, "Jupiter hid behind clouds so no one could see him causing trouble. But Juno could see through the clouds." Since the mission of the spacecraft is specifically to see through the clouds of Jupiter, so closely resembling the story of the mythological god and goddess, the probe was appropriately given the name Juno. NASA could potentially extend the Juno mission to Jupiter While the spacecraft Juno was originally planned to orbit Jupiter for two years, from July 2016 to July 2018, scientists at NASA could potentially extend the mission past the current expectation, if all goes well. As long as the probe continues to gather useful information about the gas giant, the decision to send the spacecraft delving into the violent surface of the planet could be put off indefinitely. Preserving Juno as long as possible is a high priority for many scientists at NASA. Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA, stated the following last year. "Juno is healthy, its science instruments are fully operational, and the data and images we've received are nothing short of amazing. The decision to forego the burn is the right thing to do - preserving a valuable asset so that Juno can continue its exciting journey of discovery." While Zurbuchen was speaking on a different topic regarding Juno, his words nevertheless would make a good argument to extending the mission past the current end date, so long as the probe is in good working condition. The future remains to be seen, but at this time, Juno is providing NASA with everything they expected, and more. The marriage between Prince Harry and Meghan Markle has been likened to a Cinderella-like fairytale wedding because he is indeed a prince and she is a commoner, an actress of Hollywood. Observers have forecast a change in fortune for Britain because of this alliance. According to Forbes, the wedding scheduled for May 19 could mean the addition of millions to the British economy in the form of earnings from tourism and travel. These will be exploited by associated branches like restaurants and hotels. There will also be huge potentials to make money through the sale of memorabilia like T-shirts, hats, banners and other commemorative merchandise. It may be recalled that the marriage of Prince William and Kate, which also was one between a prince and a commoner, witnessed an appreciable surge in tourism. The Harry-Meghan marriage could surpass those figures. Meghan Markle is a trendsetter In the opinion of experts, 36-year-old Meghan Markle has become a trendsetter. She has come into limelight only recently and has already won the hearts of the people. Her weakness for anything Canadian is common knowledge. It seems a specific brand she wore during her engagement announcement with Prince Harry sold out in no time. Obviously, what she chooses to wear or the brands she decides to patronize will find ready takers. Meghan and Harry went to Monte Carlo to celebrate the New Year with their friends. Needless to say, she will have to reinvent herself in order to merge into the role of a British Royal. She has apparently won over the queen who broke protocol by inviting Meghan to the traditional Christmas celebration. Incidentally, this marriage will certainly be different to that of Kates because Meghan is a bi-racial and also a divorced Hollywood actress. The future for Meghan Meghan Markle is a citizen of the United States. After her marriage to Prince Harry, she will gain a royal status which is bound to have a positive effect on various aspects of British-U.S. relations. The marriage will mean the beginning of a new chapter in her life because she will be ending her acting career to embrace a new lifestyle. She will have to brush up on royal etiquettes and her training as a professional actress should help her to transform from a commoner to a member of the royal family. There was some confusion over who will walk the bride down the aisle on the big day. Sky News reports that the matter has been sorted out and Meghans father will perform the duty. Her half-sister Samantha has confirmed that he will give her way. Al-Quds Al-Arabi, an Arab newspaper in the UK released a report that Irans former president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been arrested and placed under house arrest for condemning Irans President Hassan Rouhani and provoking the unrest and Protests that have plagued the nation for the past few weeks. The report of his arrest came from sources within the Iranian capital of Tehran. Ahmadinejad reportedly stated that the present leaders are detached from the problems and concerns of the Iranian people and have no idea of what they have to deal with under the present leadership. He further stated that the government is mismanaged and that it was not from a lack of economic sources. Ahmadinejads statement "The government of Rouhani considers that they possess and control the land and that the Iranian people are nothing more than an uninformed society that doesnt know better, said Ahmadinejad. The populaces with their protests are furious at Rouhanis government because of its domination of the publics wealth." Iranian protestors continue to protest as they attempt to take down the radical Islamic Iranian regime. While many Iranians have thanked U.S. President Donald Trump for his support, the Trump administration plans to continue to enforce sanctions against the nation and does appear that he supports a regime change. Furthermore, there are reports that the Iranian Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, as part of the Iranian government crackdown on the demonstrators, were found to be asking viewers to surrender the identities of those demonstrators. Iranian government suppression The Iran demonstrations have caught international attention and numerous protesters have been either arrested or killed for speaking against the tyrant Rouhani government. The government-sanctioned state TV on Saturday played propaganda pro- Rouhani marches in several Iranian cities, with hundreds of citizens brandishing Irans flag and reciting catch-slogans against the United States and Israel. Whether or not confirmed reports of Ahmadinejads arrest can be verified, Ahmadinejad had been at odds with Rouhani and his administration over the past few weeks. On Thursday, (Jan.4), Rouhani cautioned that Ahmadinejad was marching a path of hostility with his regime. Ahmadinejad reportedly countered Rouhanis statement by implying that the Iranian people are moving toward crippling his rule in Iran. Please turn JavaScript on and reload the page. Loading... Checking your browser before accessing the website. This process is automatic. Your browser will redirect to your requested content shortly. Please wait a few seconds. HCM CITY Viet Nam achieved its highest ever cashew exports in a year in 2017 with shipments worth US$3.52 billion. It exported 353,000 tonnes, representing a year-on- year increase of 23.8 per cent in value and 1.9 per cent in volume, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development. The US, the Netherlands and China remained the biggest buyers, accounting for 35 per cent, 15.6 per cent and 12.9 per cent of the shipments. Exports to many markets rose sharply, including Russia (up 56.3 per cent), the Netherlands (44.7 per cent), Thailand (41.4 per cent), the US (27 per cent), and the UK (24.8 per cent). Average export prices were up by over 22 per cent. While demand rose in the world market, supply was down significantly in many countries, including Viet Nam, pushing prices up, according to cashew companies. Demand is expected to continue increasing, enabling Vietnamese firms to boost exports in future, according to the Viet Nam Cashew Association (Vinacas). Vietnamese processors have worked relentlessly to improve their quality, promote their brands and maintain their prestige, and this has played a very important role in the development of the cashew industry, the association said. Viet Nam has leading processing technologies, it said. Nguyen uc Thanh, Vinacas chairman, said despite being the worlds biggest cashew processor and exporter, the industrys profits are modest. Vietnamese firms mostly exported at around $10 a kilogramme last year while value-added cashew products were sold at supermarkets abroad at up to $30. To improve the situation, more and more firms have invested in modern technologies and machinery to make more value-added cashew products, including salted/honey roasted nuts and wasabi- and chocolate-coated nuts. A number of companies from the US and Singapore have also invested in processing facilities to make value-added cashew products in Viet Nam, he said. The association as well as businesses in the sector said the current reliance on raw cashew imports is a great risk to the cashew industry. Local raw cashew supply only meets 20 -35 per cent of demand. In the first 11 months of last year, companies imported 1.2 million tonnes of cashew, up 27.4 per cent year-on-year, mainly from African countries, with the import prices up by 26.2 per cent last year. Thanh said the association has collaborated with the Cambodian Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and Cambodian firms to grow 1 million tonnes of cashew on an area of 500,000 hectares by 2022. Vinacas and its members would buy the entire output and work closely with the Cambodian partners to speed up the project, he said. For this year, the cashew industry has set a target of reducing exports to 300,000 tonnes while improving the quality of exports and adding value to their products. VNS HA NOI The Ministry of Planning and Investment has proposed the government to hasten efforts aimed at improving the business environment in 2018. The ministry said Viet Nams ranking in doing business had improved considerably in the past four years since the government implemented Resolution 19 on improving the business climate and national competitiveness. However, it lacked sustainability because there were indices with no improvement at all or with results far below expectation, such as infrastructure quality, ease of starting a business or insolvency proceedings, the ministry said. It proposed Resolution 19 for 2018 to be issued with a focus on measures to lift those indices that ranked low as well as to add targets to improve competitiveness in the tourism and logistics sectors and to enhance labour productivity. Viet Nams target is to rank 50-60 in the business climate in 2018. Last year, the country moved up 14 places to rank 68th out of 190 countries, according to the World Banks Doing Business report. The percentage of goods requiring specialised checks for customs clearance is targeted to be cut from 30-35 per cent to 15 per cent in the third quarter of 2018. Resolution 19 had stipulated this to be achieved by 2017, which did not materialise. The ministry revealed in a recent report that the cost for specialised checks for customs clearance was still a huge burden on businesses. The ministry cited the case of a company importing wood products which must bear cost worth dozens of billions of ong per year for storage as a result of quarantine requirement. The specialised checks were not based on a risk-based approach, did not allow the use of the testing results on the same import product models of other companies and did not actively recognise quality of famous brands. This causes huge wastes, the ministry said. In addition to this, specialised checks proved to be time consuming, adding to the risks of businesses, according to the ministry. For example, for animal feed, the time for quality check at the Department of Animal Husbandry was 14 days and three weeks each at the Directorate of Fisheries and Directorate of Energy. Statistics of the customs watchdog showed there were still some 430 documents on specialised checks. Overlap in specialised checks between ministries, such as Industry and Trade, Agriculture and Rural Development and Health was another problem. According to the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI), businesses expected more administrative reforms in tax, customs and land access as well as reduction in unnecessary and time-consuming specialised checks. VCCI said businesses favoured an end to overlapping between ministries and simplified procedures. Firms also called for a fair access to resources and business opportunities and reduced business costs. VNS The Vietnam Steel Association (VSA) wants the Government to take a strong stance against anti-dumping duties levied by the US on certain products, including raising a dispute with the WTO, if needed. VNA/VNS Photo HA NOI The Vietnam Steel Association (VSA) wants the Government to take a strong stance against anti-dumping duties levied by the US on certain products, including raising a dispute with the WTO, if needed. It has requested the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) to take measures to support steelmakers in tax evasion investigation initiated by the US for galvanised sheet steel and cold-rolled coils imported from Viet Nam. In case the US does not change its view, the association has recommended that the ministry asks the Government to consider litigation under the auspices of the WTO. The new proposals are a response to the US Department of Commerce (DOC) deciding to impose anti-dumping measures and anti-subsidy rates on corrosion-resistant (CORE) and cold-rolled steel from Viet Nam. The case was initiated in September when US steel producers, including ArcelorMittal USA, Nucor Corp, AK Steel Holdings Corp and Steel Corp filed a formal complaint in which they claimed Chinese steel producers were shipping products via Viet Nam to evade tariffs. In response, VSA said it expects the MoIT and its Department of Trade Defence to protest the DOCs actions, which it said were inconsistent with international laws. The ministry should ask the DOC to comply with WTO regulations as well as US law before issuing a formal decision on the tax evasion investigation, the association said. The DOC has expressed its view that Chinese products wer being dumped in third-party countries like Viet Nam to circumvent import duties. Although the steel material was processed in Viet Nam, the department agreed with the claims of American producers that as much as 90 per cent of the products value originated from China. VSA Chairman Ho Nghia Dung said Vietnamese steel businesses had poured hundreds of millions of dollars into modern technology lines to produce quality steel products, including galvanised sheet steel and cold-rolled coils that meet strict standards of the US and Japan markets. This has created significant added value in the production process, he said. The MoIT move will not only be one that protects Vietnamese steel businesses but also one that sends a message to the US that Viet Nam will continue to fight vigorously against violations of international commitments and protect the legal and legitimate interests of Vietnamese exporters through international institutions, said VSA. If the DOC decision is unchanged, Dung said the Viet Nam steel industry would suffer huge losses because the US will expand anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duties applied to China at the rate of 199.43 per cent and 39.05 per cent, respectively, for Vietnamese galvanised sheet steel, which are produced from cold and hot-rolled steel from China. As a result, the Vietnamese steelmakers who have exported galvanised sheet steel, which were produced from hot- and cold-rolled steel of China from November 1, 2016, will have to pay taxes equivalent to 238.48 per cent of export value in order to keep their customers and market. More importantly, VSA said the conclusions of this investigation would create a precedent as at present, Viet Nams hot-rolled steel is mainly imported from several countries and territories subject to US anti-dumping and anti-subsidy for cold rolled steel and galvanized steel sheet like Taiwan and South Korea. Therefore, in case the US steel industry continues to impose this condition related to other countries and territories, Vietnamese steel mills will be under pressure to find other hot-rolled steel sources. Moreover, Viet Nam may face the risk of completely losing the US market for these two products. According to the VSA, the national steel industry has made good progress in recent years. In 2016, the country exported more than four million tonnes of various steel products worth over US$3 billion. In particular, the export of cold rolled steel products and galvanized steel to the US recorded a whopping 530 per cent and 658 per cent growth, respectively, over 2015. The growth was partly due to the fact that the US previously imposed antidumping and anti-subsidy duties on these two products imported from China. As a result, US businesses looked for new suppliers, including Vietnamese steelmakers. According to the association, the DOC conclusion completely violates the provisions of WTO agreements as also US law. A number of Vietnamese firms, who are mandatory defendants in the investigation, revealed evidence that galvanized iron sheet from Viet Nam had a high conversion rate (about 30-50 per cent) compared to the Chinas hot rolled steel. This ratio is in line with the provisions of the WTO Agreement on Rules of Origin and international conventions. VNS HA NOI The State Bank of Viet Nam will not issue new banknotes with denominations lower than VN5,000 (22 US cents) for Tet (Lunar New Year) to cut costs. The announcement was made by SBV Deputy Governor ao Minh Tu at a press meeting in Ha Noi on Monday. Currently, bills with small face values are mainly used as donation money, and not as a means of payment. As a Tet tradition, Vietnamese usually donate money in small denominations to pagodas and temples to wish for luck in the New Year. This will be the fifth year that new banknotes of VN5,000 denomination are not printed and it will help save some VN280 billion for the State budget, the central bank estimated. The central bank has not issued new, small banknotes of VN500, VN1,000 and VN2,000 denomination since 2013, which has helped save roughly VN2.2 trillion for the State budget, Tu said, adding that the policy has so far been received positively by the public. He said the central bank will also collaborate with relevant ministries and agencies to better manage note exchange services. According to a current regulation, illegal note exchange services can be fined between VN20 and 40 million. In a bid to secure the supply of cash for Tet, the central bank has already instructed its branches nationwide to review the cash demand and ensure that the branches are well-prepared, with enough cash to supply to the local State treasuries and credit institutions. The central bank also requires credit institutions, which have ATMs, to ensure that demand for cash withdrawals is met. This years Tet holiday, which is the largest traditional holiday for the Vietnamese, will begin on February 15. VNS HA NOI The Department of Asia-Africa Markets under the Ministry of Industry and Trade has encouraged local businesses to promote trade with their Middle East counterparts. Nguyen Minh Phuong, a representative of the department, said Vietnamese enterprises have long focused on traditional markets like the United States, European Union and Japan and have overlooked Middle East, which she believes is a strategic market in the long-term, with the traditional markets almost being saturated. She highlighted the potential of the Middle East market, saying it boasts huge purchasing power and less demanding consumers, which would make it easy for Vietnamese firms to satisfy the markets standards. But she also underlined obstacles hindering Vietnamese exporters from entering the Middle East market, including an unstable political situation and cultural and language differences between Vietnamese enterprises and the region. Phuong said Vietnamese firms were hesitant in studying and seeking partners from the region, as well as lacked a strategic and long-term plan to penetrate the market. Le Thai Hoa, deputy director of the department, urged local businesses to develop long-term plans to enter the Middle East market by investing in a competent workforce specialising in trade, with a good understanding of the regions culture, language and trading customs. He said in order to facilitate Vietnamese exports to the market, the government has approved a project on the development of Viet Nam-Middle East relationship by 2025. Hoa also said the ministry was working to issue an action plan to implement the project. In the past, the ministry has regularly hosted trade promotion events to help domestic firms approach the Middle East market, while instructing its trade offices in the region to keep Vietnamese exporters updated on the market situation and opportunities, Hoa said. He added that publicity campaigns have been conducted to introduce Vietnamese goods to several supermarket chains in the Middle East with the hope of entering its retailer network. As advised by trade experts, when working with Middle East businesses, Vietnamese firms must pay attention to the terms of payment in their contracts. Vietnamese enterprises require a deposit rate of at least 30 per cent of the contract value to avoid payment risks. In addition to this, Vietnamese businesses should also request partners to use the irrevocable Letter of Credit payment method while discouraging customers from late payment. Vietnamese companies should not use the Documents against Acceptance (D/A) payment method, or accept money transfer via Western Union for payment. According to the ministry, the bilateral trade value between Viet Nam and the Middle East reached US$12.8 billion in 2017, up 17.4 per cent from 2016. Of this, Viet Nams export to the market in the whole year was recorded at $9.6 billion, which helped maintain the countrys trade surplus at $6.4 billion. Viet Nams main export goods are mobile phones, computers and accessories, seafood, footwear, garment and textiles, fibre, rice, pepper, wood products, cashew nuts, natural rubber, vegetables and fruit and coffee beans. The country mostly imported raw material from the Middle East for domestic production, such as plastic, liquefied gas, electronic spare parts, machines and animal feed. VNS HA NOI The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) has announced it will not be printing small currency notes for Tet (the Lunar New Year) this time too, the sixth straight year it has desisted from doing so. Speaking to the media on Monday, central bank officials said the decision not to issue new notes in denominations such as VN5,000 (22 US cent) and less is meant to cut costs and prevent the use of currency notes for any purpose other than payment. Traditionally during Tet people give away new small banknotes to pagodas and temples to wish for luck. Since the SBV stopped printing new notes for Tet in 2013 it has saved VN2.2 trillion, including VN280 billion this year alone, Pham Bao Lam, director general of the central banks issue and vault department, said. The bank has urged relevant agencies and organisations to closely monitor note exchange services and impose fines in case of wrongdoing. Illegal exchanges will be fined VN20-40 million under Decision 96 of the Government. When asked about the use of small bills at BOT toll stations recently Lam said the SBV only issues cash for reasonable demand. For example, if the BOT toll fee is VN25,000, the appropriate payment mode is a VN20,000 note and a VN5,000 note, or two VN10,000 notes and a VN5,000 note, and not 250 VN100 notes. ao Minh Tu, deputy governor of the SBV, said since it is a negative payment activity the central bank will not support it or the drivers or the BOT tolls. He said the SBV prints enough bills of all denominations based on demand but not for purposes like paying toll fee or charity offerings at pagodas. Lam said between April and November last year the SBV has ensured there are enough small-denomination bills to fully meet demand. The central bank would increase the supply of VN10,000 notes by 20 per cent compared to last Tet, he added. Since the beginning of last month the SBV has been supplying cash to its offices in cities and provinces that have many industrial parks. It has instructed the offices and banks to ensure ATMs are supplied with enough cash during the holidays. Pham Tien Dung, head of the SBVs payment department, said the central bank has instructed credit institutions to resort to cashless payments in case ATMs are overloaded. Any bank allowing an ATM to remain out of order or money for 24 hours would be penalised, he warned. VNS Deputy Prime Minister Trinh inh Dung speaks at a meeting to examine the main tasks of the national environmental sector yesterday. Photo VGP HA NOI Deputy Prime Minister Trinh inh Dung said yesterday that incidents such as the mass poisoning of fish off the coast of Viet Nam last year should never happen again. It was a painful lesson, he said. Dung was speaking at a meeting to examine the main tasks of the national environmental sector, including why the nations land-use effectiveness is still lower than in other countries in the region - and how to handle endless land petitions. Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Tran Hong Ha said the meeting aimed to assess the sectors activities during 2017 and set new targets this year. Deputy Prime Minister Dung said poor management by authorised land-use agencies was to blame for many land petitions in 2017. The main problem was the limited implementation of policies related to land issues in several localities. Data from the ministry revealed it had dealt with 3,094 land petitions in 2017. To achieve new targets, Dung ordered the ministry to quickly build a land database as well as gradually modernise the public service managing land under the model of electronic government services. He said the ministry was told to finish issuing land-use right certificates for State owned forest enterprises this year. Minister Ha said that ensuring water security was also another important task to focus on this year. Agreeing with Ha, Dung said water security was one of the pressing problems challenging the country. Viet Nam had suffered from lack of fresh water due to pollution, rising sea levels and salinity intrusion. Thus, he said, the ministry had to improve its assessments on water resources and raise public awareness on using and exploiting water resources. Additionally, Dung said the ministry was required to focus on mobilising financial domestic and international support to effectively implement the National Strategy on Climate change. Consecutive typhoons and floods, triggered by climate change, killed 386 people and caused a total damage of nearly VN60 trillion (US$2.63 billion) in the country in 2017. Dung said that the environment sector had to tighten controls on the quality of waste-water discharged into the environment this year. It is absolutely not allowed to let an incident like the Formosa incident happen this year, he said. After the incident, the lesson was drawn that developing the economy had to be run parallel with protection environment, he said. We now need to put the task of protecting the environment to the highest level, he said. The Formosa incident occurred in April 2016, when hundreds of tonnes of fish died in seas off four coastal provinces - Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Quang Tri and Thua ThienHue. The Taiwanese Hung Nghiep Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corporation claimed responsibility for the disaster, admitting that it had released toxic wastewater into the sea along these provinces. It pledged to compensate more than VN11.5 trillion ($500 million) to support local fishermen and recover the polluted marine environment. VNS PRAGUE The 15th-century astronomical clock in Pragues centre, which draws crowds of tourists every hour, was halted on Monday morning for six months of repairs, city hall said. "The Old Town clock is one of Pragues symbols and its repair... is a necessary and responsible step," said a statement from Jan Wolf, the citys councillor for culture. The clock, called Orloj, will be dismantled and taken away for repairs which will take five or six months. The Old Town Hall, where the clock is installed, is "undergoing a complete reconstruction the first since World War II when most of the building was destroyed," said Wolf. Every hour, crowds of tourists gather in front of the clock to watch figures of the twelve apostles that appear in two small oriel windows above a sophisticated astrolabe showing the movement of the Moon and the Sun and its entry into the zodiac signs. Directed by a sculpture of Death pulling a bell cord, the apostles parade takes about a minute until a gilded cock crows above the oriel windows. The medieval clocks design is based on the theory that the Earth is the centre of the Universe and three quarters of its components are from the 15th-century original. According to an old legend, Prague councillors blinded the clocks maker to prevent him from building another such device. Prague, which welcomes about seven million tourists annually, might install a large screen featuring the clock and apostles while the clock is under repair, Wolf said. AFP If you belong to the blood group O, you can help many Vietnamese patients by donating blood at the National Institute of Haematology and Blood Transfusion on Pham Van Bach Street, Cau Giay district, Ha Noi, from 8am to 10pm or by visiting your nearest blood donation centre. For details, visit www.nihbt.org.vn/Home/DiemHM or contact (024) 38686008/ (024) 37821900. The HCM City Peoples Court yesterday began its trial of Pham Cong Danh, ex-Chairman of the VNCB Board of Directors, for deliberately violating State regulations on economic management causing severe consequences at the Viet Nam Construction Bank (VNCB). VNA/VNS Photo Hoang Hai HCM City The HCM City Peoples Court yesterday began its trial of Pham Cong Danh, ex-Chairman of the VNCB Board of Directors, for deliberately violating State regulations on economic management causing severe consequences at the Viet Nam Construction Bank (VNCB). The corruption case had the largest ever recorded economic loss of any preceding corruption case in the country. This is the third trial against Danh, who is serving 30 years in jail for wrongdoings at VNCB that incurred losses of more than VN9 trillion (US$405 million) and for other breaches at OceanBank. The 51-year-old, ex-chairman of the VNCB Board of Directors, ex-chairman of the Members Board and ex-general director of the Thien Thanh Group, and his defendants are accused of using VNCBs money as collateral to take out loans totalling more than VN6.1 trillion ($274 million) at TPBank, Sacombank and BIDV. The borrowed money, however, was for Danhs personal use, and he did not repay it. According to the indictment issued by the Supreme Peoples Procuracy, after the State Bank of Viet Nam approved Trust Banks restructuring plan, Danh took over the failing bank and renamed it VNCB. Danh was charged with abusing his post as chairman of the VNCB Board of Directors and chairman of the members board of the Thien Thanh Group by instructing his staff in the group and the bank to commit a range of violations. From December 2012-March 2014, Danh and his accomplices set up false files and committed various violations of lending regulations of credit institutions. VNCB was established in May 2014 by Trust Bank which operated for 23 years, with charter capital of VN3 trillion ($135 million). In mid-2014, the State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) appointed new officials to VNCB after several former top executives at the bank had been arrested for allegedly violating state regulations. Apart from VNCB, other commercial banks owned by the SBV were Ocean Bank and GP Bank. The SBV acquired all three banks at zero ong due to their ailing performances and failure to meet required charter capital increases. Apart from Pham Cong Danh, Tram Be, Sacombanks ex-deputy chairman of the board of directors, was charged with giving approval to Phan Huy Khang, ex-general director of Sacombank, to Pham Cong Danh to borrow VN1.8 trillion through Danhs companies. These Tram Be and Phan Huy Khangs support for Danh is believed to have caused great losses for VNCB. There are 46 defendants in the case who were high-level officials of different banks like VNCB, Sacombank and TPBank. The court also has summoned 127 other people who have related rights and duties, including Tran Quy Thanh, chairman of the Tan Hiep Phat Groups Board of Directors; Tran Ngoc Bich - Thanhs daughter; Hua Thi Phan, former high-level advisor of Trust Bank; and Tran Bac Ha, former BIDVs chairman of Board of Directors. Seventy lawyers have been permitted to attend the trial, in which more than 200 people will be summoned as witnesses. The court trial is scheduled to run until February 7. VNS Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc attends a ceremony in Ha Noi yesterday to announce the establishment of the Cyber Command. VNA/VNS Photo Thong Nhat HA NOI Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has asked the freshly-established Cyber Command to become a loyal, disciplined, intelligent, and clear-headed force which is strong enough to protect national sovereignty in cyberspace. With the rapid development of science technology and the Internet, alongside the growth of the fourth Industrial Revolution, cyberspace is becoming a new territory holding an important role in each countrys socio-economic development, defence, security and external relations, Phuc said at a ceremony in Ha Noi yesterday to announce the establishment of the command. In modern warfare, cyberspace is considered the fifth combat environment which is connected closely with air, ground, sea and space combat. Therefore, cyber combat plays an important role in wars that use hi-tech weapons, he added. The Government leader requested the Cyber Command to coordinate closely with relevant units such as the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Information and Communications to safeguard the military and defence information systems as well as the nations important data. He urged the force to study and apply advanced science technology and military tactics in cyber combat, and learn from the worlds latest achievements in information technology and hi-tech weapons. It is also essential to train competent personnel so as to promote human intelligence in controlling modern cyber weapons and step up international cooperation, he stressed. He asked relevant units to quickly build projects to enhance cyberspace combat to submit to him for approval and implementation. The Cyber Command is a unit of the Ministry of Defence and helps the ministry implement the State management function of safeguarding national sovereignty in cyberspace and information technology. VNS Defendant inh La Thang, former Politburo member and former chairman of PetroVietnam at the court. VNA/VNS Photo Doan Tan HA NOI The much-awaited trial for economic mismanagement and embezzlement at PetroVietnam (PVN), the largest State-owned company, commenced yesterday morning in the capital city. The first-instance trial is scheduled to last for two weeks (January 8-21), looking into one of the most notorious cases of corruption involving the disgraced former Politburo member and former PVNs chairman inh La Thang , and Trinh Xuan Thanh, former chairman of PVNs subsidiary PetroVietnam Construction JSC (PVC). The case has been under public scrutiny as the Partys crackdown on corruption is reaching an unprecedented high, netting several executives and top-level officials hitherto thought to be immune from the law. Most defendants are those holding key positions in critical economic establishments who have been entrusted by the State and the people to manage public capital and implement nationally important projects, including the Thai Binh 2 thermal power plant project, reads the indictment of the Supreme Peoples Procuracy. However, during project implementation, multiple wrongdoings have taken place, including abuse of power to make profit. Twenty-two defendants have been put on trial, including 17 detainees and five on bail. Twelve, including inh La Thang, have been indicted on charges of deliberate violations of State management regulations on economic management, causing serious consequences as per Article 165, Paragraph 3, under the 1999 Penal Code. Eight defendants have been indicted for misappropriation of assets, while Trinh Xuan Thanh and Vu uc Thuan, former director-general of PVC, are being prosecuted for economic mismanagement and embezzlement. The jury consists of five members two judges and three peoples jurors. Judge Nguyen Ngoc Huan is presiding over the trial. Due to the importance the case, the Peoples Court of Ha Noi has arranged for a deputy judge and two deputy peoples jurors to be present at the court. Forty of 42 lawyers defending the accused appeared in the court yesterday. While five lawyers are representing Trinh Xuan Thanh (down from the initial nine), three are defending inh La Thang. Of the 31 witnesses ordered to appear in court, 24 were present and seven were absent, with three of them citing official reasons. Unlike previous trials, this trial is being conducted according to a new circular issued by the Supreme Peoples Court that takes effect this year. It stresses the spirit of innocent until proven guilty and respect for human rights. The usual horseshoe-shaped stand for the defendants, which in common perception symbolises guilt, has been replaced with defendants box placed in front of the panel of judges. Other participants in the proceedings can stand by their seats to speak to the judges or come up to a stand near the defendants box. The panel of judges sits at the highest elevated position, while representatives of the Procuracy and defending lawyers sit opposite each other. Trinh Xuan Thanh, former chairman of PetroVietnam Construction JSC , appeared on January 8 trial. VNA/VNS Photo Doan Tuan Oversight In the afternoon, interrogation of defendants began in the trial of Trinh Xuan Thanh and accomplices. The judges focused their questions on clarifying the intent behind violations of State regulations on economic management causing serious consequences with regard to the Thai Binh 2 Thermal Power Plant Project. The judges decided to place two defendants, inh La Thang and Trinh Xuan Thanh, into an isolated room before the interrogation began. According to the indictment, inh La Thang played the main role, giving directions and appointing PVC to implement the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract, as also directing the PetroVietnam Power Corporation (PVPower) to sign the No.33 EPC contract with PVC against regulations. Afterwards, Thang directed his subordinates at PVN and the management board of the project to provide an advance of $6.607 million and over VN1.3 trillion against regulations, allowing Trinh Xuan Thanh and his accomplices to use over VN1.1 trillion for wrong purposes, causing losses of nearly VN120 billion to the State. During the interrogation, PVCs former deputy director-general Nguyen Van Tien admitted that the advance payment was misused and only VN200 billion actually went to the projects implementation. The indictment said that during implementation of the Thai Binh 2 thermal power project, Trinh Xuan Thanh, as PVC Chairman, directed Vu uc Thuan to sign the EPC No. 33 so that PVC could get advance payment even though PVC did not have the necessary qualifications or experience at the time, Thuan admitted to the court. Thanh decided to use more than VN1.1 trillion ($48.4 million) of the advance for unofficial purposes, causing losses of VN120 billion ($5.3 million) to the State coffers. Besides, Thanh was the person who mooted the idea and together with Thuan, directed Nguyen Anh Minh, then PVC Deputy General Director, and Luong Van Hoa, then Director of PVCs Vung Ang Quang Trach Project Management Board, to compile false documents to withdraw more than VN13 billion ($578,000) from the project and divide among them for personal use. Of this money, Thanh got VN4 billion ($176,000). He, together with Thuan, Minh and Bui Manh Hien, then Chief of Staff of PVC, also spent VN1.5 trillion ($66,000) together. Interrogation of the defendants will continue today. VNS HCM CITY Most farmers in HCM City have not taken to the co-operative model because they do not understand its functions and benefits fully, officials say. Tran Ngoc Ho, deputy director of the municipal Agriculture and Rural Development Department, said the model has helped develop farming households since the 2012 Law on Co-operatives came into force. While it "has attracted only 15 per cent of farmers, their income is higher than households who dont take part in co-operatives," Ho told the Nong Thon Ngay Nay (Countryside Today) newspaper. However co-operatives are still small-scale, focusing mostly on the supply of inputs for members. They do not have proper production and sales plans, he said. In several cases, members have not contributed their dues because they still dont know how to make the co-ops work effectively, he added. Vo Thanh Dung, deputy director of the Truong Thinh Agriculture Co-operative, said that many co-operatives were unsuccessful because they lacked capital and assets as collateral for securing loans. The application of science and technology was also limited the investment costs were too high, he said. While the household as a production unit has contributed greatly to the agriculture sectors successes, the predominantly small-scale operations were not efficient, not benefiting from economies of scale. Ho also said that limited knowledge and skills under household farming made it difficult for them to approach banks, exploit post-harvest technologies, and sign contracts with enterprises. Currently, some 77 per cent of agriculture production in the city is carried out by households but it cannot be the main model for the future," Ho said. Other models like large scale farms, joint ventures and enterprises were also struggling to expand because they lack land and investment. Co-operatives must focus on solving farmers failures rather than replacing farmers in production and business. Farmers in co-operatives will benefit more than people outside the group, said Associate Professor Nguyen Van Ngai at HCM University of Agriculture and Forestry. Although many agricultural co-operatives have been established, many have not developed, and some have even closed despite many supportive policies. However, the co-operative model was still necessary as a key part of the countrys economic development, he said. Dr Vo Thi Kim Sa of the Agriculture and Rural Development Staff Management School said as the agriculture sector became more competitive, small farmers would fail. Co-operatives can help them, but first they should know the role and benefits of this model. Transparency of assets under collective and private ownership when farmers participate in co-operatives is a big issue. And the co-operative needs a good business manager to gather farmers, he said. According to the agriculture department, the city currently has 41 co-operatives with 2,235 members. VNS QUANG NINH An explosion at a footwear factory in Quang Ninh Province on Monday afternoon killed one female workers and injured four, one of whom is critical. The explosion reportedly occurred during working hours at 2pm when a shoe upper steaming machine blew up inside a Sao Vang Leather and Footwear factory in Uong Bi City. Le Thi Anh Tuyet, a 36-year-old division deputy manager, died. Another worker, 32-year-old o Thi Thuy, lost consciousness. Three others suffered minor injuries. The five were rushed to the local Viet Nam-Sweden Hospital, but Tuyet and Thuy had to be transferred to Ha Noi due to their critical conditions. Investigation into the incident has commenced. VNS HCM CITY The HCM City Peoples Committee and Viet Nam Post Corp (VNPost) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Monday on improving processing of administrative forms and tasks. The aim is to limit face-to-face contact with government agencies, according to Tran Vinh Tuyen, deputy chairman of HCM City Peoples Committee. Residents will now take their forms to a post office which will forward the forms to the respective agencies. The agencies will then process the forms and return the results to the residents home address. Nguyen Minh Hong, deputy minister of Information and Communications, said that HCM City had 3 million administrative forms or requests processed through the post office, which was much higher than in the past. This compares to a total of 9 million in the entire country. VNS HCM CITY Thirty-four award-winning paintings featuring the life and career of Cuban revolutionary leader Che Guevara were presented at a meeting celebrating the 59th anniversary of Cubas National Day (January 6, 1959-2018) in HCM City. The event was one of the citys many activities to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Guevaras death (October 9, 1967-2017). The painting competition, which began in November last year, was organised by the HCM City Union of Friendship Organisation and the HCM Citys Cuba-Viet Nam Friendship Association in collaboration with the HCM City Youth Cultural House and the HCM City University of Fine Arts. Winners are students at primary school, junior high school and universities. They won three first prizes, six second prizes, six third prizes and 19 consolation prizes. The president of HCM Citys Cuba-Viet Nam Friendship Association, Truong Thi Hien, said the painting competition paid tribute to the guerilla hero and demonstrated the affection of the Vietnamese for the Cuban revolutionary leader. Relations between Viet Nam and Cuba were fostered by the late president Ho Chi Minh and Fidel Castro. The artworks are expected to be displayed later at the citys Youth Cultural House, but the date has not been set. VNS HA NOI Doctors have advised people not to consume the meat of sick pigs, following the death of one person who ate infected pork. Another person is in critical condition. Nguyen Trung Cap, head of the Emergency Department at the Central Hospital for Tropical Diseases (CHTD), said the department received two patients infected with the parasite Trichinella. The patients hailed from Lai Chau Province and were brought to the hospital after suffering from exhaustion and painful muscles. They could not swallow anything and found it difficult to speak, he said. Despite being treated at the intensive care with specific treatment, one of the patients died from cardiac arrest after being hospitalised for two days. "The other patient is still being treated. He has suffered respiratory failure and is unable to eat due to sore throat, Cap said, adding that the patient has lost 10kg in just a few days. According to the patients relatives, the family had slaughtered a sick pig early last month. They prepared tiet canh (a delicacy with raw pigs blood) and a dish with uncooked pork. After five days, five men in the family complained of stomachache, diarrhoea, high fever and severe pain in the muscles. The patients underwent treatment at local hospitals for five days, but their condition worsened. Two of them were later transferred to CHTD. According to Cap, helminthiasis in humans is caused by a roundworm named Trichinella, which is present in many animals. People who eat raw or undercooked poultry are infected with Trichinella spiralis, but almost everyone can get helminthiasis. To prevent such diseases, people should not eat tietcanh and dishes made from uncooked meat as they contain many types of bacteria and viruses which cause diseases, Cap said. He pointed out people should avoid buying pork with an unusual red colour as it might be the meat of sick pigs. In a related news, some 50 workers from Friwo Co.Ltd, located in the Amata Industrial Zone in BienHoa City in southern ong Nai Province, were hospitalised on Monday afternoon after they fell ill from food poisoning. According to the workers, who are undergoing treatment, many of them started showing symptoms of food poisoning, such as nausea, dizziness and stomach ache, within an hour of having lunch. They were promptly rushed to ong Nai General Hospital. Nguyen Xuan Hoang, head of the emergency treatment department at the hospital, said the workers received first aid after being admitted. By 4pm some of their conditions stabilised and they were discharged from the hospital, he said. The provincial Food Hygiene and Safety Department has collected food samples for testing. VNS PARIS Asylum claims in France hit a record 100,000 last year, official figures showed Monday, as President Emmanuel Macrons government draws up hotly-debated new legislation on immigration. Officials said the rate of arrivals was "historic", with Albanians forming the biggest group of applicants despite their country being considered safe by France. "It confirms that France is one of the countries receiving the most asylum claims in Europe," said Pascal Brice, head of Frances refugee protection agency OFPRA. "Its a historic level," he added, though he noted the numbers are just half of those seen in neighbouring Germany last year. Macrons government is preparing to unveil a bill on immigration next month, but his centrist Republique En Marche (Republic On The Move) party are divided on how to tackle the issue. Macron and Prime Minister Edouard Philippe have vowed to speed up the process for managing asylum requests and offering improved conditions for successful applicants. But they have also promised a much tougher line on economic migrants that would see an increased number of deportations and tighter controls on people arriving. Last year France forcibly removed 26,000 people from the country, a 14 per cent increase on the year before, Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said on Monday. "The goal now is to improve the conditions of repatriation, whether voluntary or forced," he added. In his New Years message, Macron had warned that France "cannot welcome everyone" although he pledged an immigration policy that walked the line between "humanity and efficiency". Albanian influx Albanians made up the biggest group applying for asylum in France last year -- some 7,600 adults, almost all of them set to be sent home because their home country is considered "safe". Brice attributed the 66-per cent jump in Albanian asylum claims to "economic emigration", an issue he said was worrying authorities in both countries. Albania announced an action plan in July to fight trafficking, with France complaining that too many spaces in its refuges are taken up by Albanians who will never be granted asylum. Afghans made up the second biggest group last year with nearly 6,000 applications, followed by migrants from Haiti, Guyana and Sudan. Applications from Syria were down 10 percent to just over 3,000, though almost all of them were granted asylum. OFPRA also reported a sharp rise in applications from francophone west Africa including Ivory Coast and DR Congo. Brice said they were part of the wave of migrants crossing to Europe from Libya. In December, migrants rights groups heavily criticised a decision to take a census of the population of migrant shelters, saying this went against their mission to provide unconditional aid. Under pressure, Prime Minister Philippe promised a public consultation. Though the notorious "Jungle" camp in Calais was dismantled in 2016, many migrants continue to head to the northern French coast hoping to reach Britain, an issue which will be on the agenda when Macron heads to London for talks later this month. AFP WATERLOO An award-winning Waterloo-raised investigative reporter on civil rights and racial injustice issues will be the featured speaker at the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom Fund Dinner 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Electric Park Ballroom. Nikole Hannah-Jones, a 1994 graduate of West High School, is an investigative reporter for The New York Times Magazine. She has been nationally recognized for her stories on racial segregation and resegregation in schools and housing. She has won numerous awards, including George Polk and Peabody awards, and is a 2017 MacArthur Fellow, one of only 24 chosen worldwide, for reshaping national conversations around education reform. She was named Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists in 2015. In a biography on her website, Hannah-Jones said she became hooked on journalism when she joined her high school newspaper at West High and began writing about students like her, who were bused across town as part of a voluntary school desegregation program. In 2017, she won a National Magazine Award for her story on choosing a school for her daughter in a segregated city. Prior to joining The New York Times, Hannah-Jones worked as an investigative reporter at ProPublica in New York City, where she spent three years chronicling the way official policy created and maintains segregation in housing and schools. She is currently writing a book on school segregation titled The Problem We All Live With, to be published on the One World imprint of Penguin/Random House. The MLK banquet begins with a social hour at 5 p.m. followed by dinner at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $50 per person and $25 for ages 18 and younger. RSVPs are requested by Wednesday. More information may be obtained by contacting LaTanya Graves at 214-3434. The event is hosted by Social Action Inc. WATERLOO TaiChi QiGong for Health will be held at 10:15 a.m. Saturdays at United Medical Park, Physical Therapy, 1731 W. Ridgeway Ave. TaiChi QiGong is an ancient practice from China that is suitable for all, a gentle exercise and a meditation in motion. The 50-minute-long class is helpful for those with arthritis, fibromyalgia and imbalance. Cost is $4, and the entry door is left of Entrance 7. For more information, call 239-6052 or email well8aged@gmail.com. There will be no classes Jan. 20. Legion hosts oyster feed NEW HARTFORD The American Legion will host the Rocky Mountain Oyster Feed at 6 p.m. Saturday at Beaver Creek Bar and Grille. The restaurant is located at 422 Packwaukee St., and donations will be accepted. Hearst exhibit reception set CEDAR FALLS A new exhibition drawing upon the Hearst Centers permanent collection highlights the diversity of artworks gifted to the center by its members. FRIENDS: Your Gift to the Collection will run through Jan. 28. A public reception for the exhibition is set for 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday; musicians Steph and Tom will offer live jazz from 7 to 9 p.m. The exhibition features a wide variety of works, including pieces by significant regional artists such as Dean Schwarz and John Page. Additional works, including a lithograph by Kathe Kollwitz and an etched metal assemblage by Louise Nevelson, were gifted in 2010 but have rarely been shown. New donations are making their debut, including a rakuware ice wagon by Nina Ward. Visitors to the Hearst Center attending the exhibition reception also will have the opportunity to start or build upon their own personal collections. Waverly vets to serve meal WAVERLY A community breakfast will be served by the Waverly Area Veterans Post from 7:30 to 10 a.m. Saturday at the Waverly Area Veterans Post, 1300 Fourth St. N.W. The menu will include eggs, biscuits and gravy, sausage, baked goods, fruit, coffee and juice, as well as bloody marys. The public is welcome. West Music program slated CEDAR FALLS Patrick Jones will present a program on Teaching Improvisation to Intermediate Students at the Northeast Area Music Teachers Association meeting at 9:30 a.m. Saturday at the West Music Store, 6322 University Ave. The public is welcome and invited to attend. A native of Georgia, Jones serves as associate chaplain and music ministry coordinator at Western Home Communities and teaches jazz improvisation lessons in his home. Winter picnic scheduled JANESVILLE There will be a winter picnic at Ingawanis Woodland, 2588 Hawthorne Ave., on Saturday. This picnic will be a come-and-go event. Participants are asked to get outdoors and explore the snowy woodland. People are welcome to come for the Iowa Games Snowshoe race at 9 a.m. Activities in conjunction with the race include a 9:30 a.m. breakfast served by the Bremer County Nature Alliance members, a 10 a.m. snowshoe hike led by naturalist Heather Gamm and then a campfire, tepee and crafts courtesy of the Bremer County Nature Alliance. Form more informaion, contact Gamm at 882-4742 or naturalist@co.bremer.ia.us. Council seeks trivia teams WATERLOO Family & Childrens Council of Black Hawk County is looking for teams to compete in a popular trivia night at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 1 at the UAW 838 Hall, near La Porte Road and Mitchell Avenue. Each team is to have eight people. Teams will compete for prizes by testing their knowledge by answering a wide assortment of questions. The FCC facilitates several programs in Black Hawk County that provide education in schools, direct services to families, and community outreach to prevent child abuse and strengthen families. To register a team, contact Amanda Goodman at 234-7600 or amanda@fccouncil.net. WCA offering spring classes WATERLOO New spring classes and programs for all ages are being offered at the Waterloo Center for the Arts. There are play groups and classes for painting, sewing, clay work, drawing, watercolors, woodblocks, book binding, stained glass, beads and dying. For a complete list of programs and descriptions, go to waterloocenterforthearts.org. To register, stop in or call 291-4490. Students eligible for essay contest DES MOINES Students in grades seven through 11 can now enter the 12th annual Money Smart Kid essay contest and compete for the chance to win $1,000 to help boost their college savings. The statewide essay contest is sponsored by the Iowa Bankers Association. Eligible students can enter the contest by writing an essay of 400 words or fewer, addressing the following: Write a brief newspaper article describing the potential devastating effects of a natural disaster (fire, flood, hurricane, etc.) on a familys financial situation. Be sure to include tips and resources for readers to help prepare them for a potential future unexpected crisis. Essays are due by March 16. The student with the winning essay will be selected as Iowas Money Smart Kid for 2018. For more information and the Money Smart Kid application, go to https://iowajumpstart.files.wordpress.com/2018/01/msw-kid_iowa_2018-application.pdf. WATERLOO The husband of a Waterloo woman who was found dead following her disappearance in May has been found guilty of drug charges. A Black Hawk County jury on Thursday found Monte Allen Apfel, 54, guilty of possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, possession of diazepam with intent to deliver, unlawful possession of alprazolam, possession of marijuana and violation of the drug tax stamp act. UPDATE: Search continues for missing Waterloo woman DUNKERTON About 50 friends and relatives of Rhonda Apfel joined authorities in a search fo According to court records, Waterloo police stopped Monte Apfels Chevrolet Camaro for a traffic violation on July 29, 2016. During the stop, Loki, a K-9 with the Black Hawk County Sheriffs Office, indicated the presence of drugs in the cars dashboard area. In the stereo insert space inside the dash, authorities found 79 grams of meth and 19 grams of a cutting agent, which if combined would place the street valued of the drugs at about $10,000, said Assistant County Attorney Jeremy Westendorf, who prosecuted the case. Officers also found more than 200 diazepam pills. At trial, the defense argued that Monte Apfel didnt know the drugs were in the car, which he had purchased two days before the traffic stop. Westendorf said police also found a drug ledger in the glove compartment that contained a signed note from his wife, Rhonda. Sentencing will be at a later date, and the meth charge carries up to 75 years in prison with a one-third mandatory minimum. Rhonda Apfel, 47, was the subject of a search in May and June 2017 after she disappeared, and her motorcycle was found parked at the Bruggeman Wildlife Area near the Wapsipinicon River northeast of Dunkerton. She was reported missing May 29, and her body was discovered June 16 in the river west of Littleton. An autopsy determined she had drowned, but the matter of death and date of death werent determined, according to her death certificate. Black Hawk County sheriffs deputies said they dont suspect any foul play in her death. Information about her death was kept from jurors during Monte Apfels trial. DES MOINES A group of Iowans representing working families will offer a Peoples Condition of the State at noon today in the first-floor Capitol rotunda. Speakers will share their stories about how Gov. Kim Reynolds administration has affected them. They will call on all Iowans to fight back against further attacks on everyday Iowans during this legislative session. Deputy commissioner Secretary of State Paul Pate has hired longtime Cerro Gordo County Auditor Ken Kline to serve as Iowas deputy commissioner of elections. In addition to more than 25 years in the auditors office, Kline is a past president of the Iowa State Association of County Auditors and creator of the national award-winning Precinct Atlas electronic poll book program. He served for many years as a legislative liaison for county auditors. Kline will begin his new role Jan. 22. He succeeds Carol Olson, who will become state director for U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley. Waste lawsuit Aaron Rochester of Sioux City and his companies are being sued by the Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller. The Woodbury County District Court lawsuit alleges Rochester collected waste disposal fees and then illegally dumped and stored an estimated 12 million pounds of waste at licensed and unlicensed locations in Sioux City and Akron and 4.5 million pounds in South Sioux City, Neb. DES MOINES Monday was a mix of optimism and criticism as lawmakers convened a 2018 legislative session with Republican promises of tax relief and Democrats bemoaning inaction in fixing a budget mess and addressing costly sexual harassment concerns in the Statehouse. The first day of the legislative session is one of my favorites as a legislator, Senate President Jack Whitver, R-Ankeny, said in his opening-day remarks. Optimism runs high, and there are smiles and laughter heard throughout the chamber as we reconnect with friends and colleagues. Much of the first-day activities dealt with pomp, ceremony, opening speeches, reminiscing and procedural matters as family members accompanied legislators to the Statehouse and took in the pageantry. Senators opened the session by swearing in a new member, Sen. James Carlin, R-Sioux City, a former House member who was elected to fill the seat vacated by Sen. Bill Andersons resignation. Since the Legislature adjourned its last session in April, two House members Reps. Curt Hanson, D-Fairfield, and Gregg Forristall, R-Macedonia died. Monday, their successors, Reps. Phil Miller, D-Fairfield, and John Jacobsen, R-Council Bluffs, were sworn in for partial terms. House Speaker Linda Upmeyer, R-Clear Lake, said this years session should be about enabling upward mobility for Iowans seeking to improve their skills and positions, while Senate Majority Leader Bill Dix, R-Shell Rock, said the focus will be on creating career opportunities and keeping more money in taxpayers pockets. We are more than just talking the talk, were here to walk the walk, or, as many of you remember, were here to kick the door in. And we kept our promises, Dix said. In 2017, our agenda was big and bold, he added. In 2018, Senate Republicans will move an agenda that will again be big and bold because this state deserves big and bold. The changes we make will move our state forward in a positive direction, felt for many generations to come. That message was countered by minority Democrats who called for bipartisan cooperation in addressing concerns about health care, water quality, mental health services, education and spending priorities in a time of sluggish revenue. Last session, the Legislature did a lot of bad things to good people. That was a mistake, but it has been a wake-up call for Iowans, said Senate Democratic Leader Janet Petersen of Des Moines. Lets start the conversation with a message that unifies us instead of tearing us apart. Sen. Mark Chelgren, R-Ottumwa, said it was disingenuous for Democrats to call for bipartisanship but then immediately issue a political broadside on GOP accomplishments from the past session. During a prayer breakfast, Republican Party of Iowa chairman Jeff Kaufmann dismissed criticism like House Democrat Leader Mark Smiths claim the state budget has been grossly mismanaged by the majority party as absolutely background noise. He exhorted GOP legislators to make the state and yes Im going to say it great again. Upmeyer said it was an understatement to call the 2017 session productive and she expected this year would build on those successes. We have a bold, pro-growth agenda and we are ready for this session, she noted, while Gov. Kim Reynolds pledged that Statehouse Republicans are not going to go backward were going to keep going forward by cutting taxes and bolstering Iowas skilled workforce. During her floor speech, Petersen called on majority Republicans to address the disgraceful and predatory behavior in the Senate that led to a $1.75 million settlement paid to Kirsten Anderson, who alleged a toxic work environment at the Capitol while she served as the communications director for Senate Republicans. The internal investigation that was conducted following the verdict revealed that many staffers are still afraid to report harassment at the Capitol. That is unacceptable, said Petersen. But its not surprising when the only person fired in this whole scandal was the victim. Retaliation against a whistle blower is grounds for termination in the Senates handbook, but it is clear that rule is being ignored. Senate Republican leaders say they have asked a retired senator with human resources experience to review Senate rules and await recommendations. There is a reckoning in our country on the issue of harassment in the workplace, Petersen added in her speech. The Iowa Senate has the choice: Do something serious to address this problem, or be on the wrong side of history. Two Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee are pushing U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, to release transcripts of an interview with a founder of the firm that commissioned the controversial dossier about President Donald Trump and Russia. They also complained focusing attention on the firm or the former British spy Christopher Steele, who compiled the dossier, is a distraction. Grassley and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina, called last week for the Justice Department to launch a criminal inquiry into Steele. The American people deserve the facts. There is simply no reason to keep the Simpson testimony (or other testimony before our committee for that matter) hidden while this distraction goes on, Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-Rhode Island, wrote in the letter dated Sunday. The two senators want the transcript of the committees interview with Glenn Simpson, a founder of Fusion GPS, released. Last week, Fusion GPS also demanded Grassley release the transcript. The Iowa Republican, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, responded by saying he didnt want to compromise the committees investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. He also said Fusion GPS had not been cooperative and the company had previously requested confidentiality. He also offered to have Simpson testify publicly. Fusion GPS said Grassleys office was not giving an accurate version of events. In their letter, Whitehouse and Blumenthal echoed complaints by Fusion GPS that Simpsons testimony has been selectively leaked, and they rejected the idea the companys work was the basis for the start of the investigation into Russias interference with the 2016 election. A spokesman for Grassley, George Hartmann, responded its standard practice not to release transcripts, a view thats held by investigators and is consistent with how other committees are handling the issue. Its remarkable that two former prosecutors would parrot the talking points of an uncooperative witness during the committees ongoing investigation, he said. WATERLOO Plans to add another lane to a congested block of Ansborough Avenue eased through some caution flags Monday. Waterloo City Council members voted unanimously to accept a $277,600 grant from the Iowa Department of Transportations Clean Air Attainment Program to add a fifth lane on Ansborough between Black Hawk Road and Downing Avenue. The citys $69,400 grant match would come from general obligation bonds, which are repaid with property taxes. But the vote drew questions from council members and the public about whether property owners in the area had been given enough notice about the project. Interim Public Works Director Sandie Greco said the city had contacted the owner of the Carline vehicle sales lot before applying for the grant, because it is the only property from which a sliver of land will need to be acquired. Community Planning and Development Director Noel Anderson said a public informational meeting could be held before the final construction plans return to the council for approval. Greco said the project will improve traffic flow in the block. This is to add the fifth lane in the center from Black Hawk down to Downing, she said. From Downing to University Avenue the fifth lane is already there. This in turn will also work with the University Avenue project, she added. It will clear the left-turn lanes. It will make traffic progress faster and safer through that whole channel. Greco said the project also would add protected left-turn arrows at the Downing signals. Resident John Sherbon had voiced concerns when the city changed the signal timing in the past and suggested the road widening may not be the right solution. Thats been there for years and its not been a problem; now all the sudden it is, Sherbon said. Maybe we ought to re-study this and see exactly what we need to do there because the traffic used to flow really good. Last in a series on this years Courier 20 Under 40 winners. WATERLOO Born and raised in Denver, with a self-employed family, Lindy Zars was taught at a young age the importance of building relationships with customers, employees, family and community. She has implemented those values into her daily life at work, home and through volunteerism. Building authentic relationships has benefited me my entire life, Zars said. I believe you reap what you sow, and in return Ive met some of the greatest people I could ever imagine that help me out whenever I am in need. Zars received her bachelors degree in communication arts, electronic media from Wartburg College in Waverly in 2002. During her senior year, she participated in the Wartburg West program in Denver, Colo. When Zars moved back to the Cedar Valley, she landed a job at CBE Companies in 2007 as the only employee in the marketing department. During that time, she led initiatives in rebranding the company, both in domestic and global marketplaces, launched two new websites and added six employees to her team. Zars switched gears in December and is now director of marketing strategy and communication for VGM & Associates. But her 10-year tenure at CBE helped her grow and develop in her career and personally. I kind of grew up there, she said. Zars was instrumental in structuring a marketing department for CBE, wrote Chief Human Resource Officer Mary Phillips in her nomination letter. At CBE, Zars was promoted to director of sales and marketing in 2011, and earned a masters of business administration degree, with a marketing concentration, from Bellevue University in 2013. To stay abreast of the fast-paced marketing world, Zars is involved with the American Advertising Federation of the Cedar Valley and attends conferences to stay up to date with the latest trends. In marketing, you just cant sit still, she said. With a knack for networking and a passion to be involved in her community, Zars joined the Volunteer Center of the Cedar Valley in 2013. I love that organization because not everybody understands what the volunteer centers role is, she said. It really does provide a liaison service with the communitys activities. She has served on the board as president and, at present, marketing chair. You can hear her passion for volunteerism and community engagement every single time she mentions the organization and how to connect with the VCCV to start volunteering. Lauren Finke, with the volunteer center, wrote in her nomination letter. Zars attributes her success to putting others first and making the most of her time. To me, time is the most precious thing, and theres never enough of it. ... And for me as a mom, its showing my kids that the world doesnt revolve around you, its so much bigger than you, and it is your duty to give back. Zars remains close to her family and has two children, Kaylee, 13, who volunteers through her confirmation group, and Drew, 8. Im proud to live here. I think its a great place, too, for my kids to go to school and give back, she said. The family attends Nazareth Lutheran Church in Cedar Falls, where Zars, along with her sister, Lory, and father, Larry, sing together in the choir. CEDAR FALLS The UNI Tallgrass Prairie Center will host a series of restoration and natural management seminars in 2018. The first seminar will feature Kristine Nemec, who will present Creating the Case for Habitat in Rights-of-Way at 4 p.m. Thursday. In her talk, Nemec will discuss the use of a decision support tool that addresses the benefits and barriers of pollinator habitat in utility and transportation rights-of-way. Nemec manages the Integrated Roadside Vegetation Management program, which is in its 30th year at UNI. Other topics of this four-part series, which is scheduled January-April, include wetland mitigation, habitat establishment and maintenance and landscaping with native plants. All seminars will meet at the Tallgrass Prairie Center, located at 2412 W. 27th St. For more information, email Staci Mueller, outreach coordinator at the center, at staci.mueller@uni.edu, or go to tallgrassprairiecenter.org. Schools to close for MLK holiday WATERLOO Waterloo Schools and the Education Service Center will be closed Monday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Schools and normal business hours will resume Jan. 16. Groups to help at food bank CEDAR FALLS The Northeast Iowa Food Bank is partnering with the University of Northern Iowas Service and Leadership Council and the Volunteer Center of Cedar Valley to host the third annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday in Maucker Union on the UNI campus. Participants are invited to help package food for the food bank that will be contributed toward its Backpack Program, which aims to provide meals for the 14,500 children who may not have stable meals over the weekend. The event is open to the public. Participants are asked to donate at least one jar of peanut butter. Volunteers with children younger than 12 are encouraged to participate in the Youth MLK Day event hosted at the Volunteer Center. Breakfast set at new hotel WATERLOO The Greater Cedar Valley Alliance & Chamber will host Good Morning Cedar Valley from 7:30 to 9 a.m. Thursday at Courtyard by Marriott Waterloo Cedar Falls, 250 Westfield Ave. This is a quarterly networking breakfast for Alliance & Chamber investors/members. The January program will include updates from Mayor Jim Brown of Cedar Falls, Mayor Quentin Hart of Waterloo, Greater Cedar Valley Alliance & Chamber CEO Steve Dust and a Black Hawk County Board of Supervisors representative. The premier sponsor for the breakfast, Courtyard by Marriott Waterloo Cedar Falls, also will make a brief presentation. There is no cost to attend. 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29 (1) May 11 (1) Jul 11 (1) Yes, you can transfer your domain to any registrar or hosting company once you have purchased it. Since domain transfers are a manual process, it can take up to 5 days to transfer the domain. Domains purchased with payment plans are not eligible to transfer until all payments have been made. Please remember that our 30-day money back guarantee is void once a domain has been transferred. For transfer instructions to GoDaddy, please click here. Jan 9, 2018 | By Julia As CES 2018 ramps up for another year in Las Vegas, thousands of makers, businesses, and tech heads are busy scouring the conference for the newest and hottest in 3D printing technology. But despite all the (well deserved) CES hype, one of the most exciting 3D printed designs weve seen today is actually coming from across the States, at the annual Kitchen & Bath Industry Show (KBIS) in Orlando, Florida. As unveiled earlier today, metal 3D printing specialist 3rd Dimension has lent its technical expertise to luxury kitchen and bath brand KALLISTA in order to create the beautiful new Grid sink faucet. Produced by 3rd Dimension, the Grid faucet was printed using 3D Systems acclaimed ProXDMP 320 high-performance metal additive manufacturing system. As the first of its kind in the world, this state-of-the-art faucet is more than a novelty piece of 3D printing for the kitchen; its effectively a perfect marriage between function and design. The faucets unique cubic geometry, in addition to being aesthetically pleasing, pairs seamlessly with the 3D printed spout, enabling the KALLISTA designers to create an open form with discreet interior channels that allow water to flow easily through the base. As KALLISTA design studio manager Bill McKeone explains, this manufacturing arrangement allowed his team complete freedom of design. "Designers usually need to consider a manufacturing process and they have to design around that process," McKeone says. "By choosing to produce this faucet via 3D printing, we opened ourselves to limitless design possibilities. 3D Systems' breadth of materials and technologies allowed us the freedom to create a unique, functional faucet which would not have been possible with a traditional manufacturing process." The sleek faucet set was produced by 3rd Dimension, an Indiana-based company rapidly making a name for itself in metal 3D printing thanks to its specialized technique of 3D direct metal printing. For this collaboration, the 3rd Dimension team opted to use 3D Systems renowned ProXDMP 320 system. The faucets were also printed in 3D Systems LaserForm 316L, a high quality stainless steel 316 powder material that ensures no rust or corrosion will ever beset this luxury kitchen appliance. Since this was KALLISTAs first foray into 3D printing, the 3rd Dimension team led the designers through a specialized program to best develop the as-designed concept for the 3D printing process. This type of strategic design development meant that KALLISTAs designers could avoid common delays seen in production tooling, and effectively expedite the entire process. According to company representatives, the parts were produced in a matter of mere hours, thanks in large part to 3rd Dimensions experience with the 3D Systems metal printer. The results are certainly impressive. Beyond the Grid faucets very sleek looking design, and what promises to be a hand-washing experience unlike any other, the effective integration of metal 3D printing into the entire design process has resulted in a product that simply could not be made any other way. While this may be only an early case of the kitchen appliance industry turning to 3D printing, it already speaks volumes. From our perspective, the KALLISTA-3rd Dimension collaboration belies a bright future for innovative industrial designers everywhere. Posted in 3D Printing Application Maybe you also like: Joris wrote at 1/11/2018 10:36:35 AM:https://www.3ders.org/articles/20160120-redefining-luxury-meet-american-standards-first-ever-3d-printed-metal-faucet-collection.html Siddhartha Mukherjee in The New Yorker: The call came at three in the morning. My mother, in New Delhi, was in tears. My father, she said, had fallen again, and he was speaking nonsense. She turned the handset toward him. He was muttering a slow, meaningless string of words in an unrecognizable high-pitched nasal tone. He kept repeating his nickname, Shibu, and the name of his childhood village, Dehergoti. He sounded as if he were reading his own last rites. Take him to the hospital, I urged her, from New York. Ill catch the next flight home. No, no, just wait, my mother said. He might get better on his own. In her day, buying an international ticket on short notice was an unforgivable act of extravagance, reserved for transcontinental gangsters and film stars. No one that she knew had arrived early for a parents death. The frugality of her generation had congealed into frank superstition: if I caught a flight now, I might dare the disaster into being. Just sleep on it, she said, her anxiety mounting. I put the phone down and e-mailed my travel agent, asking her to put me on the next available Air India flight. My father, eighty-three, had been declining for several weeks. The late-night phone calls had tightened in frequency and enlarged in amplitude, like waves ahead of a gathering storm: accidents were becoming more common, and their consequences more severe. This was not his first fall that year. A few months earlier, my mother had found him lying on the balcony floor with his arm broken and folded underneath him. She had taken a pair of scissors and cut his shirt off while he had howled in double agonythe pain of having to pull the remnants over his head compounded by the horror of seeing a perfectly intact piece of clothing sliced up before his eyes. It was, I knew, an ancient quarrel: hismother, who had ferried her five boys across a border to Calcutta during Partition and never had enough clothes to split among them, would have found a way to spare that shirt. Then, too, my mother had tried to play it down. Kicchui na, she had said: Look, its nothing. It was a phrase that she, the familys stabilizing counterweight, often clung to. Well manage, shed said, and I took her word for it. This time, I wasnt so sure. Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulant Market The report for Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulant Market of Market Research Future comprises of extensive primary research along with the detailed analysis of qualitative as well as quantitative aspects by various industry experts, key opinion leaders to gain the deeper insight of the market and industry performance. The Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulant Market Research Report provides detailed analysis of the key regional market status of the Healthcare Industry. The Blood Coagulants Market is expected to grow at the CAGR of 9.5% during the forecast period 2017-2023 Coagulation is the process, by which blood changes from a liquid to a gel, forming a blood clot. In general terms, coagulation is a process in which the blood forms clots to block and then heal a lesion/wound/cut and stop the bleeding. The Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulant Market growth is majorly attributed to increasing prevalence of the bleeding disorders, rising funding, healthcare insurance coverage, and awareness programs for bleeding disorders. In the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa, bleeding disorders have become a huge problem due to limited screening, ignorance of diseases, and poor access to treatment. As per the study published in Blood Coagulation Fibrinolysis journal, 2016, it is reported that in the Yaounde Hemophilia Treatment Center (HTC) of Cameroon multiple cases of hemophilia and von willebrand disease (VWD) have been registered According to the 2014 Annual Global Survey of World Federation of Hemophilia (WFH), in 2014 the total population of Egypt was 86,895,099 out of which 5,246 people were living with hemophilia, 513 were living with von willebrand disease, and 1,123 with other bleeding disorders. It is also reported that 4201 cases of hemophilia A were registered and among them 37% were under 4 years A research study published in Medicine journal in 2017 stated that hemophilia A is the most common type of hemophilia in Saudi Arabia and most dominant in male patients: 1 : 5000 to 10,000. Whereas, prevalence rate of hemophilia B: 1: 34,500 male patients The Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulant Market growth is majorly attributed to increasing prevalence of the bleeding disorders, rising funding, healthcare insurance coverage, and awareness programs for bleeding disorders. On the other hand, there are certain factors that also hinder the growth of this market such as lack of R&D capabilities in the regions, presence of counterfeit drugs, and lack of awareness in most of the parts of developing and underdeveloped countries in the region. Key Findings: Hemophilia segment dominates the market with nearly 45.5% share of the MEA market MEA coagulation factor market is projected to reach about USD 141.68 million by 2023 Mea Blood Coagulants Market for hemophilia segment was estimated to be USD 31.55 million in 2016 for hemophilia segment was estimated to be USD 31.55 million in 2016 UAE is the fastest growing region in the MEA blood coagulants market with 10.1% CAGR during 2017 to 2023 Get Sample Copy at https://www.marketresearchfuture.com/sample_request/2743 . Segmentation The Mea Blood Coagulants Market is segmented on the basis of types, indications, and by country. On the basis of types, the market is segmented into coagulation factor and others. Coagulation factor is further segmented into recombinant coagulation factor, plasma coagulation factor, and others. On the basis of indication, the market is segmented into haemophilia, surgery, other bleeding disorders, and others. Haemophilia is further divided into haemophilia A and haemophilia B. On the basis of country, the market is segmented into KSA, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Egypt, and Rest of Middle East & Africa. Key Players for MEA Blood Coagulants Market: Pfizer Inc. (U.S.), Bayer AG (Germany), Novo Nordisk AS (Dernmark), Shire (Republic of Ireland), SOBI (Sweden), Octapharma (Switzerland), and CSL Limited (Australia). Regional Analysis: The Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulants Market is segmented on the basis of countries into Saudi Arabia (KSA), United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Egypt, and rest of Middle East & Africa. Saudi Arabia account for the largest market share of the Middle East & Africa blood coagulants market by countries in 2016. The large share is majorly attributed to increasing prevalence of the haemophilia disease in this country, high usage of the expensive recombinant coagulation factors for the treatment, and high disposable income of the population, and better healthcare facilities in this country. Brief TOC: Topic 1 Report Prologue Topic 2 Research Methodology Topic 3 Market Dynamics Topic 4 Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulants Market By Type Topic 5 Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulants Market, By Indication Topic 6 Middle East & Africa Blood Coagulants Market, By Country Topic 7 Company Profiles Continued Ask Question to Expert at https://www.marketresearchfuture.com/enquiry/2743 . About Market Research Future: At Market Research Future (MRFR), we enable our customers to unravel the complexity of various industries through our Cooked Research Report (CRR), Half-Cooked Research Reports (HCRR), Raw Research Reports (3R), Continuous-Feed Research (CFR), and Market Research & Consulting Services. Contact: Market Research Future +1 646 845 9312 Email: sales@marketresearchfuture.com Media Contact Company Name: Market Research Future Contact Person: Akash Anand Email: akash.anand@marketresearchfuture.com Phone: +1 646 845 9312 Address:Market Research Future Office No. 528, Amanora Chambers Magarpatta Road, Hadapsar, Pune City: Pune State: Maharashtra Country: India Website: https://www.marketresearchfuture.com Gas Flow Rates and Composition Results Brisbane, Jan 9, 2018 AEST (ABN Newswire) - Brisbane-based conventional gas developer State Gas Limited ( ASX:GAS ) is pleased to advise it has successfully completed gas flow-testing, sampling and analysis from existing gas wells at PL 231 in the Bowen Basin Central Queensland. The flow-testing and sampling was undertaken by Kinetic Production & Wellhead Services, based in Roma, Queensland. The three wells flow-tested and sampled were Primero 1, Aldinga North 1 and Reid's Dome-4. Drilled between 11 and 37 years ago, these existing wells are located within the northern half of PL 231. The Company is pleased to report that, despite the wells being shut-in for such an extended period, all wells flowed significant gas, at lowest recorded stabilized rates of between 357,000 cf/d and 658,000 cf/d using a 0.500" orifice plate. Two gas samples per well were taken from each of these wells and sent to Petrolab in South Australia for analysis. Gas composition results indicate the produced gas represents a similar composition in its natural form to that of pipeline-quality gas, with an average Methane (C1) content of approximately 96%, average Carbon Dioxide (CO2) content of approximately 1.5% and very low levels of interts. The similar reservoir pressure (166 - 167psig) and gas composition results for all the wells also implies that the reservoir is connected between each of the wells tested, providing a positive indicator for future gas production. The gas flow-testing and sampling conducted in mid-December relates to the shallow Cattle Creek Formation, which commences at approximately 130 metres from surface and does not include gas targets within the deeper Reid's Dome Beds situated beneath the Cattle Creek horizon. The Company is also pleased to advise that the reprocessing of historical seismic survey data by DownUnder GeoSolutions is currently underway and is expected to be complete during February 2018. With the seismic re-interpretation and the recent flow-testing and gas composition results, well sites will be selected for the 2018 drilling campaign. To view tables, please visit: http://abnnewswire.net/lnk/B61MX6VL About State Gas Limited State Gas Limited (ASX:GAS) is a Queensland-based developer of the Reid's Dome gas field, originally discovered during drilling in 1955, located in the Bowen Basin in Central Queensland. State Gas is 100%-owner of the Reid's Dome Gas Project (PL-231) a CSG and conventional gas play, which is well-located 30 kilometres southwest of Rolleston, approximately 50 kilometres from the Queensland Gas Pipeline and interconnected east coast gas network. Permian coal measures within the Reid's Dome Beds are extensive across the entire permit but the area had not been explored for coal seam gas prior to State Gas' ownership. In late 2018 State Gas drilled the first coal seam gas well in the region (Nyanda-4) into the Reid's Dome Beds and established the potential for a significant coal seam gas project in PL 231. The extension of the coal measures into the northern and central areas of the permit was confirmed in late 2019 by the Company's drilling of Aldinga East-1A (12 km north) and Serocold-1 (6 km to the north of Nyanda-4). State Gas is also the 100% holder Authority to Prospect 2062 ("Rolleston-West"), a 1,414 km2 permit (eight times larger than PL 231) that is contiguous with the Reid's Dome Gas Project. Rolleston-West contains highly prospective targets for both coal seam gas (CSG) and known conventional gas within the permit area. It is not restricted by domestic gas reservation requirements. The contiguous areas (Reid's Dome and Rolleston-West), under sole ownership by State Gas, enable integration of activities and a unified super-gasfield development, providing economies of scale, efficient operations, and optionality in marketing. State Gas is implementing its strategic plan to bring gas to market from Reid's Dome and Rolleston-West to meet near term forecast shortfalls in the east coast domestic gas market. The strategy involves progressing a phased appraisal program in parallel with permitting for an export pipeline and development facilities to facilitate the fastest possible delivery of gas to market. State Gas' current focus has been to confirm the producibility of the gas through production testing of the wells. Harvest One (CVE:HVST) Operational Update Perth, Jan 9, 2018 AEST (ABN Newswire) - MMJ PhytoTech Limited ( ASX:MMJ ) ("MMJ" or "the Company") is pleased to advise that TSX-V listed Harvest One Cannabis Inc. ( CVE:HVST ) ("Harvest One"), which is 59% owned by MMJ, has released an operational update in relation to its wholly-owned horticultural subsidiary United Greeneries Ltd ("United Greeneries"). About Harvest One Cannabis Inc. Harvest One Cannabis Inc. ( CVE:HVST ) controls operations across the entire cannabis value chain through three business units, with Harvest One serving as the umbrella company over horticultural arm United Greeneries and medical arm Satipharm AG. Each business is strategically located in favourable jurisdictions with supportive regulatory frameworks in place. United Greeneries has received a Canadian medicinal cannabis cultivation licence, making Harvest One one of only a few companies globally with the capacity to commercially cultivate cannabis in a federally regulated environment. To view full copy of the Harvest One announcement, please visit: http://abnnewswire.net/lnk/TRUN83K8 About MMJ Group Holdings Ltd MMJ Group Holdings Ltd (ASX:MMJ) is a global cannabis investment company. MMJ owns a portfolio of minority investments and aims to invest across the full range of emerging cannabis-related sectors including healthcare, technology, infrastructure, logistics, processing, cultivation, equipment and retail. For MMJ's latest investor presentation and news, please visit: https://www.mmjphytotech.com.au/investors/ QinetiQ has agreed its first ever multi-year training contract on behalf of the Empire Test Pilots School (ETPS), in a five-year deal with the Royal Netherlands Air Force. Under the 5.5m contract, signed in December 2017, ETPS will continue to train the Dutch forces test pilots and flight test engineers until at least 2022. Until now, all ETPS courses have been booked on a rolling annual basis, but new multi-year contract options have been made possible by the recent 11-year commitment within the Long Term Partnering Agreement (LTPA), under which QinetiQ manages ETPS in support of the UK Ministry of Defence. ETPS is seeking to extend these long-term contract options to other customers, providing them with better value for money and guaranteeing security of supply. Mr Nick Lay, Operations Director T&E and Training Transformation, QinetiQ, said: This commitment from the Royal Netherlands Air Force is a significant vote of confidence in the reinvigorated ETPS, and in QinetiQs strategy to modernise UK test aircrew training. The introduction of multi-year agreements raises exciting new possibilities for our customers, such as tailored courses, bespoke equipment and activities, and long-term cost savings. They provide extra certainty, which increases our ability to plan for future opportunities and accommodate customer requirements, giving a huge boost to the schools commercial appeal. Dutch students on the 2018 course will be among the first to fly the schools new aircraft, purchased in 2017 as part of a 85m drive to modernise the UKs provision of test aircrew training. The new fleet comprises two Grob 120TP and two Pilatus PC-21 fixed wing aircraft, alongside four Airbus H125 helicopters. These aircraft will be complemented by new modular courses, featuring modern working environments, materials and teaching practices, including student-centred and distance learning. The school will continue to be led by military staff with the Ministry of Defence (MoD) being intrinsically involved in the running, supervision and oversight of courses. Air Commodore Richard Laurijssen, Royal Netherlands Air Force, said: We have sent test pilots from the Netherlands to the ETPS since 1945. We consider the ETPS to be one of the leading test pilot schools in the world, and as such its training is accredited by the Netherlands Military Aviation Authority. We therefore appreciate the partnership and have confidence in a future together. Signing a multi-year training contract underlines this, and also ensures the continuation of this valued cooperation. Despite furnishing fake caste certificates, the state government has gone ahead with the appointment of Satish Dabhade as the Commissioner of Maharashtra Labour Welfare Board, Kalyan office. Earlier Dabhade was appointed as the labour welfare officer at the same branch even though he had submitted forged caste certificate documents. Dabhades documents were confiscated by the state government but still Labour Minister Sambhaji Patil Nilangekar gave a nod for his appointment for the commissioners post. Thus questions are being raised against the BJP government for shielding corrupt officials. The BJP which had promised to adopt a zero tolerance against corruption is sending wrong message to people by appointing tainted officials. The Supreme Court had asked the state government to dismiss employees submitting fake caste certificates for securing employment. Even many other employees in labour department have been allotted lucrative posts despite submitting fake caste certificates. Already a case has been filed against Dabhade in Bombay High Court for submitting forged documents. The state government has appointed Dabhade for the Commissioners post without seeking approval of the legislature. Before going ahead with his appointment they should have followed rules and guidelines. The Delhi High Court on Tuesday ordered the release of businessman Yogesh Mittal, who was arrested in connection with a post-demonetisation money laundering case. The accused had allegedly converted demonetised notes into valid currency and was arrested by the Enforcement Directorate (ED). The ED, on June 6, arrested Mittal, who is a close associate of advocate Rohit Tandon. The ED had, earlier in February, issued a provisional order attaching movable and immovable properties worth Rs 6,84,26,500 of Tandon, Kolkata-based businessman Paras Mal Lodha and others in money laundering case post demonetisation. The investigation conducted so far has revealed that post demonetisation, Lodha along with others illegally exchanged demonetised currency of Tandon and others into monetised form on commission basis with the help of Suman, Amranjay Kumar, Atul Kumar Aggarwal, Manoj Kumar Aggarwal and others including Hawala operators. Lodha was held in Mumbai by the Enforcement Directorate after they recovered a huge cache of new currency notes of Rs 500 and Rs 2,000 from a Delhi law firm, which belonged to advocate Tandon and Chennai based businessman Sekhar Reddy. Tandon was arrested last year in December, after the Crime Branch and the Delhi Police carried out raids at the office of his firm T&T Law and seized nearly Rs 13.5 crore, of which Rs 2.6 crore was in new banknotes released after demonetisation. How many of us think that parents come closest to God? Love and respect to ones parents would give us peace of mind. Father is compared to Heaven and Religion. He is placed at a higher pedestal than all Gods combined. Mother and Motherland is placed at a higher pedestal than Heaven and Paradise. Somewhere these values are changing and with changing time and modern era we have become scavengers. Some children have gone so wrong that they are killing their own parents or throwing them out of the house to die. We have example of Shravan Kumar or Lord Rama for their pure love for parents. Our cultural values are decaying and we are becoming more insensitive and inhuman. Perhaps that is the reason, butchering parents, kids, human lives become news, and we read and forget. We have no time to react or restore to basic humanity. India has seen some pretty terrible and mysterious cases of murder and killing within the family. The unfathomable aspect of a family, turning on itself so destructively, has always caught the attention of the public and the media. A lot of the times, its for honour, though these killers seem like the last people to know anything about the word. Some of the worst cases have been of the parents themselves killing their children, and unfortunately its not as uncommon as one would hope. Here are some famous cases of parents murdering their children and children murdering their parents, husband killing his wife and wife killing her husband. One such news of a professor has gone viral; he pushed off his old mother from the terrace of his building. Sandip Nathwani, who teaches in a local Pharmacy college, pushed his mother Jayshreeben to death on September 29 as he was fed up with her illness. Sandip initially denied the allegation made against him, but later confessed to his involvement in the crime. There was another incidence, a 55-year-old woman in Bhayander West, who paid Rs 50,000 to get her own son killed. The mother was fed up with her drug addict son Ramcharan, who used to sexually abuse her for over six months. It was unbearable when Ramcharan began abusing her daily. She informed her elder son Sitaram about Ramcharans activity and hatched a plan to get rid of him. On August 20, 2017, Sitaram roped in his two friends Rakesh Yadav and Keshav Mistry. The trio killed Ramcharan and dumped his body under water. Kerala youth Cadell Jeanson Raja murdered his father, mother, sister and a relative; he claimed that he was attempting astral projection. Raja claimed that he is a Satan worshiper. Cadell first killed his mother in the bedroom on the first floor of their two-storey house. He then killed his father Raja Thangam and his sister Caroline, one after another, when they returned home. Cadell Jeanson murdered his aunt Lalitha Jain in another room. The police found it quite strange that Cadells aunt stayed in the same house where three murders happened for three days till she was murdered. After the murders, Cadell ensured that the floor was wiped clean of blood and all evidences are destroyed. Cadell Jeanson Raja went around the town swiftly, evading the police post the murders. Cadell lived in his house for another three days with the bodies and told neighbours that others in the family were out on a leisure trip. A 48-year-old professor strangulated his marketing executive wife and then tried to stab himself to death over being suspicions about her character in Kalyan, Mumbai. After killing his 37-year-old wife Vidya, Sanjay Teli called up his younger son, Atul (19), to confess to the crime and told him of his intention to end his own life as well. Thereafter, the professor, who teaches in a Mumbai junior college, switched off his mobile phone. On hearing of his plan, Atul rushed home to find his father lying in a pool of blood and his mother dead. In Kolkata, infuriated over his fathers alleged delay in arranging funds for his engineering studies abroad, a 28-year-old youth bludgeoned his father to death. The victim Subhasis Sanyal (60) was watching television relaxing on the bed when his son Arnab hit him several times on the head with an iron dumbbell resulting in his death. He was constantly pressuring his father to send him abroad for further studies. His father had told him that he needed some time to arrange the money as studying abroad calls for a huge expense. A wife of a TV mogul arrested for the murder of her daughter, who she claimed was her sister. The wifes second husband has now been arrested and so is her driver. But yet no one knows why Sheena Bora was killed more than two years ago. The 2008 Noida double murder of a teenage girl and a house help is one of Indias murkiest murder mysteries. Fourteen-year-old Aarushi Talwar was found murdered in her house on May 16, 2008. As the servant Hemraj went missing, he was the prime suspect in the case only till his decomposed body was discovered on the terrace, a day later. The case grabbed headlines as a whodunit story. Aarushis parents Dr Rajesh and Nupur Talwar both dentists were then looked at as prime suspects and were arrested. Rumour mills have been abuzz with theories of honour killing, the Talwars having extra-marital affairs, wife swapping and more. Residents of Faridabad, Pushpa Kohli paid her brother Kulwinder, a police officer, to kill her daughter Kiran. According to the police, Pushpa said she did it because her daughter drank, smoked and visited clubs. Kulwinder slit her throat. In 2014, Bhawna Yadav, who attended Sri Venkateswara College in Delhi, was killed days after marrying Abhishek, a Punjabi. Her parents, who were very conservative about inter-caste marriages, strangled their daughter rather than seeing her marry a Punjabi. Apparently, the mother strangled her while her father held her by the feet. Deepti Chhikara, a 26 year old school teacher, was married off to someone against her wishes. After she returned from her in-laws, within a month, her mother, brother and uncle strangled her to death and dumped her body in Roorkee, all in the name of honour. There are thousands of stories; these days, children are killing parents having no mercy and parents too are killing their own kids for different reasons. Husband killing wife and wife is killing husband. Human lives have become robotic. No emotions, no values and no gratitude. We are living a life of hidden monster. I find cases of people killing their parents very disturbing and unsettling. (This is the first part of the editorial and the remaining portion will continue tomorrow) (Any suggestions, comments or dispute with regards to this article send us on feedback@afternoonvoice.com) An Italian appeals court acquitted Giuseppe Orsi, the former president of defence and aerospace giant Finmeccanica, over charges of alleged bribes paid in exchange for a Rs 3,600 crore VVIP chopper deal to sell 12 AgustaWestland helicopters to the Indian government. Milans third court of appeal also acquitted Bruno Spagnolini, former CEO of the companys helicopters subsidiary AgustaWestland, who had also been handed a four-year jail term on the same charges, Italian news agency ANSA reported. Orsi was arrested in 2014 and resigned as chief executive of Finmeccanica, which was later renamed as Leonardo. He was at the helm of AgustaWestland when the deal was struck and was suspected of involvement in the payment of bribes. Orsi had been sentenced to four-and-a-half years in jail for false accounting and corruption. The case against Orsi and Spagnolini resulted from an investigation launched in 2012 into the sale of 12 luxury helicopters to India. The two were accused of international corruption and false invoicing in relation to bribes exchanged for the contract with India. Both were cleared on charges of committing international corruption at the first-instance trial in 2014 but convicted of false invoicing and sentenced to two years in prison. In Italy, criminal sentences are not usually considered definitive until the appeals process has been exhausted. Both appealed against the conviction, while the prosecution appealed against the acquittal on the corruption charge. In December 2016, the supreme court of cassation ordered a repeat of the appeals trial. India had scrapped the contract with Finmeccanicas British subsidiary AgustaWestland in January, 2014 for supplying 12 AW-101 VVIP choppers to the Indian Air Force over alleged breach of contractual obligations and charges of kickbacks paid by the firm for securing the deal. Indias defence ministry had ordered a CBI probe into allegations of kickbacks to the tune of Rs 362 crore after the arrest of Orsi and Spagnolini by Italian investigators in connection with the case. In 2010, India had inked the deal to acquire 12 three-engine AW-101 helicopters from AgustaWestland for VVIP use. In view of the corruption charges, India also barred Finmeccanica and its group companies from participating in any new programme of the defence ministry. The CBI in September last year charge sheeted former IAF Chief S P Tyagi in a Delhi court along with nine others for bribery in the case. They were charge sheeted for offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act and the IPC in the case relating to alleged bribery of Rs 450 crore. The CBI alleged there was an estimated loss of Euros 398.21 million (approximately Rs 2,666 crore) to the exchequer in the deal that was signed on February 8, 2010, for the supply of VVIP choppers worth Euros 556.262 million. Mutual funds will soon trade in the commodity derivatives, a move that will deepen this nascent market, a top official of industry body AMFI said. We will soon see some participation from mutual funds in the commodity markets. There has been some discussion about mutual fund participation into commodity markets. We will see some progress this year, Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) Chairman A Balasubramanian said. Currently, there are 42 mutual fund players with assets under management of over Rs 22 lakh crore. Sebi, in February last year, had said that mutual funds participation in commodities derivatives would be the first one to happen among institutional investors. Also, the markets regulator had said that it was in talks with the RBI to allow institutional investors like banks and FPIs to trade in the segment. Sebi, which started regulating commodity markets after the merger of Forward Markets Commission (FMC) with the regulator in September 2015, is working towards developing the commodities market by bringing in more products for participants like FPIs, insurance and mutual funds. A PIL challenging the Calcutta Universitys (CU) decision to honour West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee with a D. Litt has been filed before the Calcutta High Court and is likely to be heard on Wednesday. The CU has announced that it will bestow the honorary D. Litt on the Trinamool Congress (TMC) chief, an alumnus, for her contribution to social service at its convocation on January 11. We have filed a PIL, challenging the decision of the university on several grounds of her ineligibility which we will place before the high court during the hearing, lawyer Shamim Ahmed said on Tuesday. The petition claimed that the decision of the syndicate and senate of the university to honour Banerjee with a D. Litt was arbitrary and devoid of any proper reasoning. The members of the university senate are appointed by the state government, which is headed by Banerjee. The same people have decided to honour the chief minister with the honorary D. Litt, Ahmed claimed. The PIL will be moved before a spanision bench of Acting Chief Justice J Bhattacharya on Wednesday, he added. The convocation will be held at the Nazrul Mancha auditorium in south Kolkata, instead of the institutions own Centenary Hall on its College Street campus. The US government announced Monday the end of a special protected status for about 200,000 Salvadoran immigrants, a move that threatens with deportation tens of thousands of well-established families with children born in the United States. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen announced the end of the temporary protected status (TPS) granted to Salvadorans already in the United States in 2001, when two major earthquakes rocked the Central American country. They were given 18 months to leave or be deported, which officials said is enough time for a legislative solution to be crafted by Congress to allow them to stay. Only Congress can legislate a permanent solution addressing the lack of an enduring lawful immigration status of those currently protected by TPS, said the Department of Homeland Security. Part of a broader crackdown on illegal immigration by President Donald Trump, the move comes after 59,000 long time resident Haitians and 5,300 Nicaraguans were stripped of similar protections late last year, after having been allowed to set deep roots inside the United States for decades. Democrats in Congress are also fighting to protect the right to stay inside the US of 690,000 young immigrants known as Dreamers, people who arrived in the country as children. Trump has said he will back a compromise on the Dreamers if Congress budgets $18 billion to build an anti-immigrant wall along the border with Mexico. Canada said it wanted to make sure were ready for an influx of Salvadorans, in an effort to prevent the kind of massive flooding of the border that took place after the US ended protections for Haitians. Kurdish Forces Begin Confiscating Assyrian Homes in Northern Syria, Issue Ultimatums TABQA, Syria - The beloved poster children of Western media, politicians and imperialist leftists, the Kurdish-led and US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have begun confiscating empty houses and giving ultimatums to tenants in the northern Syrian town of Tabqa. The SDF is led and made up primarily of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG), who falsely present themselves as Marxist-Leninist's by posing with communist and Che Guevara flags but are completely reliant and supported by the American Empire. Reports of ethnic cleansing have been consistent in areas controlled by the SDF/YPG, with Arab villages entirely evacuated and re-inhabited by Kurdish settlers. In the most recent case in Tabqa, a city made up primarily of Arab Sunnis and a small Christian Assyrian minority, has seen SDF tyranny continue since they captured the site from ISIS in May 2017. Houses that were emptied by people escaping the fighting and SDF rule has seen their houses confiscated and taken over by the SDF-controlled Tabqa Council. In addition, people renting houses are being forces to pay their rent directly to the Tabqa Council and not the homeowners if the homeowners do not reside in SDF controlled areas. If they refuse to pay the council directly for the rent, then they have to evacuate the premises and leave for government-controlled areas of Syria. The Tabqa Council says that the newly vacant homes are to be given to the families of SDF fighters who have died in battle. The small Christian Assyrian minority of Tabqa who have left the city have chastised the Tabqa Council for "taking over" their homes, saying SDF aren not living up to their own propaganda of "Protecting minorities & Communal living," according to BBC journalist Riam Dalati who posted a photo of the Assyrian statement. The Assyrian minority in Syria have continually been the target of SDF aggression with several Assyrian militia-men targeted by Kurdish forces and killed without provocation over the years in Qamishli and Hasakeh cities in northeastern Syria. Turkey's Genocide of the Assyrians Was an Islamist Crime Assyrian Christians driven from homes in North Persia waiting beside a railroad to be transported to points of refuge, 1919. ( : Underwood & Underwood/Library of Congress) Just over a century ago this week, Turkish and Kurdish forces invaded land that the Assyrian people had inhabited since antiquity and began exterminating them. The slaughter that ensued lasted from 1915-1923, leaving 300,000 Assyrians dead and innumerable women abducted. Joseph Yacoub's Year of the Sword: the Assyrian Christian Genocide, published in French in 2014 and translated into English in 2016, is the most accessible historical account of the events that composed the genocide, as well as a comprehensive case for those events as genocide. Yacoub, emeritus professor of political science at the Catholic University of Lyon, provides a distillation of sources in the languages used by both the perpetrators of and witnesses to the genocide. Year of the Sword is necessary for the breadth and depth of scholarship that informs that distillation, as well as the careful marshaling of it into analysis. The Assyrian genocide formed one distinct yet indivisible chapter of a program of eradication that also encompassed the coeval Armenian and Greek genocides. The purpose was to put an end to the presence of all three Christian peoples in the territory that became the Republic of Turkey. The politics of the genocide were not the outgrowth of a robust nationalist ideology or tradition. (Turkish nationalism has always struggled to reconcile the need for an atavistic sense of racial origins, usually placed somewhere within Central Asia, and the need to subjugate and cohere territories in Asia Minor.) The Republic of Turkey was instead founded upon the application of violent jihad to the territorial boundaries of the emerging Turkish state. The Islamization of Turkey was inseparable from the establishment of its national sovereignty. Yacoub discusses political developments in the decades prior to the genocide: the draconian centralization of power in the flailing Ottoman caliphate under Sultan Hamid II (1876-1909), and the nationalism of the Young Turks who supplanted him and ushered in an era of genocide. This background is not treated as an inductive source of understanding, but rather a context. Yacoub's major focus is on detailing the act of killing.The methods of the Assyrian genocide were mass murder, pillage, and the rape and abduction of girls. Christian Pfander, the German-American Pastor of Urmia (in today's northwest Iran), wrote that "in the villages, the Kurds killed everyone they could get hold of." Assyrians were "hacked to death with axes and thrown into the river," or left "half-executed ... exposed to the sun," wrote Hyacinth Simon, a French missionary and author, since, as "one Kurd said: Our soil is too pure to act as a tomb for Christian dogs." Clergymen were subject to spectacular forms of torture: "The skin was flayed from another priest's head before his throat was cut." One priest was "tied to a pile of dry cow dung and burnt alive," another "stabbed to death as [he] knelt in prayer." In cities like Diyarbakir, sexual slavery meant being "passed from one Turk to another." In more remote terrain--the killing fields of Urmia and adjacent Hakkari--gunmen would "even sometimes rape young women who were dying." The American Medical Department in Urmia observed that "not a woman or girl above 12 (and some younger) ... escaped violation." Ascertaining the number of abducted Assyrian women has proved more elusive than establishing the death toll. Since "all the girls, women and children stolen by Turks were treated by them as Mahometans," mass abductions served the symbiotic purposes of depleting the Assyrian population and its capacity for replenishment and reproduction and expanding the size of the conquering Muslim groups. Yacoub's attention to evidence of central planning and orchestration--the most pivotal of the legal pillars of genocide recognition--is one of Year of the Sword's strongest legacies. Yacoub specifies a widely observed repetition of process to the killings. Key elements included the removal of men "to an unknown destination" and the reading aloud of an edict from the Ottoman state prior to executions and ("as sworn on the Koran") an injunction to remain silent about "acts committed by the executioners" and "the fate of those executed." That "all observers and witnesses confirm that the conduct of the Turkish authorities was motivated by a premeditated, defined and criminal objective," argues Yacoub, confirms that "the driving force was not in the mountains but in the capital." Discussion of potential responses to the genocide accompanied the spreading of news. Yacoub is excellent in mapping the network of institutions and actors involved in deciding the fate of the surviving Assyrians. Soon after their emergence as a national political entity in the modern sense, Assyrians sought to overcome the circumscribing hostility of their neighbors through outreach to the West. They were met with the reality that whatever sense of geographically expansive Christendom still existed in Europe was rapidly dwindling, and would disappear forever with World War I. One of the most telling individual lines in Year of the Sword speaks of Assyrian authors writing in their native Assyrian Aramaic: "Every author, without exception, expresses a sense of shock that Germany and Austria, two Christian countries, could have found themselves on the same side as Turkey during the war." A hope for Christian solidarity from the West--which in the 19th century formed the basis of external Assyrian political and institutional engagement--shaded into a prayer-like approach to the international community. From the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 to the present day, Assyrians have been entrapped within systems of appeal and recourse to western powers, fuelled by a deep and tragic belief that the moral legitimacy of the Assyrian cause will finally be rewarded. Calls for a "safe haven" and "international protection" dominated Assyrian activist and advocacy efforts following the 2014 Islamic State invasion of the Nineveh Plain in Iraq, the last nexus of substantial Assyrian demographic concentration in the Middle East. It is deeply significant that Raphael Lemkin explicitly linked his novel category of genocide (among whose victims he listed "Christian Assyrians" ) with the notion of international protection. The nation-state had created a brand of group massacre particular to its form, whose redress had to come through the moral power and legislated interventions of international institutions. A lack of resources and state legitimacy following the genocide contributes to the ongoing failure (with some exceptions) by Assyrians to obtain recognition of it, a reward for its successful perpetration. The U.S. State Department EU Parliament , and other bodies did, however, designate the more recent crimes of ISIS as genocide. In this case, the designation focused on the intention of the perpetrators and was not defined by the suffering of the victims, which consisted of an enumeration of religious groups, including Christians. No specific measures seeking to empower Assyrians followed the designation. Genocide aims to erase the past in order to open a future free of its burdens. In Hakkari, the perpetrators were almost entirely successful in this aim. After thousands of years of continuous settlement by Assyrians, Hakkari exists today predominantly in a state of wilderness. Scattered ruins of churches--some 250 Assyrian churches and monasteries were destroyed--are quiet monuments to a genocide intimately remembered by its sons and daughters in Europe, yet largely unknown to the descendants of its perpetrators. Local Kurds often profess a lack of knowledge or curiosity as to why a Christian grandmother is listed on their ID cards. A local tradition of confusing crosses etched onto the stone of Assyrian churches with instructions to dig for treasure incites the exhumation of graves for personal enrichment, in a parody of excavation aimed at the recovery of the past. Turkey refuses to acknowledge any genocide on its own soil. President Recep Erdogan, who recently described the persecution of Muslims in Myanmar as genocide, said in 2009 that "it is impossible for Muslims to commit genocide." Kurdish nationalist leaders continue to persecute Assyrians while occasionally invoking the events of the genocide as a way to underscore the need for an independent Kurdish state, dominated by the particular leadership making the invocation. Yacoub makes it clear that Kurds responded "enthusiastically under the planned and concerted direction of the Turkish authorities" to the call of "holy war proclaimed in Kurdistan" a century ago. Yet in a part of the world where martyrs are stacked like currency for claims made on the present, it is no surprise that the legacy of the Assyrian genocide, like ownership of the land that hosted it, is still up for grabs. Share Article Two Afghan Air Force A-29 maintainers work on a Super Tucano at Kabul Air Wing, Afghanistan, in July. Air Force photo by TSgt. Veronica Pierce The Air Forces mission to train the Afghan Air Force has taken major steps, but the US training mission does not have a plan to define its mission, a Pentagon investigation finds. The Defense Department Inspector General, in a report released Jan. 4, states the US Train Advise Assist Command-Air mission in Afghanistan has recently achieved notable accomplishments in three areas: A-29 Super Tucano mission performance, night vision capability, and air-ground integration. These accomplishments came through the TAAC-Air winter training plan, between October 2016 and April 2017. The Afghan Air Force continues to expand its capabilities and missions sets in support of the Afghan National Army corps, the report states. Both US advisors and Afghan National Army leaders have expressed growing confidence in the Afghan Air Force, which results in the Afghan National Army requesting more Afghan Air Force support. However, US advisers cannot measure the Afghan Air Forces progress toward a defined end-state. While TAAC-Air has a mission statement of developing a professional, capable, and sustainable force, it doesnt have associated metrics to measure this progress, the report states. The training command also does not integrate its planning with Operation Resolute Supports overall campaign plans. This lack of integration can result in inefficient and potentially ineffective use of US and Coalition resources as incoming advisors perform train, advise, and assist activities that may not align with either TAAC-Airs or [NATO Air Training Command-Afghanistan]s envisioned end state, according to the report. Without focused development, the Afghan Air Force may lack the desired skills, capabilities, or capacities necessary to support [Afghan National Defense Security Force] operations, which would prevent the United States and the Coalition form transferring important functions to Afghan control. In a response to the report, the training command agreed with the assessment and is planning to include lines of effort and a set of metrics that measure the development of the Afghan Air Forces capabilities and capacities. Lee Roop | lroop@al.com Alabama's road to securing the $1.6 billion Toyota Mazda manufacturing plant involved an huge corporate partnership, a multi-state search and a lot of other factors. Since the initial announcement last August, speculation settled early that the factory might land somewhere within the state's borders. But where? And how? Here's a look back at how we arrived as the announcement. Don't Edit Lee Roop | lroop@al.com On Aug. 4, 2017, Toyota and Mazda announced a joint venture - to build a $1.6 billion manufacturing plant in the U.S., expected to create as many as 4,000 jobs. While the companies did not announce a location for the plant, Toyota said it will build the Corolla, the world's most popular sedan, while Mazda will focus on crossovers. The plant could produce about 300,000 cars a year. As part of the venture, Toyota and Mazda said they will both buy 5 percent of each other's shares and use the partnership to develop technologies for electric vehicles and autonomous drive, or self-driving vehicles. Don't Edit William Thornton | wthornton@al.com But is there room for another major automotive plant in Alabama? That question came into focus early on. Alabama is already the fifth largest automobile producing state in the U.S., home to the Mercedes-Benz, Honda and Hyundai plants, as well as a Toyota engine manufacturing plant in Huntsville. Employment in the automotive sector tops 57,000, with 25,000 jobs in the automotive supplier chains among more than 160 companies. At least one analyst said yes, but said incentives would play a role. Don't Edit Toyota Within a week of the initial announcement, Alabama was identified as one of 11 states on the short list for Toyota-Mazda. The Wall Street Journal quoted people familiar with the project say the companies are eying possible sites in Alabama, Florida, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas. Don't Edit William Thornton | wthornton@al.com Ben Baxter a Dothan native, wrote early on that Dothan ought to have a shot. His case: Along the Florida panhandle just minutes from Dothan, the 2,240-acre Florida-Alabama Mega Site is available and ready to attract large manufacturers like Toyota and Mazda. According to the Florida-Alabama Mega Site website, the land plot is ideally situated for highway, railroad, and water transportation. Don't Edit Don't Edit William Thornton | wthornton@al.com The new plant will require about 1,000 acres, as a second assembly line has been added to the projected plant. There are 13 industrial sites in Alabama that have that kind of acreage, with each occupying a different sector. Don't Edit Matt Wake | mwake@al.com North Alabama emerged early on as a possible destination. USA Today quoted Montgomery Mayor Todd Strange as saying that if the plant comes here, North Alabama is the "more likely area." The project is reportedly needing about 1,000 acres, and there are several sites that could fit the bill. What other aspects favored Alabama? The paper stated Alabama has a bustling auto sector and low cost labor in a right-to-work state "desperate for good paying jobs." Don't Edit Lee Roop | lroop@al.com By October, the picture began to clear. According to Bloomberg, Toyota Motor Corp. and Mazda Motor Corp. want an incentive package of at least $1 billion to get the sought-after factory. The Japanese carmakers reportedly positioned themselves to drive a hard bargain with states with a prize estimated at 4,000 jobs. Don't Edit JOE SONGER Going back to 1993, when Alabama lured Mercedes-Benz to build the first auto factory in Alabama, the state has been aggressive in going after big targets with incentives. Here's a look at past packages. Don't Edit William Thornton | wthornton@al.com State officials have been tight-lipped about the state's chances, but Gov. Kay Ivey was asked about them during an announcement of a $1 billion expansion at Mercedes. Her response was that "we'll be welcoming any automotive producer that wants to locate here." Don't Edit Don't Edit Paul Gattis | pgattis@al.com Toyota is investing $106 million in expanding its Huntsville plant. In an announcement last September, plant President David Fernandes said the expansion was an endorsement of the area. . "This is the new Toyota global architect engine so that platform is a future business for Toyota. That platform are the engines with the highest technology and the best designed engines. This is our new technology. Don't Edit William Thornton | wthornton@al.com What do some of the state's existing automakers think of its chances to snag another major manufacturer? That question came up in December at a forum involving the heads of those plants. Alabamians have been making vehicles here for 20 years, since the start of production at Mercedes-Benz in 1997. Now the state is home to three auto plants and one Toyota engine plant. Don't Edit Paul Gattis | pgattis@al.com A Toyota executive told Reuters in early December that the companies planned to announce a site for their new $1.6 billion auto plant in the first quarter of 2018. "The final decision has not been made," Jim Lentz, chief executive of Toyota North America, was quoted as saying. Don't Edit John Talty | jtalty@al.com During a trip to Japan, President Donald Trump met with Japanese auto officials and alluded to the project. "Toyota and Mazda where are you? Are you here, anybody? Toyota? Mazda? I thought so. Oh, I thought that was you. That's big stuff. Congratulations. Come on, let me shake your hand. (Applause.) They're going to invest $1.6 billion in building a new manufacturing plant, which will create as many as 4,000 new jobs in the United States. Thank you very much. Appreciate it." (Photo via Associated Press) Don't Edit )^ The speculation about Alabama's chances came in the midst of a contentious U.S. Senate campaign, which was rocked by allegations involving Republican candidate Roy Moore. This was after more than a year of scandal in Montgomery, involving former Gov. Robert Bentley. The atmosphere made some question whether the headlines might scuttle the state's hopes of getting the plant. Don't Edit Don't Edit Joe Songer | jsonger@al.com Shortly after winning the U.S. Senate seat for Alabama, Doug Jones was enlisted in the hunt for Toyota-Mazda. At a press conference the day after his election, he said he "got a call earlier about maybe trying to get involved in helping... involving the Toyota plant." (Joe Songer | jsonger@al.com). Don't Edit Eric Schultz In December, a 1,252-acre tract of farmland in Limestone County's unincorporated Greenbrier community was identified as the site where Toyota-Mazda might locate their $1.6 billion plant, should the companies decide to build it in Alabama. The area, off Powell Road and Greenbrier Road, was passed over by Volkswagen in 2008 in favor of Chattanooga. Since then, it has been certified as a TVA Megasite, and an Advantage Alabama site by the Economic Development Partnership of Alabama. (Eric Schultz/eschultz@al.com) Don't Edit William Thornton | wthornton@al.com Mazda is expected to produce crossovers. But how will that look? Mazda CEO Masamichi Kogai said in December the crossover will be designed and built exclusively for the U.S. market. The company plans to initially dedicate its entire capacity of 150,000 units at the plant to the vehicle. "We have big expectations," Kogai was quoted as saying of the new vehicle. "We are actually going to introduce a totally new and different type of SUV. R&D is coordinating with our North American operations on that right now." Don't Edit Kelly Kazek | kkazek@al.com In a November survey by Development Counsellors International (DCI), 69 consultants were surveyed on the states with the best chance to lure Toyota-Mazda. The results were based on an earlier report from the Wall Street Journal, which named 11 states as being in the running for the manufacturing plant. Alabama placed fifth. Don't Edit Lee Roop | lroop@al.com What has Alabama done to prepare? The Huntsville city council last month began the process of creating a special tax district that would include the possible Toyota Mazda plant site that would accelerate infrastructure for the area. Huntsville's city hall is a tight-lipped organization when it comes to pursuing economic development projects. Don't Edit Don't Edit Lucy Berry | lberry@al.com Currently, more than 57,000 Alabamians are employed in the auto industry, counting its three vehicle assembly plants and engine plants, as well as more than 150 Tier 1 and 2 automotive suppliers. That number would only grow with a new player. The future of the automotive industry as a whole also comes into play. Toyota is reimagining its global portfolio, creating lighter, easier-to-build vehicles with new advanced features and powertrains. Don't Edit Lucy Berry | lberry@al.com North Carolina lost out to Alabama because it does not have the supply chain logistics that the car companies want, according to the Charlotte News Observer. A formal announcement of the companies' plans is expected Wednesday. A second teen is in custody in the deadly shooting of an 18-year-old in Gadsden. Kalab Blake Whitworth, 16, was taken into custody Monday, said Gadsden police Sgt. John Hallman. Whitworth was booked into the Etowah County Detention Center at 6:24 p.m. and is held without bond, jail records show. Police on Monday announced formal charges against 17-year-old Tyler Michael Abbot. Abbot, of Hanceville, and Whitworth, of Gadsden are both charged with capital murder in the Jan. 4 shooting death of 18-year-old Aaron Joe Huff. The shooting happened just before 8 p.m. on Thursday. Hallman said officers responded to the area of Hoke Street and Litchfield Avenue on a call of gunfire in the area. They also were notified by Gadsden Region Hospital that a victim had arrived with a gunshot wound. Authorities said Huff and Abbott knew each other and had met in a nearby parking lot just prior to the shooting. They had some kind of altercation, but both left in separate vehicles. The vehicle Huff was in stopped at an intersection, and Abbott and Whitworth were in the vehicle behind him. That's when someone got out of the vehicle and shot Huff. The driver of Huff's vehicle drove him to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead a short time later. Huff was one of two people killed in unrelated homicides in just a four-day span. Kevin L. Winston, 48, was killed on Sunday. That shooting happened about 4:10 p.m. Sunday. Gadsden police responded to a call of shots fired in the 2800 block of Shahan Avenue where they found Winston slumped over in the back seat of a vehicle suffering from a gunshot wound, Hallman said. Medics pronounced the victim dead on the scene. Investigators were able to identify a 59-year-old man as the suspect. His name has not yet been released by police. He is being held without bond pending a formal charge of capital murder. Also during that time period, a 10-year-old girl and an 18-year-old male were wounded when a shootout erupted Saturday night. Qhiniyia Hester is in critical but stable condition after being airlifted to Children's of Alabama, said her grandmother Ingrid Chacha. "She's doing Ok. She's stable and alert,'' Chacha said. "She knows what happened." Gadsden police late Monday afternoon announced the arrest of two men in connection with the shooting. Jakerious Shauntez McKenzie, 19, and Jaquan Lamar Fomby, 21, are charged with two counts of attempted murder. Both are from Talladega and are being held in the Etowah County Jail. Qhiniyia and an 18-year-old male were both wounded in the Saturday night incident. Two other shootings in the city - one on Wednesday and one on Sunday - left two men dead in unrelated incidents. Aaron Huff, 18, was fatally shot on Jan. 3, and Kevin L. Winston, 48, was killed on Sunday. The spate of violence prompted Gadsden Mayor Sherman Guyton to address to the bloodshed on Monday afternoon. "With the events occurring in our city over the last week, I feel compelled to speak out against the senseless violence. The Gadsden Police Department has been working virtually around the clock to identify those responsible for committing these crimes,'' he said in a prepared statement. "I commend our officers for their quick response and outstanding work identifying and arresting the suspects in these cases." "I feel confident that these are isolated incidents that do not represent who we are as a community,'' Guyton said. "We will do whatever is necessary to keep the citizens of Gadsden safe." A second teen is in custody in the shooting of an 18-year-old in Gadsden. Kalab Blake Whitworth, 16, was taken into custody Monday, said Gadsden police Sgt. John Hallman. Whitworth was booked into the Etowah County Detention Center at 6:24 p.m. and is held without bond, jail records show. Police on Monday announced formal charges against 17-year-old Tyler Michael Abbot. Abbot, of Hanceville, and Whitworth, of Gadsden are both charged with capital murder in the Jan. 4 shooting death of 18-year-old Aaron Joe Huff. The shooting happened just before 8 p.m. on Thursday. Hallman said officers responded to the area of Hoke Street and Litchfield Avenue on a call of gunfire in the area. They also were notified by Gadsden Region Hospital that a victim had arrived with a gunshot wound. Authorities said Huff and Abbott knew each other and had met in a nearby parking lot just prior to the shooting. They had some kind of altercation, but both left in separate vehicles. The vehicle Huff was in stopped at an intersection, and Abbott and Whitworth were in the vehicle behind him. That's when someone got out of the vehicle and shot Huff. The driver of Huff's vehicle drove him to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead a short time later. Huff was one of two people killed in unrelated homicides in just a four-day span. Kevin L. Winston, 48, was killed on Sunday. That shooting happened about 4:10 p.m. Sunday. Gadsden police responded to a call of shots fired in the 2800 block of Shahan Avenue where they found Winston slumped over in the back seat of a vehicle suffering from a gunshot wound, Hallman said. Medics pronounced the victim dead on the scene. Investigators were able to identify a 59-year-old man as the suspect. His name has not yet been released by police. He is being held without bond pending a formal charge of capital murder. Also during that time period, a 10-year-old girl and an 18-year-old male were wounded when a shootout erupted Saturday night. Qhiniyia Hester is in critical but stable condition after being airlifted to Children's of Alabama, said her grandmother Ingrid Chacha. "She's doing Ok. She's stable and alert,'' Chacha said. "She knows what happened." Gadsden police late Monday afternoon announced the arrest of two men in connection with the shooting. Jakerious Shauntez McKenzie, 19, and Jaquan Lamar Fomby, 21, are charged with two counts of attempted murder. Both are from Talladega and are being held in the Etowah County Jail. Qhiniyia and an 18-year-old male were both wounded in the Saturday night incident. Two other shootings in the city - one on Wednesday and one on Sunday - left two men dead in unrelated incidents. Aaron Huff, 18, was fatally shot on Jan. 3, and Kevin L. Winston, 48, was killed on Sunday. The spate of violence prompted Gadsden Mayor Sherman Guyton to address to the bloodshed on Monday afternoon. "With the events occurring in our city over the last week, I feel compelled to speak out against the senseless violence. The Gadsden Police Department has been working virtually around the clock to identify those responsible for committing these crimes,'' he said in a prepared statement. "I commend our officers for their quick response and outstanding work identifying and arresting the suspects in these cases." "I feel confident that these are isolated incidents that do not represent who we are as a community,'' Guyton said. "We will do whatever is necessary to keep the citizens of Gadsden safe." Three more suspects - including two teens - have been arrested in the slayings of a Blount County couple whose remains were found last week in a shallow grave after they vanished in December. Blount County District Attorney Pamela Casey and sheriff's officials on Tuesday announced the arrest the latest suspects. One of them is a 17-year-old Locust Fork teen. Because of his age, his name wasn't released by officials, but court records identify him as Jose Gamaliel Villanueva. He is charged as an adult with two counts of capital murder during a robbery, and one count of capital murder of two or more people in the same act. Villanueva also is charged with two counts of corpse abuse for disposing the bodies of Ricardo Santiago Gonzalez and Adalberta Chavez Ruiz in the crude grave. He was arrested Jan. 5. On Jan. 8, 20-year-old Jose Guevara-Valadez, of Fultondale was taken into custody. He is charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit murder and two counts of corpse abuse. Casey said a 14-year-old boy also is in custody and charged with one count of capital murder. His name is not being released because he is a juvenile. Gonzalez and Adalberta Chavez were discovered missing on Saturday, Dec. 16, by family members who were concerned about their welfare. They went to the couple's home in Cleveland and found blood inside the trailer, authorities. That's when lawmen were notified, and the family began a search of their own that has spanned weeks and countless hours. Leo Chavez The investigation led them to the slain couple's son, 17-year-old Leo Chavez, who was charged on Dec. 19 even before the bodies of his parents were found. Two of the charges are for the deaths of his parents during a robbery and the third capital charges is for the murder of two or more people at one time. He remains held in the Blount County Jail without bond. The couple's missing pickup truck was later found in Chattanooga. According to an affidavit made public Tuesday afternoon, Valadez drove Villanueva and the unnamed 14-year-old to the Covered Bridge Road home where Gonzalez, Chavez and their teen son lived. The records state Villanueva and the 14-year-old had discussed killing the couple prior to going inside. Valadez stayed in the vehicle while his friends went into the home. He then heard gunshots, and was instructed to go into the house. Once inside, Valadez saw Gonzalez on the couch. He had been shot. Adalberta Chavez was lying on the floor, also having been shot. Valadez told authorities he was threatened by the other three young men that if he didn't assist, he too would be killed. The group wrapped the bodies in garbage bags and drove to a wooded area where they used shovels to dig the graves. Valadez told lawmen the bodies were moved in the white truck. He was able to tell investigators the position of the bodies as they were located in the grave, the affidavit says. He also told them they tried to clean up the crime scene. A motive in the case has not yet been disclosed. Then, on Jan. 3, 2018, authorities recovered the slain couple's bodies in a wooded area off Sims Road in the Straight Mountain area. A tip led lawmen to the scene. Blount County Sheriff's Lt. Leonard Chambless has been the lead investigator in this case, a probe that extended all the way to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where authorities recovered Gonzalez's Chevrolet pickup truck. Casey lauded the work of Chambless and the other sheriff's investigators for their efforts on the case. "These officers worked a number of long days and late nights to solve this case and recover the bodies of our victims," Casey said Tuesday. She also praised the work of the Center for Applied Sciences with Jacksonville State University for their recovery of the bodies. "The families of the deceased organized large search parties and covered miles of territory in an effort to find their loved ones,'' she said. "It has been very fulfilling to work with this family to bring some closure to this tragic event and allow them to honor their loved ones with the dignity of a proper burial and service." Casey said she would also like to thank the members of the community who volunteered their time and resources to assist this family in their search. "This community's willingness to come together in support of each other during such tragedies,'' she said, "is just one of the things that makes Blount County such a special place." Birmingham police are investigating a shooting after a man with a gunshot wound arrived at UAB Hospital on Monday night. Details are limited at this time, but Lt. Sean Edwards said the victim was shot in the 2300 block of Mayfield Avenue Southwest. The victim is in surgery at UAB. His current condition is unknown. The motive is unknown and a suspect has not been arrested. This story will be updated once more information is released. Baldwin County is joining the wave of litigation against opioid manufacturers and distributors, and should it see any proceeds from a favorable ruling or settlement, county leaders hope to fund increased law enforcement efforts. Last week the Baldwin County Commission approved a resolution that cleared the way for a civil complaint against manufacturers and distributors of prescription opioid pain relievers. On Tuesday, Commission Chairman Chris Elliott and Baldwin County Sheriff Hoss Mack jointly discussed the motivations for the suit and hopes for its outcome. Both said that the national opioid addiction epidemic has cost Baldwin County millions of dollars, particularly as it has struggled to handle with the number of addicted inmates in its jail. Mack said that just as in other parts of the country, prescription drug abuse has fueled an increase in heroin use, with signs that heroin users are turning to mixtures featuring the even more powerful drug fentanyl. "We are seeing an alarming number of prescriptions and frankly of individual pills that are entering Baldwin County and are costing taxpayers an enormous amount of money," said Ellliott. "We're tracking about a 56 percent increase in the use of heroin," said Mack. He added that addicts also will turn to methamphetamine when heroin isn't available, so those numbers are up as well. Elliot said the costs went far beyond prison healthcare, but that provided one measure for gauging the severity and cost of the problem. Mack estimated that 10 to 15 percent of those booked into jail had an addiction problem, and that anytime an inmate had to receive emergency hospital treatment for overdose or withdrawal the bill could easily top $5,000. Elliott said it was his understanding that the actual suit had not yet been filed, though it would be soon in federal district court in Mobile. Elliott said he expected it to be similar to numerous other suits filed around the country. Similar suits already have been filed by Birmingham, Mobile and several smaller Alabama cities; some counties; and medical institutions including Mobile-based Infirmary Health. Some of those are among scores of suits that have been rolled into a multi-district litigation process being handled in Cleveland, before Judge Dan A. Polster in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. On Tuesday, Elliott and Mack reiterated a line of reasoning common to the cases: That drug manufacturers and distributors over-marketed potent painkillers, misleading doctors and the public about their addictive potential, and also failed to cut off the flow of drugs in cases where the consumption rate was high enough to be suspicious. Hospitals, states, cities and counties complain that this, in turn, saddled them with costs for which the makers and distributors should be liable. The companies, meanwhile, have argued that they've done nothing wrong. Distributors, for example, say they operate in a highly regulated environment in which manufactures provide the drugs, doctors prescribe them and the DEA keeps close watch. Elliot said it was costing the county nothing to file its suit, and acknowledged that any return could be months or years in the future. In the short term, Mack said that he was assigning a narcotics officer to focus strictly on prescription drug abuse and related heroin abuse, and to serve as a liaison to the DEA. In the long term, Mack and Elliott said they were eager to funnel a significant portion of any money from the case to beefing up local enforcement. They said that while they believed most medical professionals were responsible, they wanted to crack down on doctors and dentists who cater to addicts with excessive prescriptions. "I think you will see more of those to come," said Elliott. Asked if he expects that the Baldwin County suit will be swept up among the others being consolidated in Ohio, Elliot said "I think that's a possibility." Controversial former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio is running for U.S. Senate to replace retiring Republican Senator Jeff Flake. Arpaio announced his candidacy via Twitter. I am running for the U.S. Senate from the Great State of Arizona, for one unwavering reason: to support the agenda and policies of President Donald Trump in his mission to Make America Great Again. https://t.co/ANppBdDOtp Sheriff Joe Arpaio (@RealSheriffJoe) January 9, 2018 Arpaio, 85, was the long-time sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona who gained national attention for his tough stances on immigration and his questions about former President Barack Obama's birth certificate, which he claimed was forged. Arpaio lost his 2016 reelection bid and, in 2017, was convicted of criminal contempt of court for violating a judge's order related to immigration round-ups. Arpaio was pardoned by President Trump in 2017. Flake, a vocal critic of the president, announced in October 2017 he would not seek reelection. When announcing his decision, Flake defended his criticism of Trump. "If I have been critical, it not because I relish criticizing the behavior of the president of the United States. If I have been critical, it is because I believe that it is my obligation to do so, as a matter of duty and conscience," he said. Steve Bannon is stepping down from Breitbart News Network. Bannon, who served as executive chairman of the news site since 2012, announced his departure on the Breitbart website. "I'm proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplished in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform," Bannon said. Breitbart said Bannon would work with the site for an "orderly transition." "Steve is a valued part of our legacy, and we will always be grateful for his contributions, and what he has helped us to accomplish," Breitbart CEO Larry Solov said. The departure comes as onetime White House chief strategist had found himself the subject of criticism from President Trump over statements Bannon allegedly made to Michael Wolff, publisher of "Fire & Fury: Inside the Trump White House." Bannon was quoted as saying the 2016 meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and a group of Russians was "treasonous" and that the president's son would "crack like an egg" under an investigation. Bannon had also been criticized for his role in the campaign of controversial Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore. Moore, who faced accusations of improper sexual contact with teenage girls in the 1970s, lost to Democrat Doug Jones, the first GOP U.S. Senate loss in Alabama in two decades. The controversy began, as nearly everything in Washington, DC, does these days with a tweet. The New Year had barely dawned over the eastern United States when President Donald Trump shot out a nasty warning to Pakistan. The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, complained the US president, ending his missive with the ominous warning, They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with little help. No more! In a testy State Department briefing the next day, a spokeswoman emphasised that Pakistan must do more to earn the aid that the US was giving. Before Pakistani leaders could hand in assurances, the sword fell. On January 4, the State Department announced that it was suspending security aid to the country, estimated to amount to roughly $1.3bn. The threat and even the actual cutting of security aid to Pakistan is not a new strategy; it has periodically been deployed by previous US presidents, with mixed results. The aid freeze under Trump, however, is particularly troublesome for two reasons. First, the unpredictable nature of the Trump presidency, its lack of a cohesive foreign policy, Trumps keen desire to appear the tough guy and his childish aversion to reversing any of his diktats mean that there may be little chance of the decision being reversed. In Trumps view that would be a sign of weakness and hence cannot happen. Second, while analysts have made much of Pakistans ability to turn to powers other than the United States to make up for the aid lost, few have considered the possibility that it may be one of these other allies that may have persuaded the US to ditch Pakistan in an effort to make the latter more dependent on them. One likely suspect for this role would be Saudi Arabia, whose close connections to the Trump administration are well known and which would benefit from increased Pakistani dependence. Two wars on terror Unlike all of Trumps other terrible tweets, the admonition to Pakistan has been at least partially hailed by Washington pundits who have made careers on playing the do more game with Pakistan. Many of them know that there are two definitions of the war on terror at play here, each dictated by geography rather than any noble ideological commitment to fight terrorism: one as the US imagines it and one as Pakistan lives it. The US in Afghanistan wants to eliminate terrorism and end the insurgency; it wants a declarable victory and a happy return of its troops back home. Pakistan, on the other hand, cannot go anywhere. It is stuck with active extremists, retired extremists, and the regional players (India and China). While Pakistan can and should do more to fight terror, there may be some truth to what some within the Pakistani security circles are saying: that you can fight terror, but you can never really eliminate it. Given the nature of extremism, terrorist groups, once disbanded, can simply re-emerge with another name and another local or regional sponsor. After all, terrorism is part of the political game. None of that, of course, can be explained to the tweeting enthusiast in Washington, DC. If the material in the recently released book Fire and Fury is to be believed, he doesnt, listen or read. He does, however, like to be feted and flattered. In the past few months, no country has done this better than Saudi Arabia, whose rulers delighted Trump on his maiden presidential voyage by projecting giant pictures of him on tall Riyadh buildings and treating him like the monarch he imagines himself to be. While US presidents have always been close to Saudi Arabia, this level of love is certainly not the norm. A vassals predicament This connects directly to Pakistans conundrums. In late November, six months or so after Trump made the trip to Riyadh and hailed the kingdom as the vanguard in the fight against terrorism, the inaugural meeting of the Saudi-funded and Pakistani-led Islamic Military Counter Terror Coalition was held. A few weeks after that, legislators in Pakistans senate demanded that the government provide more clarifications about the militarys role in the coalition. Unfortunately, the parliament is kept in the dark, and we do not know under what terms and conditions Pakistan has agreed to be a part of this coalition, complained one Pakistani legislator. Pakistans foreign policy position has always been to maintain neutrality between Saudi Arabia and Iran. A few months earlier, Sartaj Aziz, the prime ministers adviser, had been summoned to the Senate, and the terms of reference of the agreement with Saudi Arabia were demanded. None were provided. It is useful to remember here that in the past Pakistan has denied military assistance to Saudi Arabia because of lack of support by the civilian government. There are, of course, many other countries, India and Afghanistan among them, which have long lobbied for an end to security aid to Pakistan. That, however, has been a static condition, long existing and ever-present. This new one speaks to a world in which alliances are transforming, and the US is retreating. Its unlikely that Saudi Arabia felt threatened by a few Pakistani legislators who arent happy with the new status of the military as Riyadhs army for hire. At the same time, one way to ensure that a vassal state remains one is to ensure that it has no means of turning away and that its dependence is complete. This summer there will be elections in Pakistan. The drama of another shutdown of the border with Afghanistan (like the one in 2012) may play well into the theatrics of the moment. Nothing gets ordinary Pakistanis more fired up than the opportunity to thumb their noses at the US, denial of military aid be damned. The only problem with this plan is that in the past it was Pakistan that was the bastion of instability, its chaos so threatening to the policy wonks watching in Washington. In a bizarre turn, this may not be the case in 2018. The Pakistan-Afghanistan border may be shut down and the supplies to US troops in Afghanistan suddenly cut, but such is the chaos in Washington that no one may notice. The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeeras editorial policy. Earlier this month, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn announced plans to release political prisoners in a surprise move the government says aims to foster national reconciliation. The prime minister also declared that the government would close the Maekelawi detention facility in Addis Ababa, which has been considered one of the countrys most notorious police stations since its construction in the 1970s. While the international community welcomed the governments unexpected announcement as a step in the right direction, many in Ethiopia, especially civil society and political organisations, took the news with a grain of salt. The obvious question many are asking is: What is in it for the government and why now? Perhaps the answer partially lies in the fact that Ethiopia is host to a very important African powerhouse the African Union (AU). The AU has long been trying to disentangle itself from Africas poor human rights record, including systematic suppression of basic rights and detention without trial of political prisoners. Ethiopia is currently seen as an impediment to these ambitions. Over the years, the Ethiopian government has repeatedly failed to deliver basic services to its citizens and protect their fundamental human rights and freedoms. In this context, it is understandable for the Ethiopian government to try and live up to its responsibilities as a founding member of the AU, by promising to release thousands of political prisoners. But there is certainly more to this recent announcement than an honest desire to please the AU and improve the countrys human rights record. An attempt to curb foreign interference In the past few decades, the Ethiopian government has marginalised several ethnic groups by allowing a single ethnic group, Tigrayans, to dominate the political sphere. This has resulted in deep-seated, widespread dissatisfaction with the political establishment, and has caused occasional flare-ups of protest. The government, rather than starting a dialogue with these marginalised communities, tried to suppress dissent by force. According to Amnesty International, the government of Ethiopia has engaged in a crackdown on the political opposition which has resulted in mass arbitrary arrests, torture and other ill-treatment, unfair trials and violations of the rights to freedom of expression and association. This has led to a number of armed groups forming and waging war against the government of Ethiopia. {articleGUID} The most prominent among these groups is the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF). Since 1984, the ONLF has been fighting for an independent homeland for ethnic Somalis in the region known as Ogaden, in eastern Ethiopia. Another one of these groups is the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), which was established in 1973 to promote self-determination for the Oromo people. The Oromo people are the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, however, their economic and political participation remains minuscule. Over the years, both organisations have managed to establish support beyond the borders of Ethiopia. The Ethiopian government has repeatedly accused neighbouring Eritrea of supporting the ONLF, and Somalia of providing equipment as well as moral and organisational support to armed groups in the Ogaden region. This foreign interference has damaged the national cohesion in Ethiopia and hindered the governments efforts to improve the economic, social and political conditions in the country. By promising to release political prisoners, many of whom have been imprisoned for their alleged support for these organisations, the government of Ethiopia is extending an olive branch to the countrys marginalised communities. This gesture of goodwill may lead to an easing of tensions and give the government an opportunity to concentrate its resources on Ethiopias new economic and political interests in the region. A possible truce with the ONLF and the OLF will serve to counter any attempts by the governments of Eritrea and Somalia to intervene in Ethiopias domestic politics. By positioning itself to start direct political negotiations with these groups, Addis Ababa will finally have a chance to derail efforts by its neighbours to create conflict within the borders of Ethiopia. A mega dam project Another reason behind Ethiopias sudden decision to release political prisoners may be its determination to complete an ambitious construction project, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, without hindrance. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, formerly known as the Millennium Dam, is a gravity dam on the Blue Nile River in Ethiopia that has been under construction since 2011. It is in the Benishangul-Gumuz Region of Ethiopia, about 15 km east of the border with Sudan. The dam will be the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa when completed, and the seventh largest in the world. It is expected to solve Ethiopias ongoing energy crisis and help the country expedite its development. Ethiopia needs to ensure that the construction of the dam is completed without any disturbances. It is therefore in the interest of the country and its main investor, China to make truce with the ONLF and OLF at this time. Also, the dam project may ignite another confrontation between Egypt and Ethiopia in the coming days. Egypt has long been at odds with Ethiopia over the $4.8bn megaproject, with Cairo fearing that the dams position may affect its access to water from the Nile River basin, which will feed the dam. Therefore, as Ethiopia prepares itself for the completion of this monumental project, it is forced to re-evaluate threats and priorities. Addis Ababas sudden decision to release political prisoners is not only a necessary move aiming to fix the countrys human rights record, but also an important chapter in a complex political strategy. Ethiopia is prepared to make truce with its internal dissenters in a bid to end foreign interference in the countrys domestic affairs, and ensure the swift completion and smooth operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeeras editorial policy. Over $1 trillion is stolen from the worlds poorest countries every year, threatening security, health and democracy. More than a trillion dollars are stolen from the worlds poorest countries every year, which is such a vast sum that it is hard to visualise. That amount of money would get you Apple, with enough left over to buy every sterling-denominated note or coin in circulation. To count out a trillion dollars in dollar bills would take you almost 32,000 years. If the first anatomically modern humans had started counting at the moment they crossed from the Middle East into Europe, they would be getting to a trillion around now. But if you live in a wealthy country, you may be struggling to care. After all, most of that money ends up supporting jobs in estate agencies, buoying the share prices of luxury goods companies, and taking our politicians on all-expenses-paid trips to Baku, Bahrain, or Bamako. Although corruption is bad for other people, it suits us very well, right? Wrong. Corruption is everyones problem, and here are four reasons why you should care about the worlds failure to properly address the situation. Corruption causes bloodshed We should be cautious about accepting the word of armed groups who call governments corrupt. They are murderous and will say anything to attract more followers. But we do need to listen to the warnings of our own generals. All around the world, the people who know best what it is like to fight terrorism tell us their worst enemy is corruption. For too long, weve focused our attention on the Taliban as the existential threat to Afghanistan. They are an annoyance compared to the scope and magnitude of corruption, said US Marine Corps General John Allen, formerly head of international forces in Afghanistan, in 2014. Similar warnings can be heard about Boko Haram in Nigeria, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) in the Middle East, and equivalent movements elsewhere. Corruption angers citizens, making them sympathetic to the states enemies, even if they are terrorists, while undermining the governments ability to fight back. In the long term, the best way to neuter the threat of terrorism is to provide honest and fair government. This is everyones problem because terrorism spreads freely across national boundaries a movement born in Iraq can attack us in Manchester, Paris or Brussels. Corruption spreads disease In 2017, Russia recorded more than 100,000 new HIV infections for the second year running, taking the total number of cases in the country perhaps as high as 1.5 million. Two percent of Russians in their thirties are infected, which is unprecedented for a European country, and the epidemics growth shows no sign of slowing. It is spread by drug use, prostitution, and a poor healthcare system all of which are a result of the countrys rampant corruption. Russia is not alone. Corruption has helped rekindle polio in Ukraine, spread multi-drug resistant tuberculosis in Central Asia, and impede the fight against Ebola in Liberia. Viruses and microbes do not respect national borders. If we do not help these countries build effective healthcare systems, we will all be dealing with the consequences, and all be getting sick. Corruption undermines democracy Opinions differ on whether Russian money helped Donald Trump win the United States presidency, but surely everyone can agree that the reputation of US politics has been badly harmed by the controversy. This is what happens when the virus of illicit finance, hidden in the secret channels of the global financial network, infects a democratic system that depends on trust to survive. The US is only catching up with other countries here, however. Russias own democracy died of corruption back in the 1990s, while the political systems of Nigeria, South Africa, Malaysia, Kenya, Ukraine, and elsewhere are perilously ill, if not terminally so. Open discussion and the free exercise of votes cannot coexist with a system where decisions are made for money, and positions of power are bought and sold. Corruption is threatened by democracy, and corrupt individuals will always seek to undermine the rule of law to protect themselves. If we wish to protect our political systems from infection, we need to fight back. Corruption raises house prices Academic research has shown that flight capital inflates house prices in London, and there is every reason to suppose the same phenomenon of rich people getting their money out of places where it could be taken away, and stashing it somewhere safe affects cities all over the developed world. One of the reasons your rent is so high, therefore, is that foreigners are investing money in your country not because they are seeking a good return, but because they want to keep it safe from corrupt officials. Several cities notably London and New York City, but also Miami, Los Angeles and elsewhere have seen expensive buildings become an asset class, rather than homes. This has emptied out some neighbourhoods and sparked fury among people who can no longer afford to live in their own cities. Dark corners Fighting corruption does not have to be hard. Most people would not steal if they could not keep their stolen property. Similarly, corrupt officials would not embezzle their fortunes, if it was not so easy for them to wash their money in the dark corners of the offshore world, then invest it in safe havens like the UK, Switzerland or the US. Our weapon against this dark money is simple: light. We need to open windows into all corners of our economies, so we can see where money is from, and who owns what. We will never stop officials being dishonest, but we do not have to make their lives so easy. We need public registries of property and company ownership, so we can see where money is coming from. And we need to give our law enforcement bodies the money they need to investigative the worlds crooks. Just a few successful prosecutions would drive dirty money out of our countries, thus protecting our economies and political systems, and helping our allies all over the world. The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeeras editorial policy. Waking up to headlines on January 8 was an immensely disorienting experience. On the one hand, the Fire and Fury scandal continues unabated, offering us yet another glimpse into the dysfunctional and utterly destructive politics of the current administration. If Michael Wolffs book does indeed reflect reality in the Oval Office, then the image is devastating, further proof of the puerility and misogyny of the man charged with running the most powerful country in the world. On the other hand, the 75th Golden Globe Awards ceremony, which was covered on the very same newspaper pages, offers a totally different version of the US cultural landscape, one steeped in progressive visions of gender and racial equality. Oprah Winfrey, who was, by all accounts, the evenings star, forcefully articulated the aspiration for a more equitable and just society. How then do we reconcile these two diametrically opposed moments, one of reactionary politics and another of increasingly progressive cultural pushback? The 16th-century Italian political theorist Machiavelli can provide some insight into how we might understand the relation between the two. In his famous book The Prince, Machiavelli alters the Greek meaning of fortune, using it, instead, to refer to the particular circumstances within a given situation. The virtuous prince, he tells us, knows how to take advantage of these circumstances in order to advance his political goals. It was, as Machiavelli explains, necessary for Moses to find the people of Israel in Egypt, enslaved and oppressed by the Egyptians, so that they would be disposed to follow him, in order to escape from their servitude. Thus, Mosess fortune was that the people of Israel were enslaved by Pharaoh, and his ability to take advantage of their predicament and exercise effective power that underscored his virtue. Despite Oprah Winfrey's past cosiness with the likes of Harry Weinstein, her speech - reaching millions of people worldwide - should be understood as a momentous moment in the US, since it reflects the cultural pushback to an increasingly frightening political landscape while revealing how this process is helping to shift certain mainstream norms. by Trump, like Pharaoh, has become the fortune of the progressive left. It accordingly makes sense that precisely as the US government actively dismantles reproductive rights while stoking racism and xenophobia through the Muslim Ban and draconian immigration policies, progressive movements and organisations, such as #MeToo and Black Lives Matter, can more readily mobilise citizens, in some cases becoming more daring, vocal, and, as it were, visible. This pushback is also bleeding into the cultural arena. Much of the media coverage has already commented on the fact that the Golden Globe Awards ceremony on January 7 was a night of firsts: Sterling K Brown was the first African American actor to win in the category of best actor for a TV drama; Aziz Ansari was the first Asian American actor to win in the category of best actor for a TV comedy; and Oprah Winfrey was the first African American woman to be awarded the Cecile B DeMille Award for lifetime achievement. These are important firsts, to be sure. Yet other media outlets have underscored that these firsts are not nearly enough. Hollywood still suffers from male domination. Even Natalie Portman, going off script, noted that all of the nominations for best director were men. She failed, however, to mention that all five male nominees were also white. It would, however, be misguided to simply dismiss these cultural firsts or the comments and speeches as a kind of empty virtue signalling. Indeed, underestimating the immense influence of the mass, popular, and social media is not only misguided but also hopelessly behind the times, especially given that the US is currently run by the king of tweets. As the political establishment has moved further and further right, the mainstream seems to have moved in exactly the opposite direction. by Despite Oprah Winfreys past cosiness with the likes of Harry Weinstein, her speech reaching millions of people worldwide should be understood as a momentous moment in the US, since it reflects the cultural pushback to an increasingly frightening political landscape while revealing how this process is helping to shift certain mainstream norms. First, the speech centre-staged race, as well as gender, drawing on a different genealogy of role modelling from the one usually provided at venues such as the Globe Awards: from Sidney Poitier, an oft-named first, through Quincy Jones, to Rosa Parks and the little-known Recy Taylor. In 1944, Taylor was abducted and gang-raped by six armed white men in the South, men who later admitted to the assault but who, nonetheless, failed to be prosecuted for their heinous crime. Over the decades, Taylor, whose story was recently made into a documentary, was relentless in her pursuit of justice, even though she only received an apology from the Alabama Legislature in 2011. Rather than focusing on yet another celebrity, Winfrey put an unknown black woman front and centre, helping to transform Taylor into a cultural icon. Winfreys words, however, were momentous not only because they offered a different genealogy of American heroism, but also because of the way in which they were received. Unlike the defensiveness of the media establishment when faced with the scathing criticism of the whiteness of the 2016 Oscars, Winfreys speech was followed by a standing ovation. Mainstream US media outlets overwhelmingly endorsed the speech, calling it stunning, inspiring, and rousing. Thus, as the political establishment has moved further and further right, the mainstream seems to have moved in exactly the opposite direction. This can be attributed to the fear about what the US is becoming under Trump, a modern-day Pharaoh. Obviously, social change will require challenging not only race and gender hierarchies but also confronting neoliberal capitalism and environmental depredation, issues that were not addressed on the Golden Globe Award stage. Taking into account Trumps ruthless attack on both the poor and the planet, moving beyond identity politics is crucial. And clearly, making speeches at such a ceremony is only one tiny step in a much longer process. But it is a step. So lets not rush to dismiss the speeches as empty moralising. After all, stories matter and cultural symbols are vital. Sometimes these symbolic and narratives acts can have powerful effects that go well beyond our wildest expectations. What is clear is that Trumps reign is arousing the masses. If the progressive left is going to lead the way, then we must continue to take advantage of our fortune, namely, the dire circumstances that Trump is producing and use them in order to advance a politics that stops catering to the greedy few and, instead, addresses the plight of the many. The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeeras editorial policy. Figure cited by Iranian MP on state media much higher than previous estimates of number detained. About 3,700 people were arrested across cities in Iran as a rare wave of anti-government protests and unrest gripped the country, according to a parliament member. Tehran MP Mahmoud Sadeghi announced the official figure, which is much higher than previous estimates, via the state-run ICANA news agency on Tuesday. Different security and intelligence forces arrested the protesters, making it difficult to know the exact number of detainees, Sadeghi was quoted as saying. About 1,000 were previously reported to have been arrested during almost a week of demonstrations that began in December. Violence broke out at several rallies, leaving at least 22 people dead. The unrest spread to more than 80 cities and rural towns late last month as thousands of young and working class Iranians voiced anger at corruption, unemployment, and a deepening gap between rich and poor, in the biggest anti-government demonstrations since 2009. Grievances also seemed to revolve around Irans foreign policy and its spending on groups in Syria, Lebanon and Gaza. {articleGUID} The protests started in Irans second-largest city of Mashhad on December 28 before spreading to other cities. The provincial governor in northeastern Mashhad was quoted as saying that 85 percent of detainees there had been released after signing a pledge not to re-offend. Iranian authorities have accused the United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia of involvement and orchestrating the anti-government demonstrations. The government restricted access to Instagram and Telegram social media apps as a security measure. On January 3, General Mohammad Ali Jafari, head of Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), declared the end of the sedition. Tens of thousands also took part in pro-government rallies to show support for the Iranian leadership. Prominent Arab Knesset member, Ahmad Tibi says solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict under Trump is impossible. Jerusalem Ahmad Tibi, a prominent Arab member of Israels Parliament, said a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict under US President Donald Trump would be impossible. Speaking to Al Jazeera from his office in the Knesset, Tibi said there is no political solution in the cards, despite US statements to the contrary. There was nothing on the horizon when Trump came to power, and now that he is in power, a solution is impossible, he said. Tibi also dismissed the so-called deal-of the-century, which, according to media reports offers the Palestinians a state in Gaza and parts of the West Bank, minus Jerusalem. According to Tibi, Trump and his allies have made a radical departure from previous US policies, especially on the issues of Jerusalem and illegal Israeli settlements. Prior to Trumps recognition of Jerusalem as Israels capital, US policy considered the city occupied territory and a subject to final status talks between the two sides. No doubt that the Trump decision is a complete adaptation of the Israeli narrative about Jerusalem and is a complete departure from the US foreign policy on the Middle East, Tibi said. In 1947, the UNs partition plan in Palestine envisioned dividing the territory into two separate states, but would have left Jerusalem under an international administration. However, Tzachi Hanegbi, Israels minister of regional cooperation, told Al Jazeera that Trumps decision on December 6 should not hinder Palestinian claims to have occupied East Jerusalem as their capital. We claim that Jerusalem is our capital and should not be divided, but thats only a claim, not a diktat, Hanegbi, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus Likud party, told Al Jazeera. Palestinians can claim East Jerusalem as their capital and we can negotiate a settlement. Although we annexed East Jerusalem, it is still up for negotiations, said Hanegbi. Jerusalem remains at the core of the perennial Israel-Palestine conflict. Israel occupied the citys eastern sector in 1967 and proceeded to annex it in breach of international law. Palestinian leaders want occupied East Jerusalem as the capital of their future state, while Israel insists that the city is its indivisible capital. {articleGUID} Trump changes all that, and gives Netanyahu a gift in the same month he was subjected to a corruption investigation by Israels Attorney General Office, Tibi told Al Jazeera. Netanyahu is currently facing criminal proceedings over allegations of corruption and financial improprieties that may threaten his position as prime minister. Trumps move, according to Tibi, disqualified the US as a mediator in the conflict. The Americans were not honest brokers in general, but at least they were brokers, he said, adding: Trump instantaneously disqualified himself as a broker by taking Jerusalem off the negotiating table and completely ignoring the Palestinians and his Arab allies. Saudi involvement Tibi dismissed press reports about the so-called deal of the century, which reportedly enlisted Saudi Arabia to pressure Palestinians into accepting a state in Gaza and parts of the West Bank, minus East Jerusalem. The purported deal would have given the outlying Jerusalem suburbs of Abu Dis and Silwan to the Palestinians to call it their capital. This is just not true, Tibi said. {articleGUID} According to discussions Tibi had with high-level Palestinian leaders in Ramallah, Saudi Arabia did not pressure Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas into accepting the deal. What has been published about Saudi Arabia pressuring Abbas to accept the so-called deal is not true. On the contrary, the last meeting between (Crown Prince Mohammad) bin Salman and Abbas was very positive, in which the Saudi side has stressed that Jerusalem is a red line, he added. Future Palestinian state Tibi told Al Jazeera that what White House advisors have in mind regarding solving the conflict does not even meet the minimum requirements the Palestinians can accept. Tibi attributed what he called Trumps lopsided approach to solving the conflict to advice the president receives from his hardline Jewish advisors. Trump is not been advised by liberal Jews, who would be more comparably reasonable in their approach to the conflict, rather by Jewish hardliners, he said. He stressed that the conflict in the Middle East is about more than just real estate. It is a nationalistic struggle between two nations, Tibi said. Follow Ali Younes on twitter @ali_reports Media network denounces forced closure of its office in Taiz in the war-torn countrys south. Al Jazeera has condemned the forced closure of its bureau in Yemens southern city of Taiz. The office was ordered shut by soldiers on Tuesday for reasons that were not made clear, Al Jazeera Media Network said in a statement. The Yemeni military force belonging to the Higher Security Command in Taiz, southern Yemen, stormed Al Jazeera Media Networks offices in the city and forcefully ordered its closure, it said. The Network calls on the authorities in the city of Taiz to reverse its decision and allow Al Jazeeras journalists to carry out their professional responsibilities duties without any hindrance or intimidation. It was not the first time Al Jazeera journalists have been targeted in the city. Three network staff were abducted in Taiz in January last year. It is extremely dangerous for media workers to report throughout the war-torn country. Houthi rebels last month attacked the Yemen Al Youm TV channel and took dozens of media staff hostage. Taiz has become a flashpoint in the ongoing war in Yemen as it is seen as a strategic gateway between the capital Sanaa and the south. Yemen has been torn apart by conflict since 2014 when Houthi rebels captured large expanses of the country, including Sanaa. Saudi Arabia launched a massive aerial campaign against the rebels in March 2015, aimed at restoring the government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi. Since then, the Houthis have been dislodged from most of the south, but remain in control of Sanaa and much of the north. An estimated 10,000 people have died in the war. Yemen also faces a deadly cholera outbreak, a direct consequence of the conflict, which has claimed about 2,000 lives and affected more than one million people since April 2017. One killed and five injured as protests against government austerity measures spread across Tunisia. Tunisias main opposition party has called for continued protests against unjust government austerity measures, a day after widespread demonstrations left one person dead and several others injured, according to reports. Protests took place in a number of towns across Tunisia on Monday following the governments decision to raise taxes under its 2018 Finance Act. The budget, which took effect on January 1, hiked fuel prices and introduced new tax measures related to the purchase of housing. Hamma Hammami, leader of the opposition Popular Front party, told reporters that multiple opposition groups would meet on Tuesday to coordinate our movements. We will stay on the street and we will increase the pace of the protests until the unjust financial law is dropped, he said, according to Reuters news agency. Imen Mhamdi, a 27-year-old university graduate who is employed as a factory worker, joined protests in the coastal city of Sousse this week. This government, like every government after [Zine El Abidine] Ben Ali, only gives promises and has done nothing, she said, referring to longtime Tunisian leader who was forced to step down after the countrys 2011 revolution. People are angry and poverty is rising. Mhamdi told Al Jazeera in a telephone interview on Tuesday that many Tunisian youth have lost faith in political parties. The protest movement began spontaneously, she said, after a few people tagged the phrase #Fech_Nestannew [What are we waiting for?] on walls across the city at night. The slogan is being used on social media to highlight the protests. Im not feeling a lot of hope, but we are saying no [to austerity], said Mhamdi. We have to push this government to do something. Prime minister calls for patience Tunisian Prime Minister Youssef Chahed, meanwhile, called for calm following the protests, saying the economy would improve this year. People have to understand that the situation is extraordinary and their country is having difficulties, but we believe that 2018 will be the last difficult year for the Tunisians, he told reporters on Tuesday, adding that while demonstrations are acceptable, violence is not. Tunisias current government reached an agreement late last year with the International Monetary Fund for a four-year loan programme, worth about $2.8bn, in return for economic reforms. The countrys trade deficit reached a record $5.8bn in the first 11 months of 2017, while its currency the dinar weakened to more than three units per euro for the first time ever on Monday, Reuters reported. Mouna Ali, a university student in Sousse, told Al Jazeera the austerity measures constitute a catastrophe for the middle class. The Tunisian government needs to understand that Tunisian society is fed up. It is suffocating in misery, in poverty, in unemployment, the 28-year-old said. Protests turn deadly A 55-year-old man died following a protest over the state of the economy in Tebourba, 40km west of the capital, Tunis, on Monday, state media reported. Five others were injured during the demonstration, according to a report by Tunis Afrique Presse (TAP) on Tuesday. The Tunisian Ministry of Interior confirmed in a statement on Monday evening that a 55-year-old man had died in a local hospital after being admitted with symptoms of dizziness. He suffered from chronic shortness of breath and showed no signs of violence or [having been] run over, and a forensic doctor has been tasked with determining the cause of death, the statement said. Speculation on social media throughout Monday evening suggested that the man had died after being hit by a security forces vehicle, but the ministry refuted this claim, saying it was likely he had suffocated from inhaling tear gas. In the city of Sidi Bouzid in central Tunisia, protesters took to the streets for the second day in a row on Monday to denounce price increases and call for revisions to the Finance Act, TAP reported, noting that more protests were scheduled in the coming days. Yassine Rouatbi, an entrepreneur from the small town of Kalaa-Sghira, told Al Jazeera that peaceful protests will continue until the government revises its budget. The demonstrations should not be entirely surprising, he added, given Tunisias recent political history. These types of protests are completely normal only a few years after a revolution, said Rouatbi. We are building our Tunisia and we have an obligation to build a better Tunisia. Six years since the 2011 uprising that overthrew Ben Ali, the former president, Tunisia has been held up as a model by avoiding the violence that affected other nations after their Arab Spring revolts. Successive governments, however, have struggled to enact fiscal reforms that have been delayed by political infighting and government wariness of social tensions over jobs and economic conditions that helped spark the 2011 uprising. US president has had the most negative effect on press freedom worldwide, according to a journalism advocacy group. Washington, DC Donald Trump has been awarded a tongue-in-cheek prize for undermining global press freedom by a journalism advocacy group, after the US presidents first year in office was dominated by personal attacks on media outlets and reporters. Trump topped the list of world leaders accused by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) of attempting to silence critics and censor citizens. Sherif Mansour, CPJs Middle East and North Africa programme director, said Trump was awarded the prize for overall achievement because of the effect he had locally and internationally [on] the cause of press freedom. This is the president of the United States and what he says matters, Mansour told Al Jazeera. The ironic awards were handed out this week to various heads of state who have gone out of their way to attack the press and undermine the norms that support freedom of the media, the group said. The list also included Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkeys Recep Tayyip Erdogan. 1,000 tweets Over the past year, the Trump administration has accused media outlets of spreading fake news, an epithet that has been since adopted by leaders in countries across the world. Trump was also named runner-up in the most thin-skinned category, losing to Erdogan. The US presidents response to criticism in the media has been frequent, ranging from issuing threats to sue outlets or having their broadcast licenses revoked, to making suggestions that US libel laws be changed to make it easier to go after news organisations. {articleGUID} Since 2015, when he first declared his presidential candidacy, Trump has posted about 1,000 tweets that criticise or disparage the press, according to a tally by the Columbia Journalism Review. Using Twitter as his social media tool of choice, Trump has regularly insulted media outlets, calling them garbage, sad or failing. He has also called for various journalists to be fired and for certain media organisations to be boycotted. On the campaign trail, Trump mocked a New York Times reporter, Serge Kovaleski, who has arthrogryposis, a congenital condition which affects the functioning of the joints. Trumps latest attack has focused on Michael Wolff, author of the new White House tell-all book, Fire and Fury. Trumps lawyers had attempted to block its publication while a spokeswoman for the president said the book was full of ridiculous lies. Journalists jailed Meanwhile, the number of imprisoned journalists reached a record high last year, with 262 journalists behind bars worldwide at the end of 2017, CPJ reported. The group said Russia and China hold the tightest grip on their respective media. Using censorship and internet controls, as well as harassment and imprisonment, Beijing has restrained the work of its journalists. Under Putin, Russian independent media has slowly dissipated as journalists were either killed, jailed or harassed, according to CPJ. {articleGUID} This week, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi was named runner-up for CPJs most outrageous use of terror laws against the press award. At least 20 journalists were imprisoned in Egypt at the end of last year, the group said. The de facto leader of Myanmar, Aung San Suu Kyi, won the prize for the biggest backslider in press freedom for security officials harassment of journalists trying to report on the crisis affecting the majority-Muslim Rohingya ethnic group. The UN has termed the attacks against the minority a textbook example of ethnic cleansing. Competing visions of the future of EU immigration policy are straining relations between countries. Athens, Greece Greek Migration Minister Yannis Mouzalas has lashed out at six European Union countries for sabotaging the blocs refugee relocation scheme and undermining efforts to craft a common asylum policy. An original European Commission proposal seeking to redistribute 160,000 asylum seekers throughout the EU from overcrowded camps in Greece and Italy fell significantly short after completing just 31,000 relocations by its end last September. We were slow to implement the proposals, Mouzalas said on Tuesday. There were member states which sabotaged these proposals; and it took a great struggle on the part of the Commission and the ministries to prevent this sabotage from leading to a failure of the programme. Mouzalas was referring to Hungary, Poland and Denmark, who refused to participate in the programme. Austria, the Czech Republic and Slovakia all together took in just 45 people. Relocation in Europe Over the last three years, Greece and Italy have become the main gateways for 1.5 million refugees arriving on Europes shores. Under current EU rules, known as the Dublin II regulation, refugees must apply for asylum in the first EU country they arrive in an impossible burden for the Greek and Italian authorities dealing with asylum requests. The spat over the blocs Relocation Programme has now opened up a gulf between EU members over how to reshape a future asylum policy. The idea of institutionalising relocation has become part of the Dublin reform discussion, and it has become deeply contentious within that, Elizabeth Collett, director of the Migration Policy Institute, Europe, told Al Jazeera. [It] is one of the reasons why the Dublin reform discussion has largely stalled. Mouzalas said that the dispute has weakened, rather than strengthened, the prospect of a common EU migration policy. The EU, through its institutions, tried to create a common treatment, he told Al Jazeera. I think that in the first phase this failed Xenophobic parties are playing en ever-larger role in the formation of the political agenda. There is a turning. One cannot say whether this will win in the end, he said. {articleGUID} Collett agreed that EU members had moved further apart, arguing that the problem lay in mistaken assumptions as Europe expanded eastwards. The events of the last three years raised a question that had conveniently been sidestepped, she said. When Europe went through its major enlargement in 2004 [with the accession of 10 new countries], the question was never put, Are you willing to host large numbers of refugees? I think it was assumed by existing member states that acceding member states understood this, and by acceding member states that it would never be required of them. What happened in 2015 or 2016 [at the height of the refugee crisis] was that the question was asked and the answer came back, No, were not ready to do that. That placed a fundamental political question on the table: on what basis is Europe collectively prepared to do protection? That question has yet to be resolved, and we seem to be moving further apart with each passing month. The allure of club membership The person in charge of creating Greeces Asylum Service in 2013 took a more optimistic view. If we look back over the last three years in the EU, its an unprecedented period, said Maria Stavropoulou, referring to the period that saw Europe grappling with the what has been described as the worst refugee and migrant crisis since World War II. Many things happened very quickly People usually go forward not running but stumbling. The Relocation Programme was a process of trial and error. Stavropoulou, who steps down as the services director next month, argued that the EU proved that relocation works if we give it a chance, and it works very well. She also said she believed that the naysayers would ultimately change their position. Sooner or later, member states tend to act like persons, she said. Theres a lot of human psychology in the way countries and governments act, and they like to be eventually members of a club because it is in their self-interest. Rosa Balfour, a European foreign policy expert at the German Marshall Fund, a think-tank, also held out hope. She said she saw the relocation debate as part of a broader tug-of-war between Brussels and member states over national sovereignty versus supranational decision making. It wasnt just about the numbers, [holdouts] also wanted to affirm the principle that the Commission could not tell them what to do at the moment everyone is pushing boundaries to see how far they can go, said Balfour. According to Balfour, the Commission has scope to leverage its power in the run-up to the EUs next financial perspective for the 2020-2027 period, which sets a ceiling on the amount the bloc can spend in any of these years. Poland and Hungary claim 105bn euro ($125bn) in EU funds during the current period, a significant contribution to their Gross Domestic Programme, and the Commission is considering tying funds to compliance on rule of law, freedom of speech and other issues. If [holdouts] were to be negatively affected by stricter conditionality on, say, rule of law issues they could decide to renegotiate their position on certain policies, they could do some horse-trading and decide what the priorities are, said Balfour. A plan for the future The Greek government now wants the EU to focus on expanding its Resettlement Programme, which allows refugees to apply for asylum directly from third countries deemed safe such as Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. That, officials in Athens believe, would undermine human traffickers and take pressure off the Aegean route, one of the main ways for refugees to reach Europe via sea. It really needs to become the main legal avenue for refugees towards the EU, said Stavropoulou. To make a dent, if it is going to undercut the business model of the smugglers, it has to be significant numbers. Stavropoulou said she believed that means in the hundreds of thousands of refugees a year, but the Commissions current plan seeks to resettle only 50,000 in the next two years. The stakes for Europe are much higher than the well-being of refugees and the upholding of humanitarian law, said Collett. The outcome of the European migration debate has the power to either advance or unravel the European project, she argued. Can we maintain an area of internal free movement where there are no border controls? The Schengen area, upon which all this immigration and asylum discussion is based is more in question now than it ever has been, she said. If these big questions are not resolved, some countries will start asking, Should we all be working together in Schengen? Should we change the shape of Schengen? Should we have more than one of these things? I think there are those very, very quiet conversations taking place. Daniel Esdras, head of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in Greece, said he would never forget the first group [of relocation subjects], which was bound for Luxembourg. It was IOMs job to prepare relocation subjects and make logistical preparations for their move and he remembers well how unlikely those new beginnings seemed to amount to anything. We had to convince the airline to accept this group; we had to help the [Luxembourg] embassy prepare the paperwork there was nothing. But we had to make a start, he says. If we had not begun by taking risks and [displaying] courage and using all our strength, this programme would not have run as it did. Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites are being forced to remove offensive content or face fines of up to $60m. Internet rights activists and opposition politicians in Germany are outraged at a new law aimed at combating a rising tide of online hate speech. Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites are being forced to remove offensive content or face fines of up to $60m. The legislation is being widely condemned for allowing the policing of freedom of expression in Germany to be placed in the hands of large, multinational companies based in the United States. Al Jazeeras David Chater reports from Berlin. More than 200 flying foxes reportedly succumbed to heat stroke amid soaring temperatures in the Australian city. While the Sydney suburb of Penrith was grabbing headlines on Sunday with temperatures of 47C, it was to the southwest of the city that the extreme heat was taking its greatest toll. In Campbelltown, which is home to a large colony of flying foxes, the hot weather caused some of the bats mainly youngsters to succumb to heat stroke, and more than 200 reportedly died. The local wildlife rescue group, WIRES, was on hand to rescue those bats found alive. The group rescued and rehydrated 120 bats, reuniting them with their mothers. Another 40 were brought to intensive care. Young flying foxes are vulnerable to temperatures above 35C, and their parents also suffer once temperatures exceed 40C. According to veterinary scientist Tania Bishop, the bats seek shade and begin to fan themselves as temperatures rise. Blood vessels in their skin widen to allow heat to radiate out and cool their bodies. This effect is limited, as fanning tends to increase core body heat due to the energy produced by the pectoral muscles, and eventually this outweighs any cooling from fanning. Volunteers sometimes spray the trees where bat colonies shelter in an effort to keep them cool. Ongoing problem As recently as last February, more than 2,000 flying foxes reportedly succumbed to temperatures in excess of 45C in the Richmond Valley area of New South Wales. Recent studies have shown that such heatwaves are likely to become more frequent in the years ahead. A 2014 report by Australias Climate Council stated that heatwaves were becoming stronger, longer and more frequent across the country. The southeast is believed to be at particular risk. Australia is home to four species of flying fox: black, grey-headed, spectacled and little red. Numbers of the latter two species have fallen by 95 percent over the last century. Habitat loss, shooting and man-made hazards such as power lines, barbed wire and backyard fruit tree netting all take a toll. The addition of climate change to the list of hazards makes the long-term outlook for these creatures appear bleak. Top court had previously ordered theatres to play the national anthem before film screenings to instill patriotism. Indias Supreme Court has reversed an earlier order that mandated theatres to play the national anthem before film screenings to instil a sense of committed patriotism and nationalism in citizens. A 12-member government panel will examine and recommend anthem-related protocol within the next six months, the top court said on Tuesday. Indians had hotly debated the mandatory playing since it was ordered more than a year ago. Under right-wing Prime Minister Narendra Modi, disputes over national identity have taken centre stage. The anthem controversy evoked a revealing debate on nationalism, said Rakesh Sinha of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the ideological parent body of Indias ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its affiliates. Certain sections in India are not merely opposed to playing of the anthem in the cinemas, but they have contempt for our anthem. There is a certain class in this country who are professing a [divisive] idea of nationalism, Sinha said. These people were leading an ugly protest against the anthem. The anthem bears the legacy of our freedom struggle. Why should you not show respect to this? Rigid nationalism In a November 2016 order citing the Prevention of Insults to National Honor Act of 1971, Indias top court ruled that all present in a cinema hall must stand while the anthem is played and that theatre exits should be shut to avoid disrespect. Critics said the 2016 ruling further emboldened right-wing Hindu groups to push ahead with their rigid brand of nationalism. A dozen people were arrested in the southern state of Kerala in December 2016 for not standing while the national anthem was being played at an international film festival. Indian media has reported on several incidents of moviegoers, including disabled people, being beaten by right-wing activists for not standing. In 2014, a man in the southern state of Kerala was charged with sedition for refusing to stand, while earlier last year, a man in a wheelchair in the northeastern state of Assam was called a Pakistani for sitting while the anthem played. Such incidents triggered outrage over what many say is the rise of aggressive nationalism in the country. Sugata Bose, an opposition politician from the Trinamool Congress party, welcomed Tuesdays ruling. Patriotism has to come from within. [It] cant be imposed, Bose told Al Jazeera. Mahatma Gandhi himself, in August 1947, had remained seated while the then-national song Vande Mataram was performed. Gandhi said standing up for a national song is not a requirement of Indian culture; its a practice we have imported from the West. Assaults and threats As the BJP government has focused on Hindu nationalism, Indias religious minorities, including millions of Muslims, have faced assaults and threats as members of the ruling party have harped on their foreignness. BJP-ruled states, such as Uttar Pradesh, have made singing the national anthem mandatory in all schools and madrassas a move criticised by some Muslim groups as a forced show of patriotism. No one should have a monopoly on nationalism. The present tendency to brand all critics of the current regime as anti-nationals is extremely worrying, Bose said. Nationalism has a liberating aspect, but it can also potentially have an oppressive dimension. We should all subscribe to a nationalism which instils a spirit of service among our people and inspires our creative faculties. We should not accept a nationalism which borders on narrow chauvinism. Group vows to stay until leaders recognise native treaty rights and take action on climate change. Sitting in a tarpee erected outside the Capitol Building in the US state of Washington, seven Indigenous women and their supporters have vowed to stay put. They will stay until they are either arrested or politicians take action on climate change and native treaty rights. We will be here as long as they let us be here, said Eva, a member of Santee Sioux Tribe. Today, this is all we have left, she told Al Jazeera by phone. Weve been taken from and taken from. Eva, along with others from the indigenous community and their supporters, occupied the front lawn of the state capital in the city of Olympia on Monday, the first day of a new 60-day legislative session. While theyre inside doing their talks for the next 60 days, [we hope] they come to understand that the native nations people are watching them, Eva said. We are outside and we are not leaving until you guys [politicians] understand that we dont want fracked gas factories [or] coal mining. We want them out. The group is demanding that Washington Governor Jay Inslee take a stronger stance against the expansion of the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline, which carries oil from the Alberta tar sands to terminals and refineries in British Columbia, on Canadas west coast, and the northern part of Washington state. Indigenous and environmental rights groups say the pipeline threatens native sovereignty and puts wildlife, as well as the land and sea along the route, at risk. Inslee has expressed serious concerns about the pipeline project, but the group says it is not enough. The women also called on the governor to respect native treaty rights and stop the use of fish farms. It takes something like this for our voice to be heard, said Janene Hampton, who was among the women in the tarpee a type of teepee on Monday night. We're here in our native structure facing a colonial structure behind us. by Fran Tatu, protester and member of the Metis Nation According to Eva, police had initially demanded that they remove the four tarpees that had been erected earlier in the day. But after occupying the space, negotiating and presenting the text of the Medicine Creek treaty of 1854 which guarantees hunting and fishing rights to nine nations in the northwestern part of the US the seven women were eventually allowed to stay, Eva said. Were here in our native structure facing a colonial structure behind us, Fran Tatu, a member of the Metis Nation who is occupying the space, told Al Jazeera. I find this [the occupation] to be beautifully symbolic of the indigenous matriarchy facing down the patriarchy, Tatu said. Tara Lee, the governors deputy communications director, told Al Jazeera in an email on Tuesday that Inslee greatly respects treaty rights and [his team believes] that the tribal governments in Washington and the governor have a productive government-to-government relationship. Lee added that the governors chief of staff met with the protesters, but no treaty was presented and the governors office did not agree to let them stay. The structure they have erected is not allowed and if it is not removed they will be arrested for trespassing, Lee said. Washington state police did not respond to Al Jazeeras request for comment. Sixty days to act As well as the tarpee sit-in, a simultaneous protest by climate activists was taking place inside the Capitol Building. {articleGUID} Were in a climate crisis, one side of activists chanted as they interrupted the opening ceremony for the legislature. You need to act now, the other side responded. The Climate Countdown campaign protesters were escorted outside, where they continued to rally with about 300 others. You have 60 days to act like were in a climate emergency and pass legislation ending fossil fuel infrastructure and transitioning Washington state [to] 100 percent renewables, 350 Seattle, one of the organising groups, told legislators on Facebook. Valerie Costa, an organiser with 350 Seattle, wants to stress the sense of urgency in addressing climate change. Now is the time to take action, Costa said. We want to show them [politicians] that we will be holding them accountable. Costa explained that in the face of setbacks by US President Donald Trumps administration in addressing climate change, leaders in the West Coast state have taken a stand and expressed their commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. After Trump announced he was withdrawing the US from landmark Paris Agreement last year, Washingtons Inslee and other governors formed the US Climate Alliance aimed at upholding the climate accord and taking aggressive action on climate change. But according to Costa, politicians must act by also passing legislation aimed at stopping fossil fuel projects and committing to reduce the states carbon footprint. {articleGUID} Washington state is seen as a leader on climate policy, Costa said. The state needs to do more to earn that reputation. Halting the construction of the Puget Sound Energy (PSE) liquified natural gas (LNG) facility in the city of Tacoma is a priority for climate activists and indigenous groups in the state. According to 350 Seattle and the Puyallup Tribe, whose reservation sits near the proposed facilitys site, the company has not obtained the necessary permits, and the facility puts the tribes water and fish at risk. Every single fossil fuel project has needed grassroots resistance for them not to succeed, Costa said. [Its] only happened with a tremendous amount of work. Back in the tarpee, the group of indigenous women said they will continue their occupation. According to Eva, police said they would give the group an ultimatum on Tuesday, addressing if they can stay. We are holding this space and the reason that us seven women this is a women-led indigenous movement, Eva said. Its also a womens movement. This is about lives not only our lives, but the future lives of our children and our grandchildren and when it comes down to that. Ayatollah Khamenei threatens retaliation against the US and UK for allegedly plotting to overthrow the Islamic republic. Irans supreme leader lashed out at the United States and Britain and vowed to respond against foreign powers he accused of attempting to overthrow the Islamic republic. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also took a shot at Donald Trump on Tuesday, accusing the US president of being a very unstable man who exhibited extreme and psychotic episodes. Iran says it has hard evidence the recent deadly demonstrations were very clearly directed from abroad. US officials should know that, firstly, they have missed their target Secondly, they have inflicted damage upon Iran in recent days, and they should know this wont be left without a response, Khamenei said on Twitter. Once again, the nation tells the US, Britain, and those who seek to overthrow the Islamic Republic of Iran from abroad that youve failed, and you will fail in the future, too.' At least 22 people were killed and about 3,700 arrested after anti-government protests erupted in the second-largest city, Mashhad, on December 28 and quickly spread throughout the country. Iranian officials have accused the CIA and Israels Mossad of masterminding the unrest, also alleging Saudi Arabia funded the operation. CIA Director Mike Pompeo said allegations that his intelligence agency was involved in Irans demonstrations were false. It was the Iranian people started by them, created by them, continued by them demanding a better set of living conditions and a break from the theocratic regime that has been with them since 1979, Pompeo told Fox News on Sunday. The U.S. President says the Iranian establishment is terrified by their power. Well, if we were so terrified by you, how did we kick you out of Iran in late 70s and send you packing, out of the entire region, in the 2010s? Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) January 9, 2018 Khamenei also challenged Trumps assertion that Irans establishment was frightened by American power. If we were so terrified by you, how did we kick you out of Iran in late 70s and send you packing out of the entire region in the 2010s? the supreme leader said. At the height of the protests, Trump described Iran as the Number One State of Sponsored Terror with numerous violations of Human Rights occurring on an hourly basis. {articleGUID} He later tweeted: The people of Iran are finally acting against the brutal and corrupt Iranian regime. A close ally of Israel and Saudi Arabia Irans foremost enemies the Trump administration has denounced Iranian influence in the Middle East and threatened to withdraw from the international nuclear deal with Iran. The US government is expected to announce in the coming days whether it will recertify the landmark 2015 agreement also involving China, Russia, Germany, France, and the UK to curb Irans nuclear weapons programme. Trump has called the nuclear deal the worst ever, though the International Atomic Energy Agency said Tehran has fully complied with the agreement. Iran and the EU wish to continue the nuclear agreement, but the Trump administration has baulked at certifying the agreement and the US Congress is considering new sanctions. Iran is warning it may reconsider its cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency unless the United States honours the agreement it signed with Tehran and international powers in 2015. President Donald Trump has refused to certify the deal which lifted sanctions in return for Iran scaling back its nuclear programme. The US Congress has a few more days left to decide whether or not to impose new sanctions. Al Jazeeras Zein Basravi reports from Tehran. An Israeli settler has been killed near an illegal settlement outpost in the northern West Bank. The Israeli army has carried out raids in Palestinian villages near Nablus in the occupied West Bank, following the death of an Israeli settler who was shot in the area. The shooting incident happened on Tuesday on the main road near the illegal Israeli settlement outpost of Havat Gilad, where the 35-year-old settler, a rabbi, resided. He later died of his wounds in a hospital near Tel Aviv, Israeli media reported. Al Jazeeras Harry Fawcett, reporting from Jerusalem, said the Israeli army declared the area to the southwest of Nablus a military zone and raided the Palestinian villages of Tell and Sarra. There were reports of clashes in the villages, Fawcett said, and Israeli settlers were seen throwing stones in the direction of Palestinian cars. After some confrontations, the Israeli forces then withdrew to the entrances of those Palestinian villages, said Fawcett. They also went into Palestinian neighbourhoods in the west of Nablus, confiscating security cameras there were more confrontations with Palestinians there, as well, he added. The Israeli army said that troops were searching the Nablus area for the suspected attacker or attackers. Established in 2002, the settlement outpost of Havat Gilad is considered illegal under both Israeli and international law. Israeli settlements violate the Fourth Geneva Convention, which states that an occupying power cannot transfer its population into the territory it occupies. Fawcett said there are a number of illegal settlements and outposts in the area around Nablus, a major town in the occupied West Bank. So, it has long been a centre of tension between Palestinians and Israeli settlers, he said. Declaring the area a military zone essentially means that the Israeli army has reinforced its positions around there, and it can populate and build up checkpoints with great ease. Hamas, in the Gaza Strip, welcomed the shooting. The operation in Nablus is the first armed response to remind the enemy leaders and those behind them that what they are afraid of is coming, its armed wing said in a statement. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu offered his condolences to the family of the settler via Twitter. Even after experiencing horrible treatment and conditions, almost half of West African migrants returning home from Libya say that they will try to reach Europe again. Nigerian officials are calling for more international cooperation in the fight against human trafficking, as the country continues to evacuate its citizens from Libya. Earlier this month, the Nigerian government began the immediate removal of some 5,500 people from the North African country after reports of abuse, slavery and torture. Large numbers of Nigerians were among thousands of migrants trapped in Libya in their attempt to escape war and economic hardship in their home countries and reach Europe. Many have been exploited by human traffickers as they attempted to pass through war-torn Libya in a bid to reach Italy by sea. Muhammad Babandede, head of Nigerias immigration service, said there needed to be a joint effort to tackle the problem. Its frustrating that we, as countries, are not working together, including Europe, he told Al Jazeera. It takes more than returning, it takes more than publicity to do this. We need to work together at the source, transit and destination countries to deal with the criminal groups, added Babandede. {articleGUID} The evacuation process began after Nigerian officials on a fact-finding mission to Libya expressed shock at what they saw and heard from victims. They talked about various abuse systematic, endemic, and exploitation of all kinds, said Nigerias Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama. There were obviously interests that wanted to keep as many of them there as possible because they were commodities. Despite their ordeal, however, many Nigerians said they planned to try to make the journey again. Osaretin Vincent was one of them, telling Al Jazeera that his destiny lies in Europe. I have sold almost everything I have to embark on this journey but now I am going back home like a madman, he said. According to Nigerian officials, as many as 45 percent of migrants deported from Libya attempt to return in hopes of making it to Europe. As a human being, youd assume the most important goal in life is to preserve life and knowing that Ive come so close to what Ive seen [in Libya] I wouldnt go, said Frank Celestine, from Nigerias International Office for Migration. But survival is also important to a person. If you are in a place and you dont see a future, then that pushes you, he told Al Jazeera. Human trafficking Libya is the main gateway for people attempting to reach Europe by sea, however there is no registration process in place for the arrivals and detention centres in some parts of the country are unsupervised. In these conditions, human trafficking has flourished, with reports of humans being sold in modern-day slave markets. According to Al Jazeeras Ahmed Idris in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, geography also contributes to the problem. Government officials in West Africa admit that their vast, porous borders makes it difficult to stop what they call irregular migration, he said. Border police feel powerless to make arrests because of the existent pact that guarantees freedom of movement of goods and people. This agreement has been exploited by traffickers and undocumented migrants, according to Nigerian officials. The UNs International Organisation for Migration said 171,635 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea during 2017, with nearly 70 percent arriving in Italy. The remainder were divided among Greece, Cyprus and Spain. During the same period in 2016, there were 363,504 arrivals, according to the agency. Muslim leaders have called to designate anniversary of a deadly mosque attack as a national day against Islamophobia. Quebec opposition parties say they oppose designating the anniversary of a deadly Quebec mosque attack a national day to combat Islamophobia. Two political parties in the Canadian province of Quebec say they are opposed to a recent call from Muslim leaders to designate January 29 the date six Muslim men were killed in a Quebec City mosque last year a national day against Islamophobia. The right-wing party Coalition Avenir Quebec and separatist Parti Quebecois say they oppose the demand for several reasons, including being uncomfortable using the term Islamophobia, Montreal newspaper La Presse reported late on Monday. Last Friday, the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM) and dozens of other Muslim and community groups called on Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to make January 29 a National Day of Remembrance and Action on Islamophobia. The CAQ does not intend to support this demand, the party told La Presse. We believe January 29 should be devoted to commemorating the memory of the victims of this terrible tragedy. It was an intolerable act committed by a single person and not by an entire society. Quebecers are open and welcoming, they are not Islamophobic. A spokesperson for the Parti Quebecois leader, meanwhile, said the party chooses not to use the term Islamophobia' because it is controversial, and prefers the expression anti-Muslim sentiment'. The Parti Quebecois is the largest opposition party in the Quebec legislature, holding 28 out of 125 total seats, while the CAQ is the third-largest party with 21 seats. Quebecers will vote in provincial elections next October. The perils of hate A gunman shot and killed six Muslim men at the Quebec Islamic Cultural Centre in Quebec City, the provincial capital, on January 29 last year. Several others were injured. As the one-year anniversary of the deadly attack approaches, Muslim leaders say turning January 29 into a day to combat racism will enable Canadians to collectively remember the victims of the attack. It will also enhance public education about the perils of hate, bigotry and Islamophobia, they said in an open letter. The ongoing impact being felt within the Quebec Muslim community and more broadly, Canadian Muslim communities, one year after the attack speaks to the urgent need for our elected leaders to stand firmly against Islamophobia and the agents of bigotry, Ihsaan Gardee, NCCM executive director, said in a statement. The Canadian government has not confirmed whether it will grant the groups demand. In a brief email to Al Jazeera, a spokesperson for Minister of Canadian Heritage Melanie Joly said Ottawa has received and noted the proposal. As we approach the one-year anniversary, Canada continues to condemn this terrorist attack on Muslims in a centre of worship and refuge, spokesperson Simon Ross said. Canadians continue to stand with victims and the families affected by this attack. Our government will continue to work toward promoting a diverse and inclusive Canada. We must condemn all forms of discrimination including Islamophobia. Explosion hits high-security zone some 300 metres from the assembly of Balochistan province. At least six people have been killed, including four police officers, after a suicide bomber struck a security forces bus in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta, according to hospital and security officials. The attack, claimed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban (also known as the Pakistan Taliban) on Tuesday, took place on Zarghoon Road, a busy street in a high-security zone some 300 metres from the assembly of Balochistan province, of which Quetta is the capital. This was to avenge the killing of our fighters [by security agencies] in staged encounters, Taliban spokesman Mohamed Khorasani said. Shahjehan Panezai, senior hospital official, confirmed the death toll to Al Jazeera. At least 16 people were also wounded in the explosion. Security sources told Al Jazeera that the attacker, who was on foot, wanted to head towards the assembly. However, he detonated his explosives near the vehicle due to the roads being blocked. Photographs from the scene of the blast showed the shattered windows of the vehicle and debris strewn near it. Quetta has been at the centre of recent violence in Pakistan. The city has come under attack both from armed groups allied with the Tehreek-e-Taliban and separatist fighters. Last month, at least eight people were killed and dozen wounded in a suicide and gun attack on a church in Quetta. The attack targeted Bethel Memorial Methodist Church as worshippers gathered inside to attend a Sunday midday service. In November, a senior police official was also killed in a similar attack, while in October at least seven police officials were killed in another roadside bombing. Weapons depots allegedly targeted near Syrian capital as Israeli prime minister vows action to halt arms to Hezbollah. Israel launched a series of predawn air strikes then followed up with artillery fire on an army base near the Syrian capital, Damascus, Syrias military said. The allegation was not denied by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when questioned by reporters later on Tuesday. Israeli jets fired missiles at the Qutayfeh area northeast of Damascus from inside Lebanese airspace at 2:40am local time (00:40 GMT), causing the Syrian army to retaliate and hit one of its planes, the Syrian army said in a statement broadcast on state television. UK-based war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the air strikes targeted Syrian army and Hezbollah weapons depots, igniting successive explosions and fires, causing material damage. After the air raids, Israel also launched rockets from the occupied Golan Heights, but the Syrian military intercepted them, the army statement said. {articleGUID} When asked about the alleged attacks inside Syria, Netanyahu said Israel was ready to stop weapons from reaching the Lebanon-based Hezbollah armed group, which has backed the Syrian government in its nearly seven-year civil war with rebel forces. We have a long-standing policy to prevent the transfer of game-changing weapons to Hezbollah in Syrian territory, the Israeli prime minister was quoted as saying by the Times of Israel. This policy has not changed. We back it up, if necessary, with action, Netanyahu added, without confirming or denying attacks were launched inside Syrian territory. The report said the Israeli military wouldnt comment on the alleged attacks. Syria wrote a letter to the UN Security Council demanding that it condemn Israels cross-border strikes. Syrias foreign ministry also accused Israel of launching the attacks in support of opposition fighters. The recurring Israeli attacks on Syria will not succeed in protecting the terrorist organisations, which are Israels partners and proxies, the official news agency SANA quoted the ministry as saying. {articleGUID} It said Israel was primarily assisting Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, a former al-Qaeda affiliate. The Syrian government once again warns Israel of the serious repercussions of its attacks on Syria and its support for armed terrorist organisations, the ministry said. Meanwhile, SANA reported that rebel shelling of the capital killed five people and wounded 30 others on Tuesday. It said 15 artillery shells hit the central, predominantly Christian neighbourhood of Bab Touma, adding Damascus has been targeted on a near-daily basis in recent weeks. Egypt sends troops to Eritrea as Sudan and Turkey ink a deal to rebuild a Red Sea island and construct a naval dock. Tensions in the Red Sea region have been brewing for months but came to the fore when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Sudan last month. The visit, hailed as historic, was the first by a Turkish head of state since 1956 when Sudan gained independence. Sudans official state news agency said the two countries agreed to set up a strategic planning group to discuss international affairs, and that they intended to conclude a military deal. Among more than a dozen agreements signed by Erdogan and Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir was a deal to temporarily lease the Red Sea island of Suakin to Turkey. Ankara and Khartoum said Turkey would rebuild the ruined, sparsely populated Ottoman island to increase tourism and create a transit point for pilgrims crossing the Red Sea to Islams holiest city of Mecca. Suakin belongs to Sudan Egyptian and Saudi media have harshly criticised the agreement, and alleged Turkey would build a military base on Suakin. Turkey and Egypt, an ally of Saudi Arabia, have had frosty relations for some time. Ankara strongly condemned Egypts military coup in 2013, which overthrew the first democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood. Saudi newspaper al-Okaz ran a headline that read: Khartoum hands over Suakin to Ankara Sudan in Turkish hands. Turkeys greed on the African continent seems to have no limits, the report noted, referring to Turkeys recent move to set up its biggest overseas military base in Somalia. Serdar Cam, head of the Turkish International Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA), said Turkey has been introducing projects to establish basic infrastructures African countries need in every sector. The aim of all these efforts is to prove that [African] countries are indeed able to embark on sustainable and beneficial development processes when tangible projects are created that consider real needs regardless of the actual magnitude of the funding, Cam said. Therefore, it is also Turkeys aim to show the entire world that no country can be eternally damned to poverty, and to help Africa get rid of its image as the dark continent. The Sudanese embassy in Saudi Arabia responded by saying that Suakin belongs to Sudan, no one else, and promising that the deal with Ankara would not harm the security of Arab countries. The ripples, however, were immediately felt across the African continent. Military reinforcements In what may have been a response to fears that Turkey was expanding its influence in the region, Egypt sent hundreds of its troops to a UAE base in Eritrea, on the border with Sudan. Khartoum responded by recalling its ambassador to Cairo, hours after the head of the Sudanese Border Technical Committee, Abdullah al-Sadiq, accused Egypt of trying to drag Sudan into a direct [military] confrontation. Days later, Sudan shut its border with Eritrea and deployed thousands of troops there. The Suakin island deal with Turkey has merely heightened an already tense political situation in the region. For months, Sudan and Egypt have exchanged accusations, with Cairo claiming that Khartoum had been supporting Muslim Brotherhood members and Khartoum alleging Cairo was supporting Sudanese dissidents. Ethiopian Dam project Also straining relations between the African nations is the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) project, the largest hydroelectric dam project in Africa. Unhappy with Khartoum, Egypt last week reportedly proposed to Ethiopia to exclude Sudan from contentious negotiations over the future of the dam. Egypt has been at odds with its neighbours over the $4.8bn megaproject, with Cairo fearing that its position downstream may affect its access to water from the Nile River basin, which will feed the dam. The Egyptian proposal, sent by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, suggested that talks proceed with Ethiopia alone, according to the Addis Fortune newspaper. Egypt was quick to deny the claims. On Monday, Hailemariam received Sudanese army chief Emad al-Din M Adawi and discussed how to further strengthen their strategic partnership. Adawi said the two neighbours would continue in their collaborative efforts to contain problems in the region. Eritrean-Ethiopian tensions The deployment of Egyptian troops to Eritrea has sent longtime foe Ethiopia into a frenzy. Aware of the poor relations between Egypt and Ethiopia over Nile water use, Eritrea eagerly welcomed the Egyptian troops. Ethiopia, which has the third-largest army on the continent, responded by sending more troops to the border with its regional rival, Eritrea. Asmara and Addis Ababa have had two bloody wars over border disputes. Ethiopia is also uneasy that the United Arab Emirates, which has cosy relations with Cairo, has been stepping up its presence in the region. It recently acquired military and naval bases in countries that have borders with Ethiopia, Somalia to the east and Eritrea to the north, as well as Yemen. This has led Ethiopia to steam ahead with construction of the dam, saying that more than 60 percent has already been completed. Construction has never stopped and will never stop until the project is completed. We are not concerned with what Egypt thinks. Ethiopia is committed to benefit from its water resources without causing harm to anyone, Seleshi Bekele, Ethiopias minister for irrigation, water and electricity, said in November. As Egypt, Turkey and the UAE make efforts to expand their influence and secure allies in the region, it is unclear whether relations between African states will continue to sour. Further twists and turns could be ahead as African heads of state prepare to meet in Addis Ababa later this month for the African Union summit. Sudans government is warning protesters they will be confronted with force if they do not stop. Calling them bread protests makes the demonstrations in Sudan sounds rather harmless. But at least two people were killed in the outcry against rising prices this week. The government has warned demonstrators that acts of destruction will be met with force. Security forces have already been firing tear gas at protesters, as well as arresting opposition leaders and confiscating newspapers. That does not seem to have stopped the unrest. So what might come next? Presenter: Adrian Finighan Guests: Hafiz Mohamed director of Justice Africa Badreldin Salah protester and a student at the University of Khartoum Christopher Artiga knew the day would come. Artiga, who was born in El Salvador and came to the United Status in 1999, is one of nearly 200,000 Salvadorans with TPS, or Temporary Protected Status. On Monday, President Donald Trumps administration announced the program would end on Sept. 9, 2019, forcing people with TPS to gain citizenship, leave the country or risk deportation. The decision came as no surprise to the 22-year-old Santa Fe programming and analysis sophomore. He and his family watched closely as Haitians fought for their TPS status in November and suspected something would come ever since Trump was elected. They feared his rhetoric would become action. But Artiga has hope. Im just not going to let it get to me, he said. After the news broke, Gainesville lawyers and affected residents prepared to find a way to keep the protected status, which the U.S. offered to Salvadorans in 2001 after a series of earthquakes left the country in a humanitarian crisis, according to the Washington Post. Gainesville immigration attorney Cary Torres, a UF alumna, said some of her Salvadoran clients had anticipated the TPS drop, and the lawyer has already spoken with three clients about next steps for legalization. People have been already trying to fix their problem that they saw coming down the pipe, she said. Salvadorans have been foreseeing it in the past month or so. Those affected have a couple options, Torres said. They can have an employer or a family member who is a U.S. citizen and at least 21 years old petition to sponsor them or obtain a student visa. In November, the Department of Homeland Security ended TPS for 60,000 Haitians who arrived after a 2010 earthquake and for 2,500 Nicaraguans protected after Hurricane Mitch in 1998, the Post reported. In Gainesville, several immigration lawyers like Torres offer free legal consultations for those affected by the removal of their protected status. Her goal is to inform TPS recipients, come up with a plan, and later figure out a payment plan for additional legal services. She also plans to connect with UF latin organizations to speak on the topic. Enjoy what you're reading? Get content from The Alligator delivered to your inbox Subscribe Now Immigration attorney Richard Ruth also offers free consultations for affected immigrants. He said hes hopeful Congress midterm elections will bring in a Democratic majority that will create a policy protecting immigrants in the country. With the ending of TPS, youre kind of left with the underlying problem that the folks came in with the illegalization status, he said. The options tend to be rather limited, which is why TPS is so important to begin with. However, Ruth said TPS is just part of the Trump administrations immigration reform. Hes requested funding for the border wall in exchange for extending protection for Dreamers, those who came to the U.S. under the age of 16 and were legally protected under Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, according to CNN. Ruth said the City of Gainesville has been more welcoming of immigrants and values their contributions. Now, the state and nation should also adapt to that mindset, he said. In Gainesville, people realize the value and contribution of immigrants, he said. We have here immigrants who provided valuable contributions to society. Immigrants like Artiga have made this country their home, but each year his family has had to spend about $1,500 to apply for a TPS extension, he said. Under the protection, he and others arent eligible for citizenship or residency. Ive spent the huge majority of my life here, he said. I couldn't even tell you the street addresses of El Salvador or anything. His family doesnt receive tax benefits, and Artiga cant receive financial aid. Despite it all, Artiga said hell keep living his life to the fullest and hope Congress will take action. I don't know why I'm being so blindly optimistic, but it's better than being sad over it, he said. My futures uncertain, but life is uncertain. Contact Paige Fry at pfry@alligator.org. Follow her on Twitter at @paigexfry. Contact Romy Ellenbogen at rellenbogen@alligator.org. Follow her on Twitter at @romyellenbogen. CASA de Maryland, an immigration advocacy and assistance organization, holds a rally in Lafayette Park, across from the White House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 8, 2018, in reaction to the announcement regarding Temporary Protective Status for people from El Salvador. The Trump administration is ending special protections for Salvadoran immigrants, forcing nearly 200,000 to leave the U.S. by September 2019 or face deportation. El Salvador is the fourth country whose citizens have lost Temporary Protected Status under President Donald Trump, and they have been, by far, the largest beneficiaries of the program, which provides humanitarian relief for foreigners whose countries are hit with natural disasters or other strife. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) UF students will have a chance Tuesday afternoon to hear from one of Floridas gubernatorial candidates. As part of a statewide bus tour, Philip Levine, a former Miami Beach Mayor and a gubernatorial candidate for elections in November, will speak at the Lubavitch Chabad Jewish Center, located at 2021 NW Fifth Ave, on Tuesday at 3 p.m., according to a press release from his campaign office. Levines Live! from Floridas Living Rooms tour will launch Tuesday morning in response to Gov. Rick Scotts final State of the State speech. Scott will leave office next January due to term limits. Levine, a Democrat who has built a platform on fighting climate change and sea-level rise in his four years as Miami Beachs mayor, will visit 10 Florida cities from Jacksonville to key Largo between Tuesday and Friday. Christian Ulvert, Levines senior campaign adviser, wrote in an email that Levines goal with the statewide tour is to bring Florida politics out of Tallahassee and into Floridians homes. On this tour, we are engaging with all voters across our state, from college students to retirees, on building a better future for all of us, Ulvert said. Contact David Hoffman at dhoffman@alligator.org. Follow him on Twitter at @hoffdavid123. Philip Levine Once again, with Florida's Republican governor, Rick Scott, unfortunately leading the way, unfounded environmental hysteria has greeted the proposed expansion of American energy development by President Trump, opening up formerly restricted offshore areas for exploration and drilling. This is not to say accidents can't and won't happen. Oil trains derail, tankers run aground, and even offshore oil platforms explode. But more oil leaks from cars driving to Florida and in hotel and restaurant parking lots than is likely to wash up on Florida's beaches. It doesn't make sense to worry about the occasional oily duck and ignore domestic resources while we expend blood and treasure protecting oil supplies in the Middle East. Is the caribou worth more protection than the lives of young American soldiers? Yet opposition by environmental zealots and misled politicians has greeted Trump's proposal: As the Trump administration moves to vastly expand oil and gas exploration, Florida lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are vowing to stop drilling off the state's coasts. The new five-year plan announced Thursday would give the energy industry access to nearly all of the United States' coastal waters, including areas off the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico where drilling has been blocked for decades. The plan would pave the way for drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico after a moratorium protecting Florida's coast expires in 2022. Leases for drilling rights haven't been available there since 1988[.] ... Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, said he would oppose offshore drilling in Florida and plans to meet with [interior secretary Ryan] Zinke to voice his concern. "My top priority is to ensure that Florida's natural resources are protected," said Scott, who is expected to challenge Democratic [senator] Bill Nelson this year. Drilling technology and safety have advanced exponentially over the decades since the Exxon-Valdez and more recent Deepwater Horizon disasters. Surely, Gov. Scott noticed that the offshore oil rigs and refineries that dot the Gulf Coast withstood their recent pummeling by multiple severe hurricanes. We can stick our heads in the Florida sand, or we can foster energy independence and economic growth that will create the jobs, income, and energy that will allow Americans to visit those beaches. America needs this offshore energy, unless opponents want us to return to the days of being permanent vassals of OPEC. According to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas off Alaska contain an estimated 23.6 billion barrels of oil and 104.3 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. According to the American Petroleum Institute's website Energy Tomorrow, offshore drilling could create 840,000 American jobs and generate $200 billion in revenue to the federal government by 2035. As the Daily Caller reports: Offshore drilling in the Atlantic Ocean has the potential to produce 1.3 million barrels of oil and natural gas per day while generating nearly 280,000 jobs and contribute up to $23.5 billion per year to the U.S. economy, according to a 2013 study by the American Petroleum Institute. And what about the environmental impact on these allegedly fragile ecosystems? What about the polar bears and the caribou? We heard this apocalyptic song before, when oil was discovered at Prudhoe Bay and the Trans-Alaska Pipeline was built to carry it southward. When oil exploration began in Prudhoe Bay, 60 miles to the west of ANWR, environmentalists claimed that it would yield only a "few months' supply" of oil and would wreck the ecosystem. Prudhoe Bay turned out to be the largest deposit of oil ever found in North America. As Stephen Moore of the Heritage Foundation writes in the Daily Signal: Would oil and gas drillers kill off the eagles, caribou, and polar bears, as the White House warns? These were the arguments made more than 40 years ago against building the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System which carries oil from Alaska's North Slope to the port of Valdez for shipment to the lower 48 states. Over the last 35 years it has carried more than 17 billion barrels of oil, a quantity worth nearly $1 trillion in today's dollars. At the time, the Sierra Club moaned that the pipeline would mean "the wilderness is forever broken," while the Wilderness Society said the project would lead to "imminent, grave[,] and irreparable damage to the ecology, wilderness values, natural resources, recreational potential, and total environment of Alaska." No bird or caribou would be safe from the carnage. Sound familiar? Instead, the impact on Alaska's wildlife and natural beauty has been almost nonexistent. A study delivered in 2002 to the American Society of Civil Engineers found that "the ecosystems affected by the operation of TAPS and associated activity for almost 25 years are healthy." Today the size of the caribou herd in Alaska is estimated at about 325,000 four times the number before the pipeline was built. Offshore oil platforms are not the environmental risk critics say they are and are in fact an environmental bonanza, with the platforms serving as artificial reefs that promote an explosion of sea life: "Environmentalists" wake up in the middle of the night sweating and whimpering about offshore oil platforms only because they've never seen what's under them. This proliferation of marine life around the platforms turned on its head every "environmental expert" opinion of its day[.] ... A study by LSU's Sea Grant college shows that 85 percent of Louisiana fishing trips involve fishing around these platforms. The same study shows 50 times more marine life around an oil production platform than in the surrounding Gulf bottoms. An environmental study (by apparently honest scientists) revealed that urban runoff and treated sewage dump 12 times the amount of petroleum into the Gulf [compared to] those thousands of oil production platforms. And oil seeping naturally through the ocean floor into the Gulf, where it dissipates over time, accounts for 7 times the amount spilled by rigs and pipelines in any given year. The irony is that offshore drilling can actually reduce the amount of oil reaching our beaches because the extraction relieves pressure that forces oil to seep from the ocean floor in quantities that vastly exceed the dangers posed by oil tankers and oil rigs, according to a 2009 report by the University of California, Santa Barbara: Twenty years ago, the oil tanker Exxon[-]Valdez was exiting Alaska's Prince William Sound when it struck a reef in the middle of the night. What happened next is considered one of the nation's worst environmental disasters: 10.8 million gallons of crude oil spilled into the pristine Alaskan waters, eventually covering 11,000 square miles of ocean. Now, imagine 8 to 80 times the amount of oil spilled in the Exxon[-]Valdez accident. According to new research, that's how much oil has made its way into sediments offshore from petroleum seeps near Coal Oil Point in the Santa Barbara Channel. That's just from one area off southern California, another head-in the-sand state that opposes offshore drilling. When Mother Nature is herself a major polluter, it is hard to point the finger at the alleged dangers posed by Big Oil. Drilling in ANWR and the continental shelf, coupled with the fracking boom, will soon make the U.S. the leading petroleum-producer on the planet. Our energy assets in both oil and liquefied natural gas will free us from dependence on vulnerable regimes and state sponsors of terror. We can be free from energy bondage like what is suffered by those European countries dependent on Russia, that gas station masquerading as a country. And we can tell OPEC to go and literally pound sand. Daniel John Sobieski is a freelance writer whose pieces have appeared in Investor's Business Daily, Human Events, Reason Magazine, and the Chicago Sun-Times among other publications. It's cool to hate Trump. It's cool to hate the GOP. In fact, these days it's pretty cool to hate America. The mainstream media have given birth to these ideas, and they continue to hammer them home, no matter the cost. Most recently, it's the new GOP tax plan (which is actually two separate yet similar proposals in the House and Senate) that's caught the attention of the liberal media. Reporters, left-wing pundits, and Democratic politicians have plucked little pieces of the plan out and examined them in isolation thus losing context and made outrageous claims. Read a handful of articles from the left, and you'd think the country were coming to an end. While the plan is far from perfect something many people on both sides of the party line have publicly spoken out about the extreme animosity is a little puzzling. Yes, big businesses and wealthy individuals get some pretty nice breaks, but so do the rest of us. Most confusing of all, perhaps, is the idea that the GOP tax bill is going to hurt America's middle class and harm small business-owners. If you step out of the echo chamber the media firestorm has created and actually read through some of the bill, you'll realize that it's highly beneficial to small businesses. GOP Tax Bill: Helping Small Business-Owners Everywhere Meet entrepreneur Mary Schiavoni. She's a pediatric speech pathologist and the founder of a series of treatment tools known as "Chewy Tubes," as well as a line of baby teethers, made in the United States. In a recent piece for the Washington Examiner, Schiavoni expressed her bewilderment that nobody is really talking about the 20-percent small business deduction that's included in Congress's new plan. For a business that earns $200,000 annually, that means that $40,000 is totally tax-free. For businesses that are currently burdened by taxes, this is a huge relief. "I currently employ five people," Schiavoni explains. "This tax cut would allow me to provide bonuses for current employees, hire more employees, expand my workspace, and purchase inventory." "To prevent this provision from being a tool of wealthy small businesses, like investment and accounting firms, it is ... available [only] to those making less than $315,000 a year. The overwhelming majority of small businesses earn below this threshold, meaning [that] the overwhelming majority would benefit" Schiavoni rightly states. "For small business[-]owners who are responsible for nearly two[] thirds of new job growth in this country, that's a big win." The Senate's tax bill is even more generous, proposing a 23-percent deduction. Again, the benefit for small business is clear. "The ability to protect nearly one[] quarter of my business income from taxes will give me the ability to expand my drive-in movie theater operations, hire more employees, and give my existing employees raises," explains Susan Kochevar, CEO of 88 Drive-In Theatre. In fact, she believes that this massive deduction would level the playing field and allow her to compete with larger cinemas that can afford skilled accountants who are paid to find tax code loopholes. Once again, this tax deduction is limited. In the case of the Senate's proposed bill, only small businesses earning $500,000 or less have the right to claim the 23-percent deduction. "That's why I'm confused about the media characterization of the bill as a gift to the wealthy at the expense of the middle class," Kochevar says. "As this small[] business provision demonstrates, this narrative is backwards." When small businesses have the freedom to reinvest in themselves, they're also going to reinvest in the economy as a whole. A small business-owner who is doing well financially is much more likely to take out a personal loan to perform a home renovation, as he's confident in his ability to pay it back. A small business-owner who is more profitable in his business dealings will have a few thousand dollars more in his pocket each year to take a vacation and inject money into other cities and states. A small business employee who gets a bonus as the result of the deduction is more likely to buy a couple of extra Christmas presents for his kids, which helps other small businesses. It's a cycle that feeds itself. The left fails to see this. All the leftists see is "corporate greed." Helping Big Business Help Small Business Will the proposed GOP tax bill help big businesses? Absolutely there's no questioning this fact. But why is it such a bad thing to give American companies tax breaks? What few on the left realize is that giving big companies a boost actually helps the rest of us, small businesses included. "My most profitable clients are big companies," small business-owner Gene Marks admits. "Many of my small clients rely on corporate customers for their growth and income. Big companies hire small businesses to do all sorts of things from construction to maintenance to landscaping to computer repairs to providing temporary workers. Big companies also employ people who when times are good and their salaries are increasing go home and buy pizzas, hire landscapers, shop for clothes[,] and shower the small businesses in their community with the fruits of their disposable corporate incomes." It's Up to Businesses to Respond If you actually read the proposed tax bills and do your research, independent of the biased influence that the mainstream media push in their glorified echo chamber, you'll clearly see that they're good for business. Big business, small business everyone benefits. When you look at the top-line numbers, it's easy to say greedy big businesses are the winners and small businesses are the losers, but that's simply not true. The top-line figures don't matter. You have to look at it practically and proportionally. If you view the tax plan through these lenses, it's clear who the real winners are. In the end, it's up to businesses to respond. When they get these tax breaks, are they going to hoard their money? Or will they use it to increase wages, spark innovation, and stimulate the economy? Lawmakers are doing their job it'll be up to business-owners to pull their weight after the bill is passed. My man Kevin D. Williamson is worried that the Republican Party has nothing to say to blue states like California and New York and that the party feels pretty good about it. But such an approach leads to disaster, he says: Writing off half of the country as a lost cause is bad for the Republican soul. It also will prove bad for Republican electoral prospects, in time. Well, yes. On a tactical level, it is important to have something to say to the blue cities and not to write them off as Deplorables. But that is to miss the wood for the trees. The reason why California and New York are blue bastions is simple. On the one hand, all the upper-income residents went to secular seminary and either learned to believe what they were taught or pretend they did. On the other hand, the immigration policy of 1965 has filled the cities with people that are just off the farm. They think and act as peasants and serfs, just as the Irish and the Italians did in the late 19th century. If we want to revive GOP fortunes in the great cities, we are going to do it not by catering to upper-class conceits or lower-class tribalism. That will only put off the Day of Judgment. What we need to do get the upper class recoiling in revulsion from lefty culture. And we need to slowly and incrementally reform the welfare state so that it guides the New Immigrants into the middle-class culture of work and marriage and responsibility. I do not see how this can be done without a full-on culture war to tu rn the elites from their cowardly kowtow to the left's cultural mandarins. We need to create an America where everyone knows in his bones that the only "haters" in sight are lefty activists. As for the New Immigrants, I refer you to the welfare reform of 1996. Liberals said it would be the end of the world; instead, the welfare recipients calmly went out and got jobs. But how do we make cultural war on the elites and cure them of their conceit? Perfectly simple: We declare war on the culture of "activism." I admit to being something of a dull dog about this for most of my life until the day a liberal friend told me she had always wanted "to get into activism." Lefty "activism" is the central Problem of Our Time, that Good Little Girls from good families are raised and educated to think that marchin' and protestin' are the means to bend the arc of history toward justice. Too many Good Little Boys think that, too. Little girls and boys are carefully taught that, but for wage and hour laws, civil rights laws, and social insurance, ordinary people would be living in grinding poverty subject to ruthless industrial discipline and racist and patriarchal oppression. Thus, upper-class kids are doing the "peaceful protest" thing on campus, complete with bullhorns and signs and chants, as the new normal carefully taught by our lefty teachers and administrators. The Good Little Boys had a point 170 years ago. Of course, the new capitalists would replace the feudal lords; of course, the proletarians would replace the feudal serfs as helpless victims. Everybody knew that. That's how the dance of power works, according to ancient wisdom and according to Good Little Boy Marx and Good Little Boy Engels. Only they were wrong. That's because the capitalists were not that interested in power. Oil guy Rockefeller retired at age 50 and invented modern philanthropy. Steel guy Carnegie built libraries and a peace foundation. Imagine regular politicians like Chuck and Nancy doing that! In my view, the story of the last two hundred years is that "power" is a dead end, and the horrors of everything from communism to Bolivarianism prove it. "Price" and "markets" are much better; they get people to peacefully work for each other's benefit. But, as with any great transformation, there are those who are desperate to prove that nothing has changed and that only with power can the human race be saved. Only through activism, the activists tell us, will we save the lost souls, workers, minorities, women, immigrants, Muslims! Because white privilege. Lefties make a big deal of railing at militarism, imperialism, and colonialism. Good point, and the long 19th century was a global experiment to prove that militarism, imperialism, and colonialism were a waste of time and money and lives. I have a better idea: that "activism" is a disaster that creates violence and misery wherever it is tried. It is up to us to teach the educated elite, and every silly peaceful protester, that "activism" is a vile superstition. Only then will they all instinctively rush to identify with the Republican Party. Christopher Chantrill (@chrischantrill) runs the go-to site on U.S. government finances, usgovernmentspending.com. Also get his American Manifesto and his Road to the Middle Class. It cannot be repeated enough that the Marxist-anarchist radical left Antifa and Islamic jihadists have joined forces to destroy Western civilization. Known as the Red-Green Axis, this unlikely alliance of leftists with Islamic groups is actually a means to an end by Islamists. Inexplicably, left-wing forces do not comprehend that they are merely one of the tools by which Islamists wish to impose a global caliphate. In his searing documentary Killing Europe, producer Michael Hansen makes the following cogent points. The Islamic jihadists have found willing partners in the left for a number of reasons. Particularly in Europe, the left's traditional voting bloc was the workers or proletariat. But as communism produced only mass misery and the deaths of millions, those who had invested 20-30 years in left-wing ideology soon found themselves without an identity once the proletariat saw the true nature of communism. Enter Muslim refugees, and the left now sees a new voting base. The fact that these migrants come from a culture completely at odds with the West does not faze the left, since leftists have never accepted historical facts and, even more telling, now tout a multicultural paradise, notwithstanding the irrevocable differences that an Islamic religious-based system contains. In essence, the left has found a new base to promote its own identity. That sharia law permits the stoning of gays, endorses gender apartheid, and advocates rape and murder of the infidel seems not to have registered in the leftist mind. Although the left abhors religion, leftists cannot fathom that their reliance on Islamist partners will not end well. This was borne out when the communists and Islamists joined to overturn the shah of Iran; the Islamic fundamentalists took the reins, eliminated the communists, and imposed draconian sharia law to maintain control. As Ayn Rand wrote, "[r]eason is not automatic. Those who deny it cannot be conquered by it." But as Kevin J. Johnston at Freedom Report explains, we need to be informed and realize that what is occurring is not to be denied even when political leaders reject the facts. How, indeed, can a secularist or atheist even consider siding with a religiously mandated system that absolutely abhors secularism and atheism? How can leftists who are ostensibly concerned with women's rights and gay liberation partner with a system that mandates the murder of gays and the dehumanization and killing of women? What both groups agree upon is a totalitarian society and censorship of ideas that would expose them. Political correctness hides their deeds. For example: The so-called Syrian refugees who come to Denmark actually return to their homeland for holiday vacations. Hansen interviews airline agents who confirm that there is a "peak season to Iraq." So much for the dangerous conditions for these so-called refugees. What better way to economically cripple the West than with phony refugee claims? The number of migrants claiming German welfare benefits soared by 169 percent in 2015. Syrian women who did not come to Europe are left behind to fend for themselves and their children. Syrian women complain about their abandonment while Syrian men stay in Germany. In 2015, 73% of the migrants were males, resulting in a gender imbalance in Europe often leading to rape by "men of foreign origin." Although Islam forbids the drinking of alcohol, many Muslim refugees are seen walking around railroad stations with bottles of liquor. Religiously sanctioned gender discrimination is the new norm in Europe. Much like American mainstream news, European media collude with European leaders and do not report the truth about the onslaught of Muslim refugees. The editor-in-chief of the Bild Tanit Koch asserts that "the Press Council believes that editorial offices in Germany should ultimately treat their readers like children by depriving them of relevant information." Hansen interviews journalists and asks them why there was no coverage of the Cologne rapes during New Year's Eve 2016. The responses ranged from "it is often forgotten that there was a suspected terror attack on Munich" to "it's very complicated since many journalists were on holiday." When asked if a perpetuator's identity should be cited in the news, one journalist responds, "[I]t depends." Thus, efforts by the government to suppress the nature and perpetrators of these attacks receive the blessing of the press. Why is this important to expose? Because women need to know that the chance of rape is high among the Muslim male population, whose members have been educated to believe that unveiled women should be raped. Confirming Hansen's findings, the Daily Mail reports that "German authorities have been critici[z]ed for waiting almost six months to release pictures of a group of sex attackers which immediately led to four arrests." And "[d]espite the severity of the crime and the thugs being clearly visible on CCTV cameras, the German police did not publish their pictures, with a police chief blaming strict privacy laws." Moreover, "[s]uspects in Germany, even those accused of murder, are identified only by their first name[s] and the first letter[s] of their surname[s] because of the country's strict privacy laws." Finally, official German government figures have been revealed that show that "the huge 92% increase in crime and violence in Germany is the direct result of the massive invasion of Muslims pretending to be refugees." A report titled the "Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Exploitation in Rotherham (1997-2013)" by Alexis Jay showcases one of the most chilling aspects of Hansen's documentary. It is a "scandal involving rape, ethnicity, religion, and the willful failure of Britain's public authorities to protect thousands of girls from horrific exploitation." It took fifteen years to attract the attention of the British political class. In fact, the "delay was due to a toxic combination of pathologies on the part of the authorities and the British media. And it all boiled down to a deliberate and even bizarrely principled refusal to speak the truth, no matter the consequences to the innocent." Hansen interviewed victims and relatives and was stunned to discover that one child had 36-42 samples of sperm on her. Let that sickening fact sink in. The rapists and traffickers were of Pakistani heritage. Yet the British police state that "nothing can be done" to charge all of the rapists because then "we'll be seen as racists." The report states that "the difficult[y] that prevent[s] this issue being dealt with effectively is the ethnicity of the main perpetrators." Additionally, "the police dared not act against Asian youths for fear of allegations of racism." Notice the euphemistic use of the word "Asian." And then there is the Muslim British woman who sought relief from her husband's ongoing violence. Ignored by the police until she "was strangled by steel wire" and "kicked and stomped on her neck to get [her] soul out," she is another victim of multicultural tolerance. The European Union and the mainstream media in Europe want to shut down alternative media and censor the internet. In September 2015, Angela Merkel was caught on a hot mic talking to Mark Zuckerberg concerning censoring people on Facebook about issues she deems "inappropriate." One is reminded of Obama's "Justice Department warning against social media spread[ing] information considered offensive to Muslims." As a die-hard leftist and Muslim sympathizer, Obama had the DOJ working "in earnest to impose Islamic law on American First Amendment rights" (Pamela Geller, Fatwa: Hunted in America, 57). Then there is the current DNC deputy chair, Muslim Brotherhood congressman Keith Ellison, who endorses the violent leftist Antifa group. In The Red-Green Axis: Refugees, Immigration and the Agenda to Erase America, author James Simpson describes how lifelong communist Angela Davis celebrates how "the refugee movement is the movement of the 21st [c]entury" as migrants "expect government to ... provide better food, health[ ]care[,] and housing[.]" This kind of thinking, asserts Simpson, "is already poisoning our body politic" and must be strongly resisted. Nonetheless, Zuckerberg hired 3,000 people to form "Community Operation Teams" to remove so-called hate speech on Facebook. Moreover, Merkel, who was brought up in communist East Germany, has hired a female former Stasi agent to fight "fake news." Consequently, "the European Union [E.U.] announced a new online speech code to be enforced by four major tech companies, including Facebook and YouTube." Facebook deleted the account of Ingrid Carlqvist after she "posted [her] latest video to her Facebook feed called 'Sweden's Migrant Rape Epidemic.'" The "Swedish government is now officially questioning free speech. A government agency has declared so-called Swedish 'new media' news outlets that refuse to subscribe to the politically correct orthodoxies of the mainstream media a possible threat to democracy." The government maintains that "the new media ... stretch the limits of free speech." Thus, Sweden accepts "Islamic intolerance to an astounding degree." The poison of censorship has also found refuge in Canada. Hansen was stopped at the Canadian border and given a difficult time about his documentary. Moreover, the Ottawa Public Library canceled the screening of Killing Europe and deemed its content not suitable for Canadians. How ironic. Thus, the truth is now labeled hate speech. Everything that occurs in Europe will occur in the United States if we do not maintain intense vigilance. We already are privy to "condescension, smears, charges about being racists[,] and thinly veiled threats that truth speech about Islam could be prosecuted" (Geller 58). And sadly, mainstream media coverage is "deceptive and typically mendacious." As Hansen points out, being submissive and trying to avoid violence does not result in Islamists backing down. They have been inculcated with the belief that it "is imperative for them to be dominant." Hence, they beat up German children and "kick them for fun." One such child was beaten to a pulp for putting pork on his pizza. The "dominance crimes of the Muslims are aimed at establishing or demonstrating [their] superiority." What future do children have if adults cannot protect them? While President Trump was excoriated for his comments about Swedish no-go zones, they are a fact of life for Swedes. Chris Tomlinson writes that "Swedish [c]hief [p]rosecutor Lise Tamm has claimed that the Stockholm suburb of Rinkeby is like 'a war zone.'" Moreover, nearby areas like Husby and Tensta are some of the "worst no-go zones in Sweden, along with certain areas of the city of Malmo." These areas are euphemistically known as "particularly vulnerable areas." It behooves everyone to watch Killing Europe. What Michael Hansen, a Danish expatriate, found was worse than what he had imagined. It is a clarion call to all who despise the Islamic jihadists and their handmaidens, the leftists, who seek to destroy our way of life. Eileen can be reached at middlemarch18@gmail.com. "And by the way, if you hate to go to school you may grow up to be a mule." In the compelling if sometimes soap opera-ish British TV series The Crown, Season 1, Episode 7, the young Queen Elizabeth, who has been taking private lessons at Eton. becomes aware of the complex issues facing Britain. Almost admitting she didn't know what she didn't know, she complained to her mother, "I know almost nothing" and admits to a new tutor, "I can't keep up." Elizabeth was more forthright regarding the extent of her abilities and truth about them than Niccolo Machiavelli suggested is desirable in a ruler. It is unnecessary, he wrote in The Prince, xviii, "for a prince to have all the good qualities I have enumerated, but it is very necessary to appear to have them." More simply, in modern-day language, to fool the people is the ruler's only thought. Truth, deceit, and political partisanship have combined to form a heady brew in the attributions and remarks made about President Donald Trump presented in the new book, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, by Michael Wolff. The author is clear in his intentions. The story is meant to show that the emperor has no clothes and that the revelations in the book will end the Trump presidency, though he does admit that he does not know if all the claims in the book are actually true. The most provocative accusations in Wolff's book, particularly those by Stephen K. Bannon, are not simply that President Trump is uninformed and undisciplined, has a short attention span, is erratic, is uninterested in learning, and is generally not equipped to be president and incapable of doing his job in a chaotic White House. The most serious charge is one of a mental problem that Trump is an idiot. In a sense, it is reminiscent of the claim that President Ronald Reagan suffered from a brain disease, dementia, while in office, and with which he was officially diagnosed in 1994. In his angry rejoinder to the book, Trump has asserted that his two greatest assets are his mental stability and being really smart in fact, a "very stable genius." He claims to have been an excellent student and to have gone to the best colleges. Rational criticism of Trump and his policies is important in the present political environment. Different opinions about domestic or foreign policy, or the significance of meetings with Russian lobbyists or lawyers, or Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, or indeed, whether operations in the White House are or were chaotic, are essential. They are more relevant for public policy than the question of whether Trump is a paranoid, not fit to hold office because of his mental state. One will admit that Trump is no Winston Churchill insightful and audacious, but also impulsive and erratic at times, characteristics Trump shares. Indeed, Trump is an unusual volatile personality, impulsive, obsessed with critics, with a vivid and unusual speaking style. He is said to read little and has populist passions, but these qualities and political positions do not imply that he is mentally ill. It is remiss in this case, as in all others, to use medical terms indiscriminately and reach supposedly psychological conclusions without personal examination. Certainly, there is no unanimity on the sanity issue, just to take a few examples. Perhaps most striking are the remarks on January 6, 2018 of British prime minister Theresa May: "When I deal with him [Trump][,] what I see is someone who is committed to ensuring that he is taking decisions in the best interests of the U.S." Nor is there any doubt about Trump's sanity on the part of Palestinian officials. After the president's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, a decision approved by Congress more than a decade ago, and his tweet on January 2, 2018 threatening to cut aid to the Palestinian Authority because the Palestinians "don't want to negotiate a long overdue peace treaty with Israel," the Palestinian spokesperson, who never negotiates, accused Trump not of insanity, but of dashing hopes of future peace efforts. Nor are the leaders of Pakistan unaware that the Trump administration has acted in a rational fashion in the decision to freeze all security assistance, more than $1.3 billion, to their country until Pakistan takes a tougher stance against terrorist groups. Not everyone will agree with General H.R. McMaster, national security adviser, that Trump understands human nature and understands that he will never have perfect intelligence about capabilities, but Trump did realize that American intelligence agencies had miscalculated the nuclear progress of North Korea for years and that U.S. policy had to change. The criticism of Trump is not the first time partisan politics has challenged the rationality or sanity of presidential decision-making. Perhaps the most notorious were the accusations that Nancy Reagan had influenced President Ronald Reagan's decisions on Iran contra and other issues following advice she had received from an astrologer. It is a truth universally acknowledged that Trump has a low regard for reporters, who in return are not among his admirers. He is not alone in this. This was shown in Paris in the New Year's meeting of President Emmanuel Macron with reporters, whom he lectured to abide by a set of rules and principles and a code of ethics. No one doubts the mastery of French politics or the intelligence of the well educated Macron, let alone his ambitious role for France: a "strong country with a universal pull." Yet he was critical, as is Trump, of "fake news" and plans a law to limit it. The controversy over the ability of Trump to be president brings up the issue of the degree to which modern rulers in democratic countries are and should be prepared, through education as well as innate intelligence, to deal with national and world affairs. Comparative analysis of modern times in the U.S., Britain, and France suggests a strong connection between education at elite institutions and those who become leaders. In the U.S., all presidents from Ford on until Trump have attended law school or business school at Harvard or Yale, while Bill Clinton attended Oxford as well as Yale. Interestingly, only Woodrow Wilson had a Ph.D. In Britain, those who disproportionally attended elite schools win the glittering prizes school at Eton or Harrow, attended by 19 of the 54 British prime ministers, followed by Oxford (27, including P.M. Theresa May) and Cambridge (14). Similarly, in France, the ENA, the Ecole Nationale d'Administration, established in October 1945 to recruit and train senior officials, has educated presidents Valery Giscard d'Estaing, Jacques Chirac, Francois Hollande, and Emmanuel Macron, plus six prime ministers. In all three countries, the problem has arisen of whether the successful leaders are part of an out-of-touch elite, prone to groupthink, in an age when traditional parties and institutions are under attack or being bypassed. Rather than concentrating on the alleged mental problems of the U.S. president, it is worthwhile to examine why, in an age of globalization, immigration issues, declining trade union memberships, and populist outbreaks, social democracy and the center-left are in retreat in so many democratic countries. Are citizens carrying moonbeams home in a jar? A common theme among progressives is that conservatives aren't just wrong; they're dumb. Reagan was dumb. G.W. Bush was dumb. Trump is dumb. "Knuckle-dragger," "mouth-breather," "stupid," and "uncultured" are typical pejoratives hurled at conservatives, who apparently tend to live in trailer parks, require dental care, handle snakes, and marry first cousins. Why, I had a liberal actor (excuse the redundancy) tell me once that I wasn't necessarily bad, just not as "evolved" as he was. (I had a great retort at the ready, but I decided just to lash him with my tail instead.) The reason for this arrogance isn't as simple as many may think. Rather, it relates to a deep psychological phenomenon that makes it difficult for those afflicted to evolve out of the leftist primordial soup. I'll introduce this with a story. Many years ago, I was at an affair attended by a very chauvinistic, left-wing Greek fellow who would expound upon the superiority of Greek culture while at times demeaning the U.S. He was like the father character in My Big Fat Greek Wedding, only with an anti-American twist. Desiring to take him down a peg and do a little face-to-face trolling, I finally said with a smirk, "If all that's true, why is Greece now like a third-world country?" (For those offended, know that I have great respect for ancient Greek accomplishments, just love moussaka, and have the physique of a Spartan hoplite.) Well, I exaggerate not when saying he turned red and, with veins popping out in his neck, exclaimed, "Don't say that! Don't say that!" It was the kind of situation where you get the feeling the guy might take a swing at you. His intense reaction wasn't hard to explain. His self-esteem, his self-image, was wholly dependent upon the idea that he was a member of an elite, a superior group, with which he identified so closely that there was little to no separation in his mind between it and him. This was something deeply ingrained, part of the fabric of his being. Thus, any challenge to this idea struck directly at an intractable self-image, threatening to upset his ego's world order, which had him, through group association, at its very pinnacle. This phenomenon is common. It's often exhibited by those considering themselves part of a "master race" or any kind of special group. It can be comforting: a person may not be accomplished, intelligent, or gifted and might otherwise feel inadequate. But his group association saves his psyche's day, for whatever he is or isn't, at least he's not like those other people, those untouchables. Remember that at issue here isn't a mere intellectual appreciation. For example, I truly believe that Western culture (which did originate with ancient Greece, mind you) is superior to all others. Yet I derive no self-esteem from being a "Westerner"; it's just not part of who I am. Rather, the phenomenon in question here is a deeply emotional one. For this reason, it's wholly resistant to intellectual appeals. You can't logically talk someone out of something irrational on which his self-worth is based. In fact, if it begins to dawn on such a person that his notions of superiority and hence his self-image rest on a lie, it will be intensely painful and depressing. The individual will thus have a strong incentive to rationalize away this realization. I don't claim that every single leftist derives his self-esteem from the notion that he's part of a superior group called "liberals," nor does this phenomenon completely explain leftist resistance to reason. But it is common among devoted liberals, and it's part of why, as a group, they can't give traditionalist views a fair hearing. Doing so doesn't just threaten their ideology; it threatens who they are, their entire self-image. Any argument that may give them even an inkling that they're wrong can induce a bit of panic and is thus quickly rationalized away often as the rambling of uneducated, un-evolved mouth-breathers who just don't know any better. This phenomenon is exacerbated by two related factors. First, liberals are generally dysfunctional, vice-ridden people who embrace what we call liberalism because its underlying relativism and nihilism help them justify their sins. (They become the arbiters of their own "values." "Everything is gray, a matter of perspective. I have my own 'truth.'") Simultaneously, liberalism allows these virtue-bereft people to virtue-signal by paying homage to the day's fashionable values. In other words, liberals are generally morally "unaccomplished" people who often have nothing to cling to but the illusion of intellectual, and often moral, superiority. (As to the left's actual moral inferiority, I urge you to read the excellent 2008 piece "Don't listen to the liberals Right-wingers really are nicer people, latest research shows.") Second, conservatives are more likely to have authentic faith, while liberals tend be to avowed or de facto atheists, which is why church attendance is one of the best predictors of voting patterns. This has an effect. Theists may, and I hope will, recognize moral differences among people and groups; any tendency to become haughty, however, is often tempered by a divine injunction prescribing humility and the knowledge that we're all sinners, part of a fallen race. Love for others is also demanded. Atheism involves no such requirements; in fact, its correlative moral relativism or nihilism (explained here) makes "if it feels good, do it" the ultimate guide for behavior. Moreover, unable to look up at divine perfection, and with the individual becoming his own source of (pseudo-) "morality," the self is often exalted, the ego deified. As with a pharaoh believing he's a god on Earth, it then becomes easy to look down on others. Just as liberalism is defined not by an unchanging set of doctrines, but by opposition to conservatism and what it defends the status quo godless liberals can judge themselves only relative to other people. And being moral train wrecks, they can't really be happy. But hey, whatever they may or mayn't be, Mr. Conservative, at least they're not you. And that's one status quo they're dead set on maintaining. Contact Selwyn Duke, follow him on Twitter, or log on to SelwynDuke.com. That Soros-funded stealth hate-Israel group, J Street, marketing itself as a "pro-Israel, pro-peace" outfit when it is neither, has sent around another exasperating email advising us to put the kibosh on President Trump's efforts to decertify the Iran nuke deal. This has been known as the JCPOA. It comes up for recertification and renewed waivers for heavy sanctions against Iran periodically, giving the President sixty days to extend the sanctions waivers. New to the bouillabaisse cooked up by the Sorosian acolytes of activism against most things pro-America and pro-Israel are the protests that have swept Iran. The idea behind the so-called Iran "deal" architected by former President Obama and his anyone-but-the-U.S. mentality was that the billions airlifted in cash to Tehran were to have gone to food and other basics badly in arrears owing to the strong sanctions that had been in effect on Iran for years. These are scarcely tiny teapot dustups, as they have shown up in dozens of Iranian cities a reaction to high prices, food scarcity, and a lowered quality of life than promised when the deal that was not a deal was wrought by Obama and his servitors in the BHO cabinet. The money went, instead, to support terror elsewhere in the Middle East. To tunnels chunked out by anti-peace Palestinian Arabs. To mischief wherever Hezb'allah could find a foothold. To North Korea. And on and on. Not much if any went to the actual Iranian people. "Doing nothing," as J Street is advising Donald Trump to do, is a nonstarter. Doing nothing has been tried, and it resulted surprise! in deaths and grisly disfigurement of hundreds. The current uprising, be it noted, has included some deaths, but they are in the double-digits and do not include wide-scale torture, and to hear tell, they are occasioning panic in the ranks of the mullah mediocrities ruling the restive Iranian moiety once so modern and upscale. The J Street blast addresses me as "friend." I don't recall having pizza and Budweiser with these intelligence-averse Sorosians. I am not a friend of anyone sending this kind of nefarious and disinformational missive. If they were honest, which clearly they are not, the people at J Street would acknowledge that Iran never signed the "deal," as well we all know. It's a hanging chad, an unfinished symphony, an undigested McNegative. The former Constitution-ignoring president wanted to think it a "done deal," per his megalomaniacal notions, so he gave away the store. We learned recently that he unconscionably made side deals with Hezb'allah to deal controlled substances that have greatly amplified the opioid epidemic and deliberately loosed ancillary terroristic behaviors and subsidies of the mullahcracy, all in service of his presumptuous claim of a sour and costly so-called victory that indeed ensured no compliance. We know too that the non-signed deal has already been demonstrated as ineffective and that Iranian enrichment of uranium and development of weaponizable nuclear arms has continued, not subject to meaningful controls or inspection, buried below ground, their subverting shields beyond our agencies' ability to monitor. Like a sedated DPRK, Iran has not even observed the niceties of that non-signed deal. The Iranians have flouted the restrictions with icy impunity, making a further mockery of the horse feathers concocted by an eager presidential intern apparently new to the ways of millennial Persian chicanery. But, J Streeters chide us, we ought again do nada and let the Iranians sort it out by themselves as we emulate the 100% cowardly and unbroken failed record of our 44th resident of the august White House. Why does J Street look to destroy this country? We know the answer after decades of Nazi-sympathizer and empathy-manque George Soros's bankrolling every ugly faction the country can spit up. It comes as no surprise when his groundings vouchsafe a new nauseating offensive against logic and common self-preservation. People of good faith, which is to say those not among J Street's destructive ranks, acknowledge that Iran remains the godfather of terror. The nuclearization of that fiercely disruptive mullahverse goes on apace. The Iranians currently undermine true efforts toward peace throughout the world. They are engineering destruction and continual mayhem, fueling discord, and promoting death and the activation of one of the least hopeful forces of community and peace. Do not call "friend" those who rarely seek solutions. Friends of J Street and their symps are enemies of the globe, enemies of the United States, enemies of Israel and of all peace-seeking peoples. A judge in Las Vegas has dismissed the case against rancher Cliven Bundy and his sons, who were involved in an armed standoff with federal authorities in 2014. The judge cited the prosecution's "reckless disregard for [c]onstitutional obligations" in dismissing the case. U.S. district judge Gloria Navarro accused the government of withholding evidence from the defense, saying "that the universal sense of justice has been violated." Los Angeles Times: The decision left federal prosecutors swallowing another defeat at the hands of a family whose defiance has become a rallying cry for Westerners who believe [that] the federal government has no business managing public land. Four times now in high-profile cases in Nevada and Oregon the Bundy family and its allies have beaten the federal government in court. For the latest showdown, supporters set up banners and signs on Las Vegas Boulevard. One drove from Montana to provide Facebook updates for devotees of the cause. At least 100 Bundy[-]backers filled the courtroom Monday. Some wore shirts with American flag motifs. Others carried pocket Constitutions in their button-down shirts. More than a few wore cowboy boots. Their heroes sat looking up at U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro. Cliven Bundy, 71, wore a jailhouse jumpsuit. His son Ryan, 44, who led a large group of supporters in prayer before entering the courtroom, removed his cowboy hat. Another son, Ammon, 42, and a militia member, Ryan Payne, barely moved. It was their moment. Oh, my! "Cowboy boots"? "Pocket Constitutions"? The horror! This kind of sneering put-down of Bundy's supporters is why Donald Trump won the 2016 election. The Times and their ilk just can't get over their smug sense of superiority. This attitude appeared to filter down to the prosecution, who flagrantly violated the constitutional rights of citizens. Meanwhile, the Bundys walked. Assistant U.S. Atty. Steven Myhre wrote in his brief that the government had shared 1.5 terabytes of information with defendants and noted that it was "by far the largest review and disclosure operation in this [U.S. attorney's office's] history." Myrhe also argued the government needed to protect some witnesses from leaks that might lead to threats, so it "culled the database with witness protection in mind." "Unprecedented database volume and witness concerns aside, the government never let these obstacles stand in the way of diligently working to fulfill its discovery obligations," he wrote. Navarro didn't buy it and shredded the government for a "reckless disregard for [c]onstitutional obligations." She said she was troubled by the prosecution's tardiness in delivering information about the government's placing of surveillance cameras and snipers outside the ranch. After the decision, Cliven Bundy emerged from an elevator at the courthouse dressed in jeans, button-down shirt[,] and gray blazer. "I'm not used to being free, put it that way," he said. "I've been a political prisoner for right at 700 days today. I come into this courtroom an innocent man and I'm going to leave as an innocent man." One thing should be made clear: the Bundys may have been on the right side of the issue but went about protesting it in a completely inappropriate and dangerous manner. The standoff was not an act of civil disobedience. If that had been the case, the Bundys would have turned themselves in, accepting the consequences for defying the law. That they chose armed rebellion damages the legitimacy of their cause and makes it easy for the government to portray them as extreme redneck gun nuts. Legal experts across the board agreed that the prosecution had a slam-dunk case. That the Bundys are free has nothing to do with the right or wrong of their rebellion against the government. They got off as a result of a technicality. The legal proceedings set no precedent, overturned no federal policy it changed nothing. In that sense, the Bundys' actions failed to achieve anything of significance. The government let a minor dispute on grazing rights escalate out of control to the point that SWAT teams and snipers were employed to intimidate the Bundys. There is fault to be found on both sides a lesson neither side is likely to take to heart. Oprah got a standing ovation from the Hollywood crowd at the January 6, 2018 Golden Globe awards when she said: For too long, women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men, but their time is up. ... Their time is up. So I want all the girls watching here and now to know that a new day is on the horizon! And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men fighting hard to make sure that they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say, "Me too." If Oprah and her Hollywood pals dressed in expensive black gowns had given this speech in 1997 when Bill Clinton, darling of the Hollywood left, was abusing Monica Lewinsky, groping Kathleen Willey, harassing Paula Jones by dropping his pants, and credibly accused of rape by Juanita Broaddrick, then Oprah and Hollywood would have some credibility. Oprah and her Hollywood pals did not support the victims of Bill Clinton, nor say they should have been believed. Clinton's victims were vilified and insulted by the Clinton thugs, such as James Carville, as "trailer trash," as if a certain social class of women can be sexually abused by Clinton with no recourse and no support from the Oprah crowd. Oprah did not mention Bill Clinton and his enabler, Hillary, whom Oprah endorsed in 2016. Oprah did not explain why she would endorse Hillary, who attacked the women victimized by Bubba. What happened to believing Monica Lewisky, Paula Jones, Juanita Broaddrick, and Kathleen Willey, who dared speak truth to power? Nor did Oprah mention Ted Kennedy leaving Mary Jo Kopechne to die in his car at the lake in Chappaquidick, or her pals such as Spacey, Weinstein, Dustin Hoffman, Charlie Rose, etc. Instead, Oprah stuck to the Hollywood company line to complain in general terms. These hypocrites all knew about the Hollywood culture of abuse exemplified by Democrat darlings and fundraisers, such as Weinstein and Spacey, but never said a word for years, except to refer to Weinstein as a "god" (in the case of Meryl Streep). Oprah did speak about Recy Taylor, a black victim of a rape in 1944 by white men. Oprah apparently does not care about the rape of Juanita Broaddrick by her pal, Bill Clinton, but Oprah knows her audience and base, so she talked about a 1944 rape of a black woman. She knows how to play the race card like Barack Obama, her Chicago pal. Oprah's speech has aroused CNN and the rest of the Fake News Media to start cheerleading for an Oprah 2020 presidential run. Time magazine is already predicting how Oprah can beat Trump. Oprah must be looking at the current crop of Democratic candidates, such as Elizabeth Pocahontas Warren, Joe Biden, Cory Booker, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Kamala Harris and concluding that she can beat this bunch. She will have the Hollywood money. She now has to criticize Bill Clinton to polish up her resume of standing for women. It is twenty years too late to criticize Bubba, but that does not matter to her cheerleaders in the Fake News-Destroy Trump Media. As a kid growing up Cuban in the U.S., I remember hearing stories of how the Castro regime would call you "crazy" and throw you in jail. It happened to 20-something Cubans who wanted to listen to The Beatles, for example, and to others who wanted to watch Western films like La Dolce Vita. (For more on this, you may want to read Against All Hope by Armando Valladares.) It's an old lefty trick: to shut down political debate by simply calling you crazy. In fact, it happened in the USSR, too, as I saw last year in this article: In 1963, Russian poet Joseph Brodsky was seized and sent to a mental institution. At his trial the following year, authorities charged the 24-year-old with "social parasitism" and called him a "pseudo-poet in velveteen trousers." He had failed to "fulfill his constitutional duty to work honestly for the good of the motherland." "Who has recognized you as a poet? Who has enrolled you in the ranks of poets?" asked the judge. "No one," Brodsky replied. "Who enrolled me in the ranks of the human race?" Brodsky was committed to a mental institution for examination, where he spent three weeks. Hospital workers pumped him with tranquilizers and repeatedly woke him during the night. He was given cold baths and wrapped in wet canvas that shrank and cut his skin while drying. Years later when Brodsky was being considered for exile, officials examined his mental health records. They consulted leading Soviet psychiatrist Andrei Snezhnevsky, who, without personal examination, diagnosed Brodsky with "sluggishly progressing schizophrenia." The poet was "not a valuable person at all and may be let go." There is a lot more! I am not suggesting that the Democrats want to create gulags. I am simply saying it is playing with fire to have mental health professionals call someone "crazy" without ever seeing the patient or to have partisans talking about the 25th Amendment. The "Hillary was robbed" story has gone from "she won the popular vote" to "the Russians did it" to now "Trump is crazy." PS: You can listen to my show (Canto Talk) and follow me on Twitter. When John Kelly moved from the Department of Homeland Security to the White House, there was an interim period when an Obama holdover named Elaine Duke was acting secretary of homeland security. During that time, Duke decided that Haitians living in America under Temporary Protected Status (TPS), due to an earthquake seven years earlier, could and should return home. Duke gave the Haitians eighteen months to leave the country an unreasonably long period of time. At the time, it seemed as though Trump had pressured Duke to end TPS for the Haitians, and Duke, reluctantly agreeing, built in the extra eighteen months to benefit the Haitians. But now, John Kelly's handpicked successor at DHS, Kirstjen Nielsen, has made a similar decision regarding 263,000 El Salvadorans who were granted "temporary" residence in the United States "temporary" for over seventeen years. Secretary Nielsen, whom "Sloppy Steve" Bannon's Breitbart calls "Lady DACA," while ordering the El Salvadorans to go home, also has given the El Salvadorans eighteen months to leave the country. Such a decision could not have been made without Trump's approval. It certainly doesn't require eighteen months to leave the country. A landlord doesn't need eighteen months to evict a tenant. An employer doesn't need eighteen months to fire an employee. A man doesn't need eighteen months to break up with his girlfriend, although there are sometimes legitimate reasons to drag the process out. The only explanation I can think of is that the Trump administration doesn't want to enforce its own decision and wants to leave it up to the next administration to do so. This delay will give the El Salvadorans more time to "go into the shadows," more time to apply for green cards, more time to create more anchor babies, collect welfare, take jobs from Americans, and, for some, to collect a paycheck from MS-13. It feels suspiciously as if the Trump administration is kicking the can down the road, because the deadline to leave will not take place until nearly the last year of the Trump administration's first term. You can bet that if a Democrat wins in 2020, none of those "temporary" refugees will be going home. It would have been much better if these people had been given a reasonable period of time say, a month or two so ICE could start pursuing them sooner. Ed Straker is the senior writer at Newsmachete.com. Stretching for approximately 100 kilometers along the southern edge of Lake Athabasca, in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, are some of the most northerly active sand dunes on Earth. Unlike most dunes, which are associated with dry and arid region, the Athabasca Sand Dunes are located in the middle of a wetland and a boreal forest, making it one of the most unique sand dunes and a geological oddity. The dunes are spread across more than 30,000 hectares, and due to their unusual ecosystem, they harbor an extraordinarily diverse biological life. Photo credit: Hidehiro Otake The Athabasca Sand Dunes were formed about 8,000 to 9,000 years ago at the end of the last glacial period. As the ice sheet melted, meltwater washed enormous quantities of sand, silt and sediment from local sandstone into Lake Athabasca, whose water level was much higher then than it currently is. Then the lake receded, exposing the large sand deposits on the shores. The wind then molded the sand into the formations seen today, and it continues to do so, shaping and reshaping the dunes and pushing it into the surrounding forest. The Athabasca Sand Dunes sits on top of a region known as the Canadian Shield, which is a large area of exposed Precambrian rocks that forms the ancient geological core of the North American continent. This bedrock covers half of Canada, and extends well into the northern reaches of the United States. They are among the oldest rocks on earth, dating from 2.5 to 4.2 billion years. This rock is covered by a thin layer of soil, about 20 meters thick, in the region where the dunes are located. The entire sandy region, including areas south of the dunes, serves as an enormous aquifer, which as a result significantly affects plant life and dune development. Indeed, the dunes are home to over three hundred plant species of which about forty are rare and ten or so are endemicin other words, found nowhere else on earth. Since the 1990s, the dunes have their own Provincial Park that protects the dunes and some of the surrounding areas. But reaching the dunes is not easy. There are no roads and the only way to access is by a float plane. Lake Athabasca, Canada. In this false-color image, the ice is light blue, dark blue is open water and the sand dunes are white. Photo credit: Tim Beckett/Flickr Nora Mulready wonders why Labour is not upset by the uprising in Iran. She points us to a letter written by the leader of the Workers Communist Party of Iran written to Jeremy Corbyn, formerly a presenter on the Iranian States Press TV. She notes: Well worth reading. Remember, communists & students started 1979 revolution & were butchered by Islamists at end. Takes real courage, not dinner party grandstanding, to be a communist in Iran. To: Jeremy Corbyn, Leader of the Labour Party 7 January 2018 Dear Mr Corbyn In solidarity with the heroic struggle of the people of Iran against one of the most despotic, brutal, anti-working class and misogynistic regimes in the world, and on behalf of the largest working-class party of the left opposition in Iran, I am writing to ask you to distance yourself immediately from the disgraceful comments made yesterday by the Shadow Foreign Secretary, Emily Thornberry. I am asking you to break your silence and to come out unreservedly on the side of the people in Iran in their heroic struggle against their oppressors. Siding with the oppressors of the people or even staying silent or prevaricating on the rightful protests by the workers, women and the youth in Iran against the corrupt and reactionary Islamic Republic, whose leaders have amassed billions, while subjecting workers to abject poverty, smashing workers organisations, throwing trade unionists to jail, committing state-sanctioned discrimination and violence against women and LGBT people and executing dissidents in their tens of thousands, would be a grave political folly for the Labour Party. Once this regime is overthrown by the ongoing heroic rising of the people, the people of Iran will not forget who was on their side and who sided with their oppressors. Your declared aims of fighting for a better world, for economic equality and for social justice won you great following among millions of people in Britain and internationally, who enthusiastically supported you in your leadership campaigns and in the 2017 general election on a progressive platform to address the widening inequality and the growing injustice in the UK. However, these are exactly the same issues on a far harsher and more brutal scale that have brought millions of people onto to the streets of Iran today. The workers, women and youth in Iran are protesting against grotesque levels of inequality, lack of basic political and social freedoms and a medieval religious dictatorship that is an affront to the collective conscience of humanity in the 21st Century. People in Iran do not want the accumulation of wealth in the hands of the 1% and the billionaire clergy while they try to survive on a minimum wage that is one-fourth of the official poverty line. They do not want the vile state discrimination against women, which officially defines them as minors and the property of their male guardians; they do not want compulsory veiling and gender apartheid. They do not want the imposition of a religious state and religious thought. In one word, the people of Iran do not want the Islamic Republic. They have risen up against the Islamic Republic because they want economic equality and political and social freedoms. They want a better world and a life worthy of human beings. They are right to demand this, and should have the people of the worlds unreserved support. Siding with such an obnoxious regime and disgracefully declaring, as Emily Thornberry has, that it is not clear who is right or wrong in this struggle of the oppressed against their oppressors will forever stay in the memory of the people of Iran. It will seriously harm the credentials of a progressive and egalitarian party that you are trying to build. It will disillusion millions of your supporters who rushed to your support precisely because they believe in equality and social justice everywhere. It will alienate your grassroots from the leadership, and mark a shameful moment in the life of your new party. It will be an irredeemable political folly and a historic moral disgrace for the Labour Party. I hope the utterances of Emily Thornberry were an isolated case, which she will come to regret and openly apologies for. In any case, I urge you, as the Leader of the Labour Party, to distance yourself in the clearest terms from those comments and to come out unreservedly and unambiguously on the side of the people of Iran in these momentous days. Hamid Taqvaee, Leader of the Worker-communist Party of Iran NAPLES - Morocco was the largest fruit and vegetable exporter towards Spain in 2017, the association of Spanish agricultural producers said Tuesday. Last year Moroccan fruit and vegetable exports to Spain grew by 36% over 2016, reaching a value of 462 million euros. And the sector is to get new impetus following the recent approval by the World Bank of a 200 million dollar loan to strengthen the agrifood value chain. The sector currently accounts for 15% of the country's GDP. The loan will also help promote greater inclusion of small and medium-sized enterprises. "With the sector dominated by small enterprises and cooperatives, the program intends to better include small and medium producers in a demanding and fast growing agri-food market," said Marie Francoise Marie-Nelly, director of the World Bank Operations for the Maghreb and Malta. Unemployment down to 11%, youth jobless drops to 32.7% Some 23.18 mn in employment in Nov, highest since 1977 (ANSAmed) - ROME, JANUARY 9 - Italy's unemployment rate dropped to 11% in November, down from 11.1% in October and the lowest level since September 2012, ISTAT said on Tuesday. The national statistics agency said the jobless rate was down one percentage point with respect to November 2016. It said 2,855,000 people were unemployed, 18,000 fewer than in October and 243,000 fewer than November 2016. ISTAT said the unemployment rate for 15-to-24-year-olds who are actively on the labour market dropped to 32.7% in November, down 1.3 percentage points on October and 7.2 points lower than in the same month in 2016. The agency said it was the lowest level since January 2012. It said the employment rate for young people in this age group was 17.7%, up 0.5 of a percentage point with respect to October and up 1.4 points compared to November 2016. ISTAT reported that 23.183 million people were in employment in Italy in November, an increase of 65,000 compared to October and of 345,000 with respect to the same month in 2016. The agency said it was the highest level since the start of the statistical series in 1977. It said the employment rate for 15-64-year-olds was 58.4%, up 0.2 of a percentage point on October and 0.9 of a point on November 2016. The employment rate, unlike the absolute figure, is still below the maximum level, reached in 2008, when it was 0.5 of a point higher. ISTAT said the employment rate for women had reached an all-time high of 49.2%. Premier Paolo Gentiloni, a member of the centre-left Democratic Party, welcomed the data. "#Labour. In November the number of employed people reached the highest level in 40 years," Gentiloni said via Twitter. "And youth unemployment is down too. Better can be done and must be done. Commitment and seriousness are needed more than ever, certainly not a pinwheel of illusions". Italy is holding a general election on March 4. (ANSAmed). 135 migrants rescued by Libyan coast guard Group included 5 children, 10 pregnant women (ANSAmed) - Cairo, January 9 - The Libyan coast guard on Monday "managed to rescue" a further 135 migrants "of various African nationalities" from a dinghy "off the coast of Gasr Garabulli" 60 km east of Tripoli, a statement posted to Facebook said. The group included "5 children, 81 men and 49 women, of whom 10 were pregnant and one gave birth in hospital". The migrants were given food and medical assistance under the supervision of the UN refugee agency and IOM before being taken to a "reception centre". The same rescue operation is reported by the Libyan navy on its Facebook page, but with different figures (54 women and three children). In addition, the navy said the group included three migrants from Bangladesh. (ANSAmed) Israel responsible for consequences of attacks, Syria says Military command warns of dangerous repercussions (ANSAmed) - The Syrian army on Tuesday warned of the potentially "dangerous repercussions" of the Israeli attacks against military outposts near Damascus and said Israel is "fully responsible for the consequences". "This shameful aggression confirms Israel's support to the terrorist groups and its desperate attempt to raise their morale after their heavy defeat," read a statement published by SANA agency. The Syrian army recalled the recent progress made by government forces and loyalist militias in Harasta, east Ghouta, and in the northwestern Idlib province. The military command said Israel launched three separate attacks starting from 2:40 am local time. In the first attack, Israeli jets launched several missiles that crossed Lebanese airspace towards their target in Al Qutayfah, in the province of Damascus, the statement said. Syrian air defence "intercepted the missiles and shot down one of the jets", it added. Then at 3:04 am two land-to-land missiles were reportedly fired from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, but Damascus says these were also intercepted. Finally at 4:15 am jets launched missiles from the Tiberias region in Israel. On this occasion, Syria says one missile was intercepted and destroyed, while others "fell near one of the military posts, causing only material damage". (ANSAmed). Beirut - The Syrian air force said Tuesday it has shot down an Israeli jet following the missile attack by the Jewish State on military outposts near Damascus. In a statement the air force said it also shot down one of the Israeli missiles. The others reportedly fell on military sites, causing material damage. Israel has not confirmed either the air raid in Syria or the loss of a jet. Israeli media report the Syrian military as saying Israel attacked a weapons depot at an army base near Al-Katifa, in eastern Damascus. The same source says jets and ground-to-ground missiles were employed in the attack. The Syrian opposition website Qasioun claims the operation was conducted by four planes travelling through Lebanese air space. TUNIS - Tunis' Avenue Bourghiba on Tuesday again hosted a demonstration by a group of people protesting against the rising cost of life. The apolitical protest under the hashtag #Fech_Nestanew (what are we waiting for) denounces an increase in prices and protests against government policies, in particular asking for the withdrawal of the 2018 budget and scheduling a new demonstration on January 13. On the political front, Islamic party Ennahdha, the second main party and part of the government coalition, has condemned the ransacking of shops yesterday and the acts of vandalism on public and private properties, accusing ''some left-wing anarchic political parties'' of taking advantage of the protest to create chaos and encourage acts of vandalism. Ennahdha however asked the government to be more aware of the needs of citizens and grant more support to poorer regions. Relative majority party Nidaa Tounes condemned the violence while urging to support the demands advanced by protesters. Opposition leader Hamma Hammami, from the left-wing Popular Front, accused the government of being responsible for the violence, announcing a demonstration to ask for the budget's withdrawal on January 14, a date that symbolizes the Jasmine revolution. ''We will remain in the streets and we will increase the intensity of protests until the unjust budget law will not be withdrawn'', Hammami told a press conference. ANSAmed - Today's events in the Mediterranean (ANSAmed) - ROME, JANUARY 9 - These are some of the main events scheduled for today in the Euro-Mediterranean area: BELGRADE - Visit by Italian Foreign Minister, Angelino Alfano. BRUSSELS - EU, High Representative for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini and Commissioners Johannes Hahn and Christos Stylianides will receive Horst Kohler, Personal Envoy of the UN Secretary General for Western Sahara. TUNIS - Hearing in trial of 33 people accused of the terrorist attack at the luxury resort in Sousse on June 26, 2015, in which 38 people died TUNIS - Hearing in trial for the terrorist attack at the Bardo Museum on March 18, 2015, in which 24 people died, including four Italians. (ANSAmed). [contextly_auto_sidebar] WHAT was the real heart of the 60s? That depends, of course, on what we really mean when we talk about that much-mythologized and contested decade. The British rock critic and social historian Jon Savage, best known in the States for his chronicle of punk and the Sex Pistols, Englands Dreaming, sees 1966 as the eras key year, and his book, 1966: The Year the Decade Exploded, just out in paperback, chronicles it all in delicious detail. Here is my essay on Savages book, which was a built out of a long interview with him as well as conversations with a film critic, Michael Sragow, and a writer on black culture and politics, Gene Seymour. I found Savage to be quite sharp and lively over the phone, if despairing at recent shifts in US and UK politics. (He and I disagree about The Jam and Van Morrison!) Savage also has a book about the making of teenage culture from the Victorian era to the end of 1945 that I am eager to read. Overall, it was his skills as a social historian that impressed me the most, and his ability to put things like the Velvet Underground, the Beatles Revolver and Dusty Springfield into a historical context. And unlike a lot of folks who lived through the 60s, he is not nostalgic for the era or its music: While groups like the Kinks and the Yardbirds still matter to him, his favorite recent record, around the time we spoke (this was some months ago) was the latest Frank Ocean. As a writer, he has to look back, he told me, but he tries to stay connected to his inner teenager and also look forward. In any case, check out the book its outstanding. Rahul, at 'Global Organisation of People of Indian origin' convention in Bahrain, blamed Modi-led govt for creating a divide in the nation. Union Minister for Law and Justice Ravi Shankar Prasad Prasad also slammed Congress over its dual stand on the triple talaq bill in the Parliament and accused it of spreading hatred. (Photo: ANI) New Delhi: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Tuesday condemned Congress President Rahul Gandhi for his speech targeting the Centre at the convention of Global Organisation of People of Indian origin in Bahrain. "The BJP condemns this irresponsible utterance of Rahul Gandhi before a global conference and interaction," Union Minister for Law and Justice Ravi Shankar Prasad said, at a press briefing in New Delhi. "We expected that the baseless hate speeches Rahul Gandhi gives in India, he will not do the same and at least consider to not talk about the political differences within India when he goes to a foreign country," Prasad added. Prasad also slammed Congress over its dual stand on the triple talaq bill in the Parliament and accused it of spreading hatred. Read: BJP supports communal violence, uses youth to spur hatred: Rahul "Rahul Gandhi has accused our government of spreading hatred. I want to ask him one question - the stand your party took in the case of triple talaq - was it a stand of spreading love or hatred? The party that can't take one stand for women empowerment and justice, that party is teaching our party in a foreign country," he said. Rahul, in his Monday address at the convention of Global Organisation of People of Indian origin in Bahrain, zeroed in on the Narendra Modi-led government for creating a divide in the nation, instead of dealing with the real issues that matter. Gandhi spoke in front of delegates from 50 countries at a Global Organisation of People of India Origin function in Bahrain. 'NRIs are the true representatives of our soft power and the brand ambassadors of our nation across the globe. Looking forward to meeting and addressing fellow countrymen in Bahrain tomorrow,' Gandhi tweeted ahead of his trip. (Photo: ANI/Twitter) Manama: Rahul Gandhi on Monday met with Crown Prince of Bahrain Shaikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa in Manama and discussed a variety of bilateral issues of interest during his first foreign trip after becoming the Congress president. "Had a good meeting with Crown Prince of Bahrain, HRH Shaikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa. We discussed a variety of issues of interest to India and Bahrain," Gandhi said in a tweet. Gandhi, who is in Manama as a state guest of Bahrain, is also expected to meet King Hamas bin Isa Al Khalifa. He also addressed a convention of NRIs and met the Gulf country's Prime Minister Prince Salman bin Hamas Al-Khalifa. Gandhi was also the the chief guest at valedictory session of a function organised by Global Organisation of People of India Origin (GOPIO) in Bahrain, where delegates of 50 countries were present. (Photo: ANI/Twitter) Addressing the GOPIO, Gandhi sharply attacked the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, saying,"I am here to tell you what you mean to our country, that you're important, to tell you there is a serious problem at home, to tell you that you're part of the solution and that I am here to build a bridge between wherever you are in the world and home." He also stressed the problems of the youth and accused the BJP-led government of trying to benefit from it. Gandhi said that the government is manipulating a division based on caste and religion, to make up for its failure at creating jobs. The insecurities of the jobless youth is then being fed to create "hatred between communities." The Congress president also met with Bahrain foreign minister Shaikh Khalid bin Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, Gulf Daily News reported. "Thank you, Your Excellency, Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, honourable Foreign Minister of Kingdom of Bahrain for being a gracious host at lunch today," Gandhi tweeted after the luncheon meeting. He will also have an interactive session with business leaders of Indian-origin on Tuesday. "NRIs are the true representatives of our soft power and the brand ambassadors of our nation across the globe. Looking forward to meeting and addressing fellow countrymen in Bahrain tomorrow," Gandhi tweeted ahead of his trip on Sunday. Gandhi is expected to return to India later on January 9. Move gives ammo to Cong ahead of polls. New Delhi: Dynastic politics is all set to dominate the forthcoming Madhya Pradesh Assembly elections expected to be held later this year. Despite the BJPs robust and repeated criticism of dynasty politics, Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chauhans elder son Kartikeya made his political entry on Sunday. Addressing a public rally in Shivpuri, he took on the Congress Jyotiraditya Scindia, accused by the BJP to be a beneficiary of dynastic politics. Kartikeya, 22, who was addressing a convention of the Dhakad community while campaigning for a BJP candidate for the upcoming Assembly by-election in Kolaras, asked people not to look at the BJP candidate but vote in the name of his father, the chief minister. The Congress, which won just 58 seats, as opposed to the BJPs 165 seats in the 230-member Assembly in 2013, has slowly been gaining ground. In the by-elections held in Madhya Pradesh last year November, the Congress had defeated the BJP by a margin of over 14,000 votes. The Congress recent performance in Gujarat Assembly elections has also boosted the partys morale. The Congress is expected to focus on rural distress and farmer issues in the state. The party has demanded immediate implementation of the Swaminathan Committee report, and complete farm loan waiver. In June last year, police allegedly opened fire on protesting farmers in Mandsaur, killing five. The issue snowballed into a political controversy with the Congress and the BJP trading charges, and Jyotiraditya Scindia, the Congress Lok Sabha MP from Guna, holding protest marches and meetings with farmers, while the chief minister sat on hunger strikes. Congress president Rahul Gandhi also wanted to visit the affected area but was not allowed. Later, senior Congress leaders from the state, including Digvijaya Singh, Kamal Nath and Scindia visited the area. With Mr Gandhi in-charge of the Congress, the focus now is also on collating and corroborating dirt on BJP leaders that will stick. Details of corruption charges against some saffron leaders are being collected. Interestingly, in a bid to drop the pro-minority tag, former chief minister and Congress leader Digvijaya Singh is on a 3,300-km, six-month long Narmada Parikrama a spiritual journey on foot along the banks of the river that entails temple visits. The party is hopeful that farmers agitation, anti-incumbency and their own improving morale will catapult them to power in the state. The Congress, however, is yet to decide on the name of the leader who will lead the party in the polls. A division bench of the Kerala HC was considering a petition, (Mat. Appeal No. 1234/2015), filed by Ambika Aravindakshan from Coimbatore. Citing a 1987 ruling of the court (Karunakaran Nair vs V Suseela Amma), the Kerala High Court dismissed the argument of a rental income of Rs 12, 000 saying, an individual doesnt live by bread alone and has other basic necessities to cater to. (Photo: File) Kochi: The Kerala High Court on Tuesday held that a Hindu unmarried daughter has every right to claim and thereby obtain expenses from her father for her anticipated marriage irrespective of her and her mothers other sources of income. The high court stated that even illegitimate children are entitled to such a right. According to a report in The Times of India, a division bench of the Kerala High Court was considering a petition --- (Mat. Appeal No. 1234/2015) --- filed by Ambika Aravindakshan from Coimbatore. Ambika had approached the high court after the Palakkad family court decided that she is not entitled to receive marriage expenses from her father K Aravindakshan as the former and her mother earn a rental sum of Rs 12, 000 every month. Ambika had asked for Rs 5 lakhs from Aravindakshan. Citing a 1987 ruling of the court (Karunakaran Nair vs V Suseela Amma), the Kerala High Court dismissed the argument of a rental income of Rs 12, 000 saying, an individual doesnt live by bread alone and has other basic necessities to cater to. "One can just imagine what amount the petitioner or her mother could have saved after meeting the day to day expenses. The respondent (father) has got no case that the petitioner or her mother is employed or that they have got any other source of income. In these circumstances, we have no hesitation to find that the order of the lower court rejecting the claim of the petitioner in toto is erroneous," the TOI reported the division bench saying. According to the Kerala High Court ruling, the liability of the father arises from section 20(1) of Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956. A Hindu man is bound, under law, to maintain his infirm parents and children, both legitimate and illegitimate. Ambikas right to demand money for her intended marriage is backed by section 3(b)(ii), which includes reasonable expenses of and incident to a daughter's marriage. The matter came to light after one of the constable's wives, a nurse in Ambernath, approached higher officials for help, a top cop said. The action was taken against the constable, currently attached to Manpada police station in Kalyan division, on a complaint lodged by a woman claiming to be one of his wives, a senior officer said on Tuesday. (Photo: File | Representational) Thane: A middle-aged constable was suspended on Tuesday pending a departmental inquiry after it was revealed that he had married seven women over the last 28 years till 2014. The action was taken against the constable, currently attached to Manpada police station in Kalyan division, on a complaint lodged by a woman claiming to be one of his wives, a senior officer said on Tuesday. The name of the constable is withheld since the inquiry is being conducted against him, he said. The officer said the matter came to light after the woman, who claimed to be the wife of the constable and currently working as a nurse in Ambernath, approached higher officials against her husband. During the inquiry, police found that the constable first married in 1986 and subsequently in 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998, 2007 and in 2014, the officer said. He said the woman who approached the police claimed that the policeman married her in 1992 and has cheated her by marrying other women. Police found that two out of seven 'wives' of the constable had died over a period of time. According to the officer, the women the constable married were all residents of Thane or adjoining areas. Police are now trying to find out the reason behind the constable 'marrying' multiple times and how he managed to keep the marriages a secret. Setback to ministry, CBI as ex-Finmeccanica CEO set free of graft charges. New Delhi: In an apparent setback to the Indian defence ministry and the CBI, an Italian court on Monday acquitted Giuseppe Orsi, the former president of defence and aerospace giant Finmeccanica, and Bruno Spagnolini, former CEO of the fims helicopters subsidiary AgustaWe-stland, of charges related to alleged bribes paid in exchange for a Rs 3,600-crore VVIP chopper deal to sell 12 AgustaWestland helicopters to India, Italian news agency ANSA reported. Indias defence ministry had ordered a CBI probe into the allegations of kickbacks to the tune of Rs 362 crore after the arrest of Orsi and Spagnolini by Italian investigators in connection with the case. Under Indias defence procurement rules, the in-tegrity pact prohibits paying or accepting bribes. The company is under a cloud in India after char-ges that it had allegedly roped in the expert experience of former Indian Air Force chief SP Tyagi through a web of middlemen and a murky trail of bribe money to help influence big defence contracts. Orsi, who was at the helm of AgustaWestland when the deal was struck, was arrested in 2014 and resigned as chief executive of the aerospace group which was later renamed as Leonardo. Both Orsi and Spagnolini had been sentenced to four-a-half-years years in jail for false accounting and corruption. The case against Orsi and Spagnolini resulted from an investigation launched in 2012 into the sale of 12 luxury helicopters to India. India had scrapped the contract with Finmeccan-icas British subsidiary AgustaWestland in January, 2014 for supplying 12 AW-101 VVIP choppers to the Indian Air Force over alleged breach of contractual obligations and charges of kickbacks paid by the firm for securing the deal. Snowden spoke in defence of the journalists and directly blamed the UIDAI as responsible for destroying the privacy of a billion Indians. Snowden had spoken on the same issue earlier this month, saying, 'It is the natural tendency of government to desire perfect records of private lives. History shows that no matter the laws, the result is abuse.' (Photo: Twitter) Mumbai: Amid continuous outrage over the Aadhaar data breach that was reported after an investigation by The Tribune earlier this month, and the consequent FIR filed by Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), US whistle-blower Edward Snowden spoke up again on Tuesday in defence of the concerned journalist. Directly calling out the UIDAI responsible for "destroying the privacy of a billion Indians," Snowden tweeted, "The journalists exposing the #Aadhaar breach deserve an award, not an investigation. If the government were truly concerned for justice, they would be reforming the policies." The journalists exposing the #Aadhaar breach deserve an award, not an investigation. If the government were truly concerned for justice, they would be reforming the policies that destroyed the privacy of a billion Indians. Want to arrest those responsible? They are called @UIDAI. https://t.co/xyewbK2WO2 Edward Snowden (@Snowden) January 8, 2018 Snowden had spoken on the same issue earlier this month, saying,"It is the natural tendency of government to desire perfect records of private lives. History shows that no matter the laws, the result is abuse." Also read: No matter the laws, result is always abuse: Snowden on Aadhaar breach Rachna Khaira, the journalist against whom UIDAI filed an FIR said on Monday that she has just revealed the "tip of the iceberg" in her report and there was "much more to come" based on her investigations. Khaira also appreciated the support Chandigarh as well as Delhi media and even international media has shown to her cause. Also read: Aadhaar breach: Journo says only tip of iceberg revealed, more to come India Today journalist Rahul Kanwal tweeted, "Totally wrong for UIDAI to file an FIR against the journalist who exposed #AadharLeaks If a loophole is pointed out Govt should work on fixing the flaw rather than try to shoot the messenger. Dont intimidate journalists. Not on." The Tribune also released a statement saying Khair's investigation was a "legitimate journalistic exercise." "We regret very much that the authorities have misconceived an honest journalistic enterprise and have proceeded to institute criminal proceedings against the whistleblower. We shall explore all legal options open to us to defend our freedom to undertake serious investigative journalism," said the statement released by The Tribune Chief Editor Harish Khare. The Union government, however, on Monday released a statement saying it was not against journalists or freedom of press in any way. Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad tweeted that the FIR was against unknown persons responsible for the leak of demographic details. Prasad also said that a suggestion has been made to UIDAI to request The Tribune and its journalists to assist the police in further investigation. Laxman Mahto and Madan Yadav had cases of theft registered against them, surrendered and arrived in prison. Earlier in 2013, when Lalu Prasad Yadav had gone to jail for another fodder-scam case, Madan Yadav had used the same trick to get to prison before him. (Photo: AFP) Patna: Ahead of Lalu Prasad Yadav ending up in prison for the fodder-scam case, two of his closest aides made sure they were arrested and in the same jail before he even walked in. Nothing else can probably explain why Laxman Mahto and Madan Yadav, known to be in Lalu Yadav's inner circle, had cases of theft registered against them, surrendered and arrived at Ranchi's Birsa Munda jail hours before the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) top boss walked in on December 23. Laxman Mahto is a known face as Lalu's personal aide and helper while Madan Yadav was his active sidekick whenever he was in Ranchi. Madan Yadav's neighbour in Ranchi lodged a case of beating and theft of Rs 10,000 against Yadav and Mahto. Initially, the police had refused to register the case, but they went to another police station. The instance the FIR was lodged, the two surrendered in court and were sent to prison. Earlier in 2013, when Lalu Prasad Yadav had gone to jail for another fodder-scam case, Madan Yadav had used the same trick to get to prison before him. Laxman Mahto didn't have to, because Lalu Prasad's RJD was in alliance with the Jharkhand government at the time, and political influence could open the gates anywhere. Lalu Yadav, 69, has been jailed for three-and-a-half years in a case linked to the fodder scam involving the embezzlement of more than Rs 89 lakh in government funds between 1991 and 1994. The rally seeks to raise the demand for the release of Dalit outfit Bhim Army's founder Chandrashekhar Azad amongst other issues. A large section of students from universities and colleges in Delhi, women's groups, teachers' associations and activists associated with Mevani from across the country are expected to attend the rally. (Photo: File) New Delhi: The Delhi Police said that Vadgam MLA Jignesh Mevani's request for holding a rally on Tuesday on Parliament Street has not been granted yet. The police had earlier said that Mevani's request was "under consideration". "No permission granted so far by Delhi Police to hold a proposed protest at Parliament Street in view of NGT orders. Organisers have been constantly advised to go to an alternate site, which they are reluctant to accept," the office of Deputy Commissioner of Police, New Delhi, tweeted on Monday. No permission granted so far by Delhi Police to hold proposed protest at Parliament Street in view of NGT orders. Organisers have been constantly advised to go to alternate site which they are reluctant to accept. @PTI_News @ANI @htTweets @TOIIndiaNews @NavbharatTimes @DDNational DCP New Delhi (@DCPNewDelhi) January 8, 2018 However, the organisers have confirmed that they would be going ahead with their plan. The 'Social Justice' rally or 'Yuva Hunkaar Rally' is planned to be addressed by Mevani along with Assam peasant leader Akhil Gogoi. The NGT on October 5 last year had ordered officials to "immediately stop all activities of dharna, protest, agitations, assembling of people, public speeches and using of loudspeakers among others at the Jantar Mantar Road." Heavy security deployed ahead of Jignesh Mevani's 'Yuva Hunkar Rally' to be held at Parliament Street. (Photo: ANI/Twitter) One of the organisers and former JNU Students' Union president Mohit Kumar Pandey said, "There has been a lot of attempts to stop this event and even some media houses are spreading wrong information that the permission for the rally has been denied." Ever since the rally was announced on January 2, "a lot of money has been spent on posters calling Mevani a deshdrohi (traitor) and urban naxal," Pandey said, adding the event will be held as per schedule. Mevani could not be reached for his comments. In a statement, the organisers have urged the prospective participants to "assemble on the Parliament Street at 12 pm on tomorrow". The rally seeks to raise the demand for the release of Dalit outfit Bhim Army's founder Chandrashekhar Azad and emphasis on issues like educational rights, employment, livelihood and gender justice. A large section of students from universities and colleges in Delhi, women's groups, teachers' associations and activists associated with Mevani from across the country are expected to attend the rally. Azad, 30, was arrested in June last year from Himachal Pradesh as he was the main accused in the Thakur-Dalit clash in Uttar Pradesh's Saharanpur district. Mevani termed the refusal to grant permission to the 'Yuva Hunkar' rally as an example of 'Gujarat model' of politics. New Delhi: The Narendra Modi government poses a "threat" to the country's democracy and Constitution, Dalit leader Jignesh Mevani said on Tuesday at a youth rally for which the Delhi Police had refused permission. The newly-elected MLA from Vadgam in Gujarat termed the refusal to grant permission to the 'Yuva Hunkar' rally in Parliament Street an example of the "Gujarat model" of politics. "The 125 crore people of this country are watching that someone is not being allowed to speak for merely demanding the release of Chandrashekhar Azad, effective implementation of the Constitution and two crore jobs to the youth. If an elected representative does not have the right to do so, then this is Gujarat model," Mevani said to loud cheers from a crowd comprising student activists from Delhi, Lucknow and Allahabad among other places. The rally -- held in Parliament Street in the heart of the national capital where prohibitory orders are in force through the year -- was demanding the release of Dalit outfit Bhim Army founder Chandrashekhar Azad. The gathering also sought to emphasise issues like educational rights, employment, livelihood and gender justice. Mevani said he will stand guard against the politics of hatred and stick to constitutional values and the "politics of love", along the lines of statements made by Congress President Rahul Gandhi after the Gujarat polls. "I believe in politics of unity. I believe in politics of love, not love jihad. Alpesh Thakore, Hardik Patel and I are being targeted because we demolished their (BJP) pride and arrogance in Gujarat..There's a looming threat to our democracy and Constitution today," he said. "We are not supporters of love jihad, we are 'pyaar ishq muhabbat' supporters, and therefore, we will celebrate Valentine's Day as well," Jignesh Mevani said. Although authorities had maintained till the last minute that Mevani and his supporters did not have permission to hold the event, it seems the rally organisers and Delhi Police reached a compromise later. Read: No permission yet, but Jignesh Mevani's Delhi rally to go ahead per plan The rally, which began around 1 pm, saw a modest turnout. Former and current JNU student leaders, including Kanhaiya Kumar, Shehla Rashid and Umar Khalid were present on the stage, metres away from the Parliament Street Police Station. Assam farmers leader Akhil Gogoi and senior Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan were also present, apart from students from JNU, Delhi University, Lucknow University and Allahabad University among others. Azad (30) was arrested in June last year from Himachal Pradesh as he is the main accused in Thakur-Dalit clashes in Uttar Pradesh's Saharanpur district. His supporters turned up with posters bearing his image. This shows that Lalu Yadavs commitment to social justice is a sham & he cares only for himself and his family members, said Mr Kumar, a JD(U) MLC. Ranchi/Patna: One could call it jail bharo, Lalu style. To ensure that his jail yatra in BJP-ruled Jharkhand neither dented his lifestyle nor put him at any serious discomfort, RJD president and former Bihar chief minister Lalu Prasad Yadav had made arrangements for his helper and masseur-cum-cook to land in prison hours before his own grand arrival in Ranchis Birsa Munda central jail on December 23, 2017, in connection with a fodder scam case. Helper Lakshman Mahto and masseur-cum-cook Madan Yadav turned themselves in voluntarily on December 23, 2017, over an allegedly fudged theft and assault case registered against them by their neighbour. Sources said that the two have allegedly been personally attending to him inside the jail since December 23, the day the RJD chief was convicted and sent to prison in the Deoghar treasury fodder scam case. While the ruling JD(U) and the BJP have cried foul, sources said that the timing of the leak about Lalu Yadavs jail luxury is meant to have an adverse impact on his bid to seek bail from the Jharkhand high court in the next few days. The JD(U) and the BJP also demanded a high-level probe to find out the real truth behind Lalu Yadavs helpers reaching the jail just hours before he was convicted. The RJD jumped to its leaders defence, insisting that the presence of Mahto and Madan Yadav in jail was conicidental. The superintendent of Birsa Munda Central Jail could not be reached for comments. Other government officials remained tight-lipped. JD(U) spokesman Neeraj Kumar, in a statement issued in Patna, said, Lalu Yadav is a person with feudal mindset who can make his party workers go to any extent to serve his personal interest. This shows that Lalu Yadavs commitment to social justice is a sham and he cares only for himself and his family members, said Mr Kumar, a JD(U) MLC. Sources said Mahto and Madan Yadav, both residents of Jharkhand, had moved into a house in Ranchi a few weeks before the December 23 CBI special court verdict against Lalu Yadav. Thereafter, they had a fight with a neighbour and were booked. The FIR against Mahto and Madan Yadav was registered by their neighbour Sumit Yadav in Lower Bazaar police station, alleging that he was beaten up and robbed. They abused me and assaulted me when I asked them to return my money which they had borrowed. They also stole Rs 10,000 from my shirts pocket Sumit Yadav said in his FIR against Madan Yadav and Mahto. Both the aides of Lalu Yadav have been booked under IPC Section dealing with theft, causing hurt, insulting someone and wrongful restraint, punishable with a maximum of three years in jail. This is not the first time the two have accompanied the RJD chief to Ranchi jail. Sources claimed that in 2013, when Lalu Yadav was convicted in the first fodder scam case related to fraudulent withdrawal of Rs 37.7 crore from the Chaibasa treasury, Mahto and Madan Yadav used the same trick to land in jail and be at their masters beck and call. Lalu Yadav has been sentenced to three-and-a-half years in jail by the special CBI court in connection with the Deoghar treasury case involving the embezzlement of more than Rs 89 lakh in government funds between 1991 and 1994. The talks began in Tashkent on January 3, 1966 with Kosygin meeting Shastri and Ayub, initially, separately before the later summit meetings. It was 52 years ago, this day that the Tashkent Declaration was signed by then Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri and President of Pakistan Field Marshal Ayub Khan. Unfortunately, within a few hours after affixing his signatures on the historic document, Indias second Prime Minister, who had succeeded Jawaharlal Nehru only 18 months ago, died of a cardiac arrest, which came as a big shock to not only the people of India, but the entire world. Even before the ceasefire, following the 22-day war, on September 18, 1965, the Russian (then Soviet Union) Prime Minister (chairman of the council of ministers) Alexei Kosygin offered his good offices for bringing about improved relations between India and Pakistan. This was brought to the notice of the House where members of Parliament, cutting across party lines, supported the ceasefire but a number of them wanted India to retain Haji Pir pass, which the Army had recently captured to prevent infiltration. The MPs had foreseen that in any negotiations both countries will have to fall back to positions they held before hostilities. Amongst the notable parliamentarians who lauded the Prime Minister were Acharya J.B. Kripalani and Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit. Pandit, who was elected to the Lok Sabha from the seat vacated by her illustrious brother, stated: The story of Pakistans perfidy and deceit is a shameful one but we are a proud people today, for we have given a reply in no uncertain terms I would like to pay a respectful tribute to the bold leadership of the Prime Minister in this crisis. Though India readily accepted the offer of Kosygins mediation on September 23, Pakistan, after some hesitation, did so on November 11, 1965. Kosygins mediatory efforts were also supported by US President Lyndon B. Johnson and British Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Justifying his decision to accept the Soviet offer of mediation, Shastri stated in Parliament: No one can ever contest the view that ultimately India and Pakistan will have to live together as peaceful neighbours. We cannot therefore say no to any efforts, which may help bring about such a situation, made by those who are sincere and genuine in their feelings of goodwill and friendship. Before leaving the country for the capital of Uzbekistan, Shastri said in an interview with All India Radio (AIR): Jawaharlalji used to say the Soviet Union had given us many gifts; the most precious gift was the gift of friendship. I can do better than to echo these sentiments. The talks began in Tashkent on January 3, 1966 with Kosygin meeting Shastri and Ayub, initially, separately before the later summit meetings. Earlier, soon after the ceasefire, the Security Council had passed a resolution demanding the withdrawal of all armed personnel to positions held by them prior to August 5, 1965. Kosygin stressed upon implementation of this resolution to which the USSR, alongwith other powers, was a party. When the Indian Prime Minister told Kosygin that under no circumstances India would give up Haji Pir pass as it had a great strategic importance, and was won after a heavy sacrifice of our brave military personnel, Kosygin replied that if India did not withdraw from Haji Pir (and Tithwal), Pakistan will not withdraw from Chhamb and other Indian territories occupied by Pakistan and then there will be no agreement. Similarly, to Ayub Khan, who was insisting upon inclusion of Kashmir in the agenda and refusing to vacate Chhamb, the Soviet premier firmly told that the failure of talks would not only lead to Pakistans loss of prestige in the world, but resumption of war which his country could ill-afford. By the evening of January 9, it appeared that the talks were failing, as both sides were not willing to compromise on their respective stands. The morning newspapers in India on January 10 carried dispatches from Indian correspondents in PMs entourage in Tashkent Inder Malhotra (Statesman), Krishan Bhatta (Hindustan Times), Dev Murarka (Indian Express), Kuldip Nayyar (UNI) and G.K. Reddy (Times of India). They all reported virtual failure of talks. While Inder Malhotra reported: Mr Kosygin was trying desperately to save the talks from total failure and collapse. Bhatia opined: Unless a miracle happens, the Tashkent Conference should end tomorrow on an unmistakable note of disagreement between Prime Minister Shastri and President Ayub Khan of Pakistan. But the miracle did happen. At lunch time, on January 10, with the determined efforts of Kosygin, ably assisted by his dynamic foreign minister Andrei Gromyko, Lal Bahadur Shastri and Ayub Khan, despite strong reservations of his foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, signed the historic declaration which brought peace to the subcontinent, however temporarily. But that has been the history of India-Pakistan relations. The news of the success at Tashkent was hailed in the country, but there were hostile voices too, amongst them Jana Sangh and the socialist parties. In his biography Lal Bahadur Shastri: A Life of Truth in Politics, C.P. Srivastava, who was a joint secretary to the PM and had accompanied him to Tashkent, recorded a call between Venkataraman (PMs PS in Delhi) and Sahai (PMs PA in Tashkent): While Venkataraman was still on the telephone, the Prime Minister asked Sahai to find out from him what the general reaction to the Tashkent declaration was. Sahai put the question to Venkataraman who replied that the declaration has been generally well received, except Atal Behari Vajpayee (Jana Sangh) and S.N. Dwivedy (PSP). In fact, the Jana Sangh, which called the agreement, a betrayal, had planned to greet the Prime Minister with black flags at Palam (now Indira Gandhi) airport. But that was not to be. With his death Lal Bahadur became a martyr to the cause of India-Pakistan friendship, as did the Mahatma less than two decades, earlier, for the cause of Hindu-Muslim unity. Alongwith other parliamentarians Vajpayee and Dwivedy paid glowing tributes to Shastri and his grand success in promoting peace between the two neighbours. Like Srivastava, many journalists who were in the PMs delegation have written detailed accounts of the Tashkent Declaration and Shastris unfortunate demise. They all expressed the view that Shastris death was natural and there was no question of any foul play. This is best summed up by L.P. Singh, who was then the home secretary and was part of PMs entourage in Tashkent: The circumstances of Shastris death at Tashkent were explained in a statement in Parliament over 25 years ago and the report of the group of physicians, including Shastris Indian physician, Dr Chugh, was placed on the table of the House. After this, there should have been no doubt left in anyones mind that Shastri had died of a sudden, severe heart attack. But some in India needlessly look for conspiracy theories to explain major occurrences, including the death of a national leader. But that is India, where people get carried away be it rumours or falsehood. Ultimately, it is Satyamev Jayate. The writer, an ex-Army officer, is former member National Commission for Minorities and a political analyst. Kolaras and Mungawali Assembly constituencies are going to byelections shortly. Bhopal: A ruling BJP leader has threatened to break Congress MP Jyotiraditya Scindias hand and chop off his tongue if he dared to challenge chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan. A video showing BJP leader Radheshyam Dhakad giving the threat while addressing a public meeting at Kolaras in Shivpuri district on Sunday went viral on Monday, triggering an outrage. He, however, retracted his comment following the uproar, saying, I made the statement in the context of politics. I have absolutely no personal enmity. The BJP leader while addressing the public meeting at Kolaras said the Kirar community, to which the chief minister belonged, would no longer bear frequent verbal attacks by Mr Scindia against the chief minister. Mr Scindia is dubbing the chief minister as a murderer of farmers. The Kirar community is deeply hurt by such comment by him, he added. If Mr Scindia points a finger at the chief minister, then his hand will be broken and if he speaks against him then his tongue will be chopped off, Mr Dhakad, president of Kirar Samaj, said. The Congress has blamed the chief minister for the last years police firing on the agitating farmers in Mandsaur in MP in which six tillers were killed. Kolaras and Mungawali Assembly constituencies are going to byelections shortly. Both the constituencies fall under Gwalior-Chambal region, Mr Scindias bastion. Interestingly, chief ministers son Kartikeya Singh Chouhan was also present at the meeting. The Opposition Congr-ess on Monday took strong exception to the comment by the BJP leader. He accused the Congress of failing to take a stand on an issue of womans respect and justice. New Delhi: Taking on Congress president Rahul Gandhi for his address criticising the Indian government from an international platform, senior BJP leader and Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Tuesday said that Mr Gandhi was spreading hatred among Indians with his speeches abroad like he did in the country. The BJP said Mr Gandhi accused the government of spreading hate and terror, besides few other things that are normally not said at international forums, but for the longest time, the politics of hate and communalism has been practised by the Congress itself. Dubbing Mr Gandhis speech made in Bahrain on Monday as irresponsible, Mr Prasad compared the Congress leaders speech with Prime Minister Narendra Modis address to 270 Indian-origin (PIO) parliamentarians, focusing on boosting ties between India and other countries. The BJP strongly condemns Rahul Gandhis irresponsible utterances... He is spreading hatred among people, said the Union minister while wondering if the Congress stand on the triple talaq bill worked to spread love or hate in the society. He accused the Congress of failing to take a stand on an issue of womans respect and justice. The senior BJP leader said Mr Gandhis father and the then PM Rajiv Gandhi had committed a sin by passing a law under pressure from Muslim bodies to negate a Supreme Court order to provide alimony to Shah Bano after her husband divorced her. He said the same Muslim body is now opposing the triple talaq bill and claimed that the Congress decision to stall it in the Rajya Sabha was a case of double standards influenced by vote bank politics. The Union minister cited Mudra loans given to tens of millions of people, rise in road construction works and opening of call centres in tier two cities and said this has led to creation of employment as he refuted Mr Gandhis charge that the government had not created enough jobs. During his visit, the Israeli PM will also make a visit to PM Narendra Modis home-state Gujarat. New Delhi: Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu will visit New Delhi, Agra, Gujar-at and Mumbai during his visit to India from January 14 to 18, sources said on Tuesday. The Israeli PM is expected to hold talks with PM Narendra Modi on the entire gamut of Indo-Israeli ties during his visit to New Delhi. He is also expected to pay a visit to the Jewish Chabad House in Mum-bai that was attacked by Pakistani terrorists during the 26/11 terror att-ack of 2008. Mr Netany-ahu is also expected to attend a cultural functi-on in Mumbai with part-icipation from the Boll-ywood film industry. During his visit, the Israeli PM will also ma-ke a visit to PM Naren-dra Modis home-state Gujarat. PM Modi is un-derstood to be extremely keen that Mr Netanyahu should visit Gujarat. Goldsmiths have been running workshops on a large scale in the area for several years. Mumbai: Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis on Monday ordered that workshops where goldsmiths manufacture ornaments be shifted from Kalbadevi to otherparts of Mumbai keeping in mind fire safety. Mr Fadnavis has asked the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) to issue notice to businessmen in thegold industry. Goldsmiths have been running workshops on a large scale in the area for several years. Mr Fadnavis has taken cognisance of Harkisandas Gordia, a Kalbadevi resident. Mr Gordia had filed an online complaint to the chief minister as part of the Lokshahi Din programme where citizens interact directly with administrative and local self-government body officials and air grievances alleging that the smoke from these manufacturing units is affecting the health of residents in the area. Mr Gordia alleged that the businessmen are not taking fire safety measures, endangering the lives of residents. If the BMC takes action against these workshops, it will take a major toll on the industry, as there is no fixed alternate location for it to shift base. But the safety of the residents is the highest priority, said an official. Mr Fadnavis has asked officials to take action on residents complaints at their level and they would not be required to go to Mantralaya. Meanwhile, the Malavani government hospital will have a facility for cancer patients with help from Tata Cancer Hospital. Mumbai: With a growing number of Alzheimers patients in the state, health minister Dr Deepak Sawant has decided to open memory clinics at each district hospital to treat them. The health department will also start day-care centres for such patients at Mumbai, Pune, Thane, Nagpur, Nashik and Sindhudurg. A meeting in this regard was held on Monday helmed by Dr Sawant where the issue of Alzheimers patients was discussed. The officials informed the minister that out of an average 1,400 patients coming to government-run hospitals every day for check-up, six to seven were patients of Alzheimers disease. The officials said that these patients did not seek treatment for fear of social stigma. Hence, the state government should have its own centres to treat such patients, they said. An official from the health department said, Memory clinics are expected to have early detection of Alzheimers patients and treat them early. Various tests can be conducted on these patients to ascertain the cause and they would be treated accordingly. Government-run hospitals do not have this facility everywhere, especially in the rural areas. The day-care centres will treat patients apart from teaching family members and relatives how to deal with these patients. The official added that the government would start Alzheimers awareness programmes, even for school students. Meanwhile, the Malavani government hospital will have a facility for cancer patients with help from Tata Cancer Hospital. The facility will start from January 26. The government conducted a cancer check-up drive of nearly 1.77 crore people from the state between December 1 and 31, 2017. There is a possibility of there being 10 to 15 oral cancer patients out of every 10 lakh people in the state. The government has decided to carry out further tests on those suspected of having oral cancer. The government will also operate on them free-of-charge, the official said. The police got the first lead on the attackers from CCTV camera footage that captured one of them soon after the attack. Mumbai: Former two-time Shiv Sena corporator Ashok Sawant was stabbed to death in Kandivalis Thakur Complex late on Sunday. Tension prevailed in the area for some time following the incident and local party workers forced shops to down their shutters in some areas. The Samata Nagar police has arrested two people Sohail Dodhiya and Ganesh Jogadand while three others, including a notorious goon called Jaga, are wanted in the case. A preliminary probe revealed that Sawant had had a dispute with Jagga following which the latter threatened him on several occasions. Sawant had lodged a complaint with the police regarding this. The police is looking into two theories about what might have led to Sawant's murder: a dispute over a cable television business and a slum redevelopment project. It is, however, tight-lipped over the motive. On Sunday night, as soon as Sawant who was returning home after attending a meeting alighted from an auto rickshaw near his residence, at least three persons attacked him, stabbing him multiple times with a sharp weapon. There are at least 20 stab wounds on the body. He was rushed to a nearby hospital but he succumbed to his injuries, said an officer from the Samata Nagar police station. The investigators said that Dodhiya had hired Jogadand to fetch Sawant in his auto-rickshaw and the latter reached the spot in the vehicle following which the attack took place. We have also seized the rickshaw and are looking for more accused. We cannot reveal more at this moment," said Vinay Rathod, deputy commissioner of police (zone XII). The police said that accused on the run are the attackers and the weapon is yet to be recovered. The police got the first lead on the attackers from CCTV camera footage that captured one of them soon after the attack. The vehicle turned upside down and crashed on the way. Pune: Three youth died in an accident when the car they were travelling in hit a tempo near Khalapur toll naka on the Pune-Mumbai Expressway on Tuesday at around 9.45am. Deceased are identified as Faizal Shaikh (19) from Kurla, Sweta Dube (19) from Thane, and Rizwan Choudhary from Thane. While Nilesh Kadam (19) from Juinagar, hradha Morya from Thane injured in the accident. S B Thakur, police sub inspector, Khalapur, said Five youngsters were travelling to Pune from Mumbai via expressway in Polo car (RJ21CB0833) today morning. The driver lost control over wheels due to high speed and hit a tempo (MH04GF9007) that was ahead. The vehicle turned upside down and crashed on the way. Two people died on the spot while three injured, were taken to a government hospital in Khalapur. However Rizwan died during treatment. Other two are stable an have been shifted to MGM Hospital Kamothe, Mumbai. The traffic going towards Pune from Mumbai was affected for half an hour due to accident. However IRB, highway police removed the car with the help of crane and the traffic was cleared. CM Fadnavis has granted the stay the after political uproar in the state legislature. Mumbai: The state housing minister, Mr Prakash Mehta filed his written statement before the Lokayukta on Monday evening, in which he allegedly passed the buck to the then Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA) chief Vishwas Patil, in the controversy related to the MP mill compound SRA project at Tardeo, said sources. In his statement, Mr Mehta claimed that he had given directions to the SRA chief to act as per the provisions of law and that he never asked him to act illegally, sources said. The minister has refuted all allegations levelled against him and told the Lokayukta that he had not discussed the matter with CM Devendra Fadnavis, as per a remark in the file related to the issue. There are allegations against Mr Mehta for sanctioning an SRA proposal, which allows extra building rights granted to slumdwellers at the MP Mill compound to be transferred to a scheme for project-affected people (PAPs). The housing department had pointed out in June 2017 that there is no provision in the DC rules that allows benefits granted to eligible slum dwellers to be withdrawn or transferred. However, Mr Mehta sanctioned the proposal on 21 June last year by saying, The proposal should take general body resolution (GBR) of society. The government will get PAPs. The chief minister has been informed. CM Fadnavis has granted the stay the after political uproar in the state legislature. During the violence, Rahul Fantangale (28) was killed near Sanaswadi. Mumbai: The Pune district police arrested 28 more people between Monday and Tuesday, including three minors, in connection with the January 1 caste clashes that broke out in and around the Bhima Koregaon village in which a youth was killed. The police had earlier arrested 15 persons in connection with the incident. The violence occurred during the bicentennial event to commemorate the Bhima Koregaon battle in which British imperial forces comprising dalits had defeated the Maratha army of the Peshwa. On Monday, we arrested 12 people, including three minors and on Tuesday we arrested 16, for allegedly vandalising vehicles on road in villages adjoining Bhima Koregaon. Those arrested are from both the communities (dalit and Maratha). We are studying CCTV footage to check their activity and how this violence exactly occurred, said Pune district superintendent of police Suvez Haque. During the violence, Rahul Fantangale (28) was killed near Sanaswadi. We are investigating Fantangales death. We will get details of the incident from those who have been arrested. We are on right track and will soon arrest some more people, said an investigating officer. The police has booked six members of the Kabir Kala Manch, a radical cultural group, for making provocative remarks during the Elgar Parishad (conference) held at Shaniwarwada, Pune on December 31, a day ahead of the Bhima Koregaon violence. The conference was attended by Dalit MLA from Gujarat, Jignesh Mevani, JNU student leader Umar Khalid, (late) Rohit Vemula's mother Radhika Vemula, and Bharip Bahujan Mahasangh president Prakash Ambedkar. The police has booked Mr Mevani and Mr Khalid for making provocative speeches and creating a rift between two communities. The Pune rural police had registered an FIR against right-wing leaders Milind Ekbote and Sambhaji Bhide (aka Guruji) under SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act and under various sections of the IPC including attempt to murder in connection with the caste clashes. Today, Israel is the second biggest foreign military supplier for India, poised to pip the US over the long term. In 1893, Swami Vivekananda famously invoked Indias embracing inclusivity in his seminal address to the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago by stating: I am proud to tell you that we have gathered in our bosom the purest remnant of the Israelites who came to southern India and took refuge with us in the very year in which their holy temple was shattered to pieces by Roman tyranny. In 2013, 120 years later, then Israeli President Shimon Peres reciprocated the sentiment while also calling Mahatma Gandhi a prophet and stated: I think India is the greatest show of how so many differences in language and sects can coexist facing great suffering and keeping full freedom.... India has a rare record with Judaism before Aaliyah (emigration of Jews to Israel) with its Malabar Jews dating back to the King Solomon era, Paradesi Jews (Spanish and Portuguese), the Bene Israel community who arrived 900 years back, Baghdadi Jews and more recent converts Bnei Menashe (Mizo and Kuki tribesman) and Bene Ephraim (Telegu Jews). As Rabbi Metzger presciently put it: Jews have lived in India for over 2,000 years and have never been discriminated against. This is something unparalleled in human history. This civilisational-historical fact overcame the official distance between the two nations till 1992. The fructification of the religion-based Zionist movement led to the creation of the modern State of Israel in 1948. This genealogical fact militated against Indias own bloody Partition caused by a religion-based vivisection. Even Mahatma Gandhi had wholeheartedly empathised and sympathised with the Jews over their persecution but couldnt agree with the forcible occupation of Palestine under the pretext of sanction for it is sought in the Bible so the moral conundrum of forcing out the Arabs was unjustifiable for him, thus the initiation of the Indian position. The hyphenation of the Israeli-Palestinian context established itself in the immediate aftermath of all the subsequent Indo-Israeli moves. Though the contradictions emanating from the steadfast pro-Pakistan tilt of Arab nations (particularly on Kashmir) posited a genuine conundrum on India to continue favouring the cause of Palestine, at the cost of normalising the relationship with the reality of Israel. India recognised Israel (after opposing Israels UN membership in 1949) in 1950, after King Farouk of Egypt had voted in favour of Pakistan over the Hyderabad issue. Despite the absence of full-fledged diplomatic relations, former Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru is said to have reached out to the Israelis over the 1962 Sino-Indian war and got military wares. Despite the utopian notions of the nonaligned movement co-propounded by Nehru and Egypts Gamal Abdel Nasser, the 1965 and 1971 India-Pakistan wars further complicated the situation with the Arabs clearly tilting in favour of Pakistan, while Israel unequivocally supported India, both diplomatically and militarily (as per the P.N. Haksar papers). This despite India supporting Egyptian nationalisation of the Suez Canal, denouncing Israel in the Six Day War and the continued support to the Palestinian cause. India, in the 1970s and 1980s, was repeatedly attacked by strictures from the Organisation of Islamic Conference and the period saw substantial moral, diplomatic and financial funding by Arabs towards Pakistans India-centric nuclear programme (despite that India was the first non-Arab nation to diplomatically accredit the PLO). However, Israels own history of contradictory rapprochement with arch-rivals like Jordan and Egypt made Indias ostensibly anti-Israel behaviour contextually understandable. Israel was familiar with the spectre of the then Soviet Union and China voting against Israel in UN forums while simultaneously deepening bilateral relations and trade. The realpolitik of the evolving situation in the early 1990s warranted the normalising of India-Israel ties. With this backdrop, rumours of Indo-Israeli talks about doing an Osirak-style-military attack on Pakistans Kahuta nuclear facilities gained credibility. The changing geopolitics in 1990s with the Cold Wars end, the emergence of Islamic terror in the Middle East and gradual warming of India-US ties led to the establishment of full diplomatic relations with Israel in 1992, while still retaining the so-called moral position on Palestine. Since then, the balance on the Israel-Palestinian axis has been broadly maintained, with increasing symbolic gestures of tilting towards Tel Aviv. Indias abstention in the vote condemning Israel over the 2014 Gaza war, abstaining again on a Unesco resolution calling Israel an occupation force in Jerusalem and the recent Narendra Modi visit, which sought to dehyphenate the Israel-Palestinian context with the PM only visiting Israel, not the West Bank: all this is symptomatic of the emerging new order. Today, Israel is the second biggest foreign military supplier for India, poised to pip the US over the long term. Its cutting-edge military technology is buttressed with crucial intelligence-sharing, strategic tieups beyond military wares into the field of agriculture, commerce and space technology. The burgeoning civilian transactions already make India the eighth largest trading partner for Israel, helping override occasional hiccups like the recent cancellation of a $500 million order for the Spike anti-tank guided missiles. It is this larger narrative, contextual understanding and the obvious portents of natural allies which will allow the growing India-Israel equation to overcome Indias recent vote in the UN Security Council against the recent American move to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. For India, supporting the Palestinians is a moral obligation and it neednt be a deal-breaker in the Indo-Israeli equation. Israel will understand the sincerity and consistency of the Indian position on the two-nation solution on the future of Palestine even if it disagrees with the exact means, dimensions and contours of New Delhis stand. The future Indo-Israeli possibilities are immense as even in the military domain the Israeli components are essentially of systems, as opposed to complete military platforms like tanks, warships or fighter planes, as yet. Israel has shown remarkable flexibility in adapting to topical necessities such as the recent murmurs of an Israeli-Saudi understanding on Iran. Therefore, for it to sift through the evolving Indian position on Palestine, and yet solidify the Indo-Israeli framework with the impending visit of Prime Minister Benjamin Bibi Netanyahu to India, is entirely possible, justifiable and morally tenable. Measurements show that the decline in chlorine has resulted in about 20 per cent less ozone depletion during the Antarctic winter. The change in ozone levels above Antarctica from the beginning to the end of southern winter early July to mid-September was computed daily from MLS measurements every year from 2005 to 2016. For the first time, scientists have shown through direct observations of the ozone hole by a satellite instrument, built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, that levels of ozone-destroying chlorine are declining, resulting in less ozone depletion. Measurements show that the decline in chlorine, resulting from an international ban on chlorine-containing human-produced chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), has resulted in about 20 per cent less ozone depletion during the Antarctic winter than there was in 2005 the first year that measurements of chlorine and ozone during the Antarctic winter were made by NASA's Aura satellite. "We see very clearly that chlorine from CFCs is going down in the ozone hole, and that less ozone depletion is occurring because of it," said lead author Susan Strahan, an atmospheric scientist from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. CFCs are long-lived chemical compounds that eventually rise into the stratosphere, where they are broken apart by the Sun's ultraviolet radiation, releasing chlorine atoms that go on to destroy ozone molecules. Stratospheric ozone protects life on the planet by absorbing potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation that can cause skin cancer and cataracts, suppress immune systems and damage plant life. Two years after the discovery of the Antarctic ozone hole in 1985, nations of the world signed the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, which regulated ozone-depleting compounds. Later amendments to the Montreal Protocol completely phased out production of CFCs. Past studies have used statistical analyses of changes in the ozone hole's size to argue that ozone depletion is decreasing. This study is the first to use measurements of the chemical composition inside the ozone hole to confirm that not only is ozone depletion decreasing, but that the decrease is caused by the decline in CFCs. The study was published January 4 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. The Antarctic ozone hole forms during September in the Southern Hemisphere's winter as the returning Sun's rays catalyze ozone destruction cycles involving chlorine and bromine that come primarily from CFCs. To determine how ozone and other chemicals have changed year to year, scientists used data from JPL's Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) aboard the Aura satellite, which has been making measurements continuously around the globe since mid-2004. While many satellite instruments require sunlight to measure atmospheric trace gases, MLS measures microwave emissions and, as a result, can measure trace gases over Antarctica during the key time of year: the dark southern winter, when the stratospheric weather is quiet and temperatures are low and stable. The change in ozone levels above Antarctica from the beginning to the end of southern winter early July to mid-September was computed daily from MLS measurements every year from 2005 to 2016. "During this period, Antarctic temperatures are always very low, so the rate of ozone destruction depends mostly on how much chlorine there is," Strahan said. "This is when we want to measure ozone loss." They found that ozone loss is decreasing, but they needed to know whether a decrease in CFCs was responsible. When ozone destruction is ongoing, chlorine is found in many molecular forms, most of which are not measured. But after chlorine has destroyed nearly all the available ozone, it reacts instead with methane to form hydrochloric acid, a gas measured by MLS. "By around mid-October, all the chlorine compounds are conveniently converted into one gas, so by measuring hydrochloric acid we have a good measurement of the total chlorine," Strahan said. Nitrous oxide is a long-lived gas that behaves just like CFCs in much of the stratosphere. The CFCs are declining at the surface but nitrous oxide is not. If CFCs in the stratosphere are decreasing, then over time, less chlorine should be measured for a given value of nitrous oxide. By comparing MLS measurements of hydrochloric acid and nitrous oxide each year, they determined that the total chlorine levels were declining on average by about 0.8 percent annually. The 20 per cent decrease in ozone depletion during the winter months from 2005 to 2016 as determined from MLS ozone measurements was expected. "This is very close to what our model predicts we should see for this amount of chlorine decline," Strahan said. "This gives us confidence that the decrease in ozone depletion through mid-September showed by MLS data is due to declining levels of chlorine coming from CFCs. But we're not yet seeing a clear decrease in the size of the ozone hole because that's controlled mainly by temperature after mid-September, which varies a lot from year to year." Looking forward, the Antarctic ozone hole should continue to recover gradually as CFCs leave the atmosphere, but a complete recovery will take decades. "CFCs have lifetimes from 50 to 100 years, so they linger in the atmosphere for a very long time," said Anne Douglass, a fellow atmospheric scientist at Goddard and the study's co-author. "As far as the ozone hole being gone, we're looking at 2060 or 2080. And even then there might still be a small hole." (Source: NASA) Nearly 4,800 km long, the river is the largest inland fishery and second only to the Amazon for its biodiversity. About 60 million people depend on it. Six Chinese-built barriers stud the upper part with another 11 under construction. The effects on the environment and the economy are felt the most downstream. Phnom Penh (AsiaNews/Agencies) Communities that depend on the Mekong have complained of a drastic drop in fish catches, blaming Chinese-built dams for the problem. However, the barriers give China physical and diplomatic control over its neighbours in Southeast Asia. Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang is expected tomorrow in Phnom Penh to lead a new regional summit that could shape the rivers future. Nearly 4,800 km long, the Mekong is the world's largest inland fishery and second only to the Amazon for its bio-diversity. It is also a source of livelihood for about 60 million people living in settlements along its course, which runs from the Tibetan plateau through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, until the South China Sea. Yet, further north, it is China that controls the flows of its waters. And Beijing has already studded the rivers upper reaches with six dams and is investing in more than half of the 11 dams planned further south. Firms have invested billions of dollars, but so far, no environmental and social impact assessments have been carried out. Thai, Vietnamese and Laotian companies and state agencies have also benefit from their investments in hydroelectric projects. However, environmental groups warn that by disrupting migrations and the flow of nutrients and sediments key to fish the barriers pose a serious threat to the natural habitat and local communities. Some of the latter have already been forced to abandon their land to allow dam construction. Many others are at risk of forced displacement due to floods. With control over the headwaters of the river known as the Lancang in China Beijing can dam its section of the river whilst the impact is felt downstream. Chinese authorities can also modulate water levels, a powerful bargaining chip displayed in 2016 when China opened dam gates on its side of the border to help Vietnam mitigate a severe drought. As the regions superpower, China is now asserting its authority through the nascent Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (LMC) forum, whilst appeasing its South-east Asian neighbours with investment and soft loans. Leaders from all six Mekong countries will attend the LMC this week in Cambodia. China's foreign ministry has billed the forum, which also covers security and trade issues, as a way to foster "economic prosperity, social progress and a beautiful environment". He had been questioned by the Disciplinary Commission last August together with General Zhang Yang, who killed himself on 23 November. The two were once protected by Guo Baixiong and Xu Caihou, both of whom were convicted of corruption. Some 13,000 army officers have been convicted so far. Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) Fang Fenghui, once the youngest commander of a Peoples Liberation Army military region, will stand trial for corruption, Xinhua reported today without giving details. Fang, 66 (right in the picture), served as the Chief of Joint Staff and a member of the Central Military Commission (CMC). In late August, state media reported that Fang and his colleague Zhang Yang had been replaced. The latter committed suicide on 23 November, which delayed Fangs arrest until today. Both were once proteges of Guo Boxiong and Xu Caihou, two powerful CMC generals convicted in the anti-corruption campaign launched by President Xi Jinping five years ago. Guo was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2016; Xu died in prison of cancer in 2015 whilst awaiting trial. Fangs arrest is a further sign that Xis campaign against "tigers and flies", high and low officials, is still going on. So far, at least 13,000 military officers have been convicted of corruption. Still, many wonder if this "tiger hunt is not part of a crackdown against Xi's adversaries. Under President Hu Jintao, who was CMC president from 2004 to 2012, Fang was seen as a loyal member, protected by Hu. by Shafique Khokhar Human Rights Focus Pakistan held a ceremony in Faisalabad. Christians and Muslims of good will work across the country against discrimination and the persecution of minorities. Taseers struggle continues with others bearing the torch. Faisalabad (AsiaNews) Across Pakistan, the heirs of Salman Taseer, those who carry on the fight against discrimination and injustice against religious minorities, have been forced to commemorate the seventh anniversary of his death in private. Taseer was governor of Punjab when he was killed on 4 January 2011 by a bodyguard because he had criticised the "black law" on blasphemy and defended Asia Bibi. Many people of good will, both Christians and Muslims, are working behind the scenes across the country to continue his battles. Often nothing is heard about this. Some of the people involved prefer to stay in the shadows for security reasons. The fear of retribution, however, has not made them retreat from the belief in a just society that respects everybody. Some activists told AsiaNews that Taseer showed that death can end a persons life but not a cause. The false accusations of blasphemy must end; otherwise, Pakistans image will be only that of a country that violates religious freedom. We will continue to raise our voices for oppressed communities. Justice must be the same for all citizens." Yesterday in Faisalabad, members of Human Rights Focus Pakistan (HRFP) gathered to remember the governor's sacrifice. Political activists Raja Thomas and Robin Daniel, social activist Abrar Younas, teacher John Victor and several Muslims who withheld their names took part in the event. All the participants agree on one thing: Salman Taseers legacy is a source of encouragement to fight even more for the rights of Pakistan's minorities. For Taseer, "problems started when Asia Bibi was sentenced to death for blasphemy, said HRFP president Naveed Walter. As governor of the Punjab, he decided to intervene against this unjust ruling by a lower court. He paid a visit to the woman in prison and during a press conference declared that he would take the case of the Christian mother to the president, asking for a pardon." For Robin Daniel, a Christian activist and president of the National Minorities' Alliance Pakistan, "most Islamic radicals condemned the statements of the politician and encouraged young people [against him] by saying that those who help a person who stains with contempt the Prophet Muhammad is himself a blasphemer. The bodyguard acted under such influence, and killed him in Islamabad, Daniel added. The practice of provoking young people in the name of Islam has not ended. Even today, weapons are used for personal or political ends, as evinced in the recent siege of capital by an extremist Islamic movement." Christians are not alone in trying to change the blasphemy laws; many Muslims are doing that as well. One of them is secular activist Iftikhar Ahmed. "It is tragic that the promoters of the blasphemy laws abuse them to kill innocent people, he said. Because of intolerance, Pakistan is becoming the hub of extremism, which is the greatest obstacle on the path of progress of this society. Radicals are stripping the true essence of religion, which is peace and unity." All over the country many of Salman Taseers heirs can be found: ordinary people working in silence for the common good. They organise peace events between various communities and offer legal and paralegal aid to victims of discrimination. For example, in cases of persecution, they activate a solidarity network, spreading the news via mobile phones or calling directly people who mediate and resolve conflicts. These heirs celebrate together the religious festivals of their respective communities whether Christmas, Easter, Ramadan and promote peace and inclusion. Some of the "heirs" worthy of note are HRFP president himself, Naveed Walter; Michelle Chaudhry, director of the Cecil & Iris Chaudhry Foundation; and Irfan Mufti, deputy director of the South Asia Partnership Pakistan (SAP-PK). From his office in Faisalabad, Walter travels across Punjab province to offer legal advice and financial support to marginalised families and communities, always on the side of victims and the poor. "After the governors martyrdom, we continued with further momentum, he explained. HRFP has a REAT Helpline, a toll-free number (0800-09494) that can be reached at any time, day or night, answering calls on persecution and emergencies of all kinds. Every year we receive about a thousand calls and we try to provide every possible assistance to ensure protection." Michelle Chaudhry's foundation deals with families. It adopted the three children of Shama and Shahzad, a young Christian couple stoned and burnt alive in the brick factory where Shahzad worked. "You can silence a man but not his vision, she said. We will keep alive his legacy and we will fight without fear to promote a tolerant Pakistan, Jinnahs Pakistan*. SAP-PAK is an association that monitor textbooks for material that spreads hatred. It publishes findings on the conditions of minorities in all the provinces and exerts pressure on lawmakers to promote laws that protect their rights. In Punjab alone, it is active in 900 villages, where it takes care of the most disadvantaged segments of the population, such as workers in brick factories and street sweepers. For its deputy director Mufti, "Salman Taseer was a true secular and daring visionary. He worked in a system that was becoming oppressed by religious orthodoxy. Giving support to minorities and speaking out against the discriminatory blasphemy laws, he showed his courage and resolve to go to the root of hatred, persecution and extremist tendencies. His sacrifice has given us new courage and strength to work on his mission with rigour." Unions between refugees are also prohibited. The aim is to avoid fastrack for citizenship. The penalty for those who break the law is imprisonment for up to seven years. 655 thousand refugees have fled from Myanmar. Dhaka (AsiaNews / Agencies) - A Bangladesh court confirms a government rule prohibiting marriage between Bengali citizens and Rohingya Muslim refugees from neighboring Myanmar, who have fled ethnic violence. The judges thus support a law passed in 2014 that prohibits unions between citizens and refugees, and among refugees themselves. The goal is to prevent thousands of displaced Rohingya living in the country from getting citizenship. The Dhaka High Court rejected the appeal presented by Babul Hossain, a Bengali citizen whose 27-year-old son married an 18-year-old Rohingya girl in September 2017. The case has become known as the first union of the recent wave of migration. After the wedding, the young couple disappeared in an attempt to escape the sentence of seven years of imprisonment foreseen for the Bengal citizens who break the law by marrying a refugee. Motaher Hossain Saju, deputy attorney general, said that the court rejected the request for acquittal and ordered the father to pay a fine of 100 thousand taka (about 1000 euros) for legal fees. The son, once traced, will end up behind bars. Since last August, that is, since the violence between the Burmese army and the militants of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (Arsa) took place, about 655 thousand refugees have fled from Myanmar. Added to these are another 200 thousand displaced in the past years from the State of Rakhine. According to groups of activists, there are numerous cases of arranged marriages to escape the poor conditions of the camps in the southern part of the country. In the specific case, Hossain rejects the accusations and states that the young couples marriage is a true bond of love and is not motivated by issues of citizenship. According to the latest figures, 8.2% of eligible male civil service staff have applied. The goal is to reach 13% by 2020. There are still reserves, especially in the private sector. Tokyo (AsiaNews / Agencies) - More and more men employed in public administration are choosing paternity leave, encouraged by government agencies and their high-ranking officials. In a context of combating the persistent decline of births, the goal is to empower the father to participate in raising children. Under current legislation, workers have time to request parental leave until their child is one year old, subject to two years under certain conditions. In the fiscal year 2016, which ended last March, 8.2% of eligible male workers chose parental leave: 2.7% more than the previous year. The government aims to reach 13% by 2020, both in the public and private sectors. "Most of all, men, myself included, have to change their thinking," said the Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, during an awards ceremony held on December 13, in which the merits of the companies committed to gender equality were recognized. There are still many barriers to overcome in the work environment, such as the fear of damaging their career and their hopes for promotion. At the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, senior officials - including the Minister of Labor - have directly urged their male staff to take their leave. The campaign started in 2015. In 2016, the then Minister of Labor Yasuhisa Shiozaki declared himself "iku-boss" (a boss that raises a child). The result of the campaign is that the number of male workers taking paternity leave has risen by 13.7 points, reaching 40.9%. The Ministry of Finance has the highest number of male staff to have asked for it among all the government agencies: 420 men, or 24.3%. Moreover, if they decide not to apply, the ministry obliges its managers to submit a report explaining their motivations. The national staff authority, for its part, promotes measures in favor of parental leave, including full payment of bonuses for workers who take up to a month's leave. The figure remains daunting if we introduce the statistics of the private sector: the proportion of male workers falls below 3.2%. Now, the challenge for the government is to increase the percentage in both sectors. (By karen roach/Shutterstock.com) (By karen roach/Shutterstock.com) Concerns have been issued about a migration agency in Sydney, Australia, after reports of clients being left thousands of dollars out of pocket.Visa applicants from overseas often use migration agencies as a way of making sure their applications are correct and more likely to be successful but the advice is always to make sure they use registered migration agents.The New South Wales Government said it has received numerous complaints about Goldman Pintex Migration, which offers its services to those seeking 457 visas and Yoon Seok 'Joseph' Choi, who has been listed as the company's sole director since it was registered in September last year.'Choi and his associates claim they will find a business sponsor for clients and lodge a work visa application with the Department of Immigration and Border Protection,' said the state's Better Regulation Minister Matt Kean.'This is in exchange for a hefty fee of up to $60,000, which is to be paid in instalments by the consumer. In a number of cases, where an application was denied, the trader failed to refund instalments already paid, leaving some consumers out of pocket by as much as $30,000,' he explained.'As if that wasn't disgraceful enough, some consumers who persisted in trying to get their money back were met with abuse, threats and insults from Goldman Pintex staff,' he pointed out.He also pointed out that the company is connected to Sydney businessman Eddie Kang, who is awaiting appeal on multiple fraud offences. Kang, who was a director of 20 other registered companies, was convicted of multiple fraud offences in March last year and was sentenced to up to 12 months jail but is on conditional bail awaiting appeal.'Kang was accused of running a similar dodgy visa racket, and Fair Trading believes he is involved in this one as well. Investigators have been told he is advising Goldman Pintex clients and accessing the company's bank accounts,' Kean added.The New South Wales Civil and Administrative Tribunal also found the company was connected to Kang. Contact Californian columnist Herb Benham at 661-395-7279 or hbenham@bakersfield.com. His work appears on Sundays, Tuesdays and Fridays; the views expressed are his own. KNOW THE SYMPTOMS Valley fever, an insidious respiratory disease endemic to Kern County, is commonly misdiagnosed and mistaken for the flu or pneumonia. Protect yourself by knowing the most common symptoms: Fever Cough Extreme fatigue Shortness of breath Skin lesions Chills Night sweats Muscle and joint pain Lack of appetite Weight loss If you think you have valley fever, insist your doctor test you. Unfortunately, our website is currently unavailable in your country. We are engaged on the issue and committed to looking at options that support our full range of digital offerings to your market. We continue to identify technical compliance solutions that will provide all readers with our award-winning journalism. Hillsborough County students returned to school Tuesday and teachers are back as well. But without the pay raises they say they are owed. The school district's teachers have backed off their hardline stance from a few months ago when they said they would stop work outside of their regular 8-hour day. But there may still be impacts now that the winter holiday break is over. Teachers who were expecting a $4,000 a year raise say they were informed in November that a one-time bonus is the best the district can do, a bonus critics claim would only amount to $92. The pay raise issue impacts about one-third of Hillsborough County's 14,000 school teachers. Teachers threatened to stop working outside of their 8-hour day, meaning they would not respond to after-work emails, would not come in early or stay late and wouldn't grade papers from home. The teacher's union is encouraging teachers to stay the course, however, officials said that most of the teachers will not shortchange their students. By law, teachers in Florida can not strike. Meanwhile, the district says it does not have the funds to make the raises happen. So the union is now asking teachers to push for their raises through social media. Teachers and representatives will be back at the bargaining table with school district officials later this month. At this point, it appears a third-party arbitrator will be brought in. A bipartisan group is scheduled to meet with President Donald Trump Tuesday to try and come up with a way to prevent deporting hundreds of thousands of immigrants. There is a media briefing with White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders scheduled for 2:30 p.m. And the House GOP leadership has a meeting at 9 a.m. and then there will be a media conference at 10 a.m., however, it is not known if the meeting is about DACA or not. Just a few months ago, the Trump administration announced the end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which is also known as DACA, which started in 2012. It allowed certain people, called "Dreamers," who came to the U.S. illegally as minors to be protected from immediate deportation. For months, groups of people in Central Florida have been fighting the president's decision to end the program. Back in September, students at the University of Central Florida held a huge rally and marched in opposition. Last month, a group from Apopka also went to Washington D.C. to tell lawmakers they need to take action. "We were promised there was going to be a decision made by December about the Dream Act. So what are we going to do? What can we do? Push Congress, demand Congress to start speaking about it," said Alejandra Salinas, a Dreamer. Trump plans call for the deportation of DACA recipients who cannot renew their applications and to build a border wall. "We are going to end chain migration. We are going to end the lottery system and we are going to build the wall," said Trump. The border wall, which will be discussed Tuesday, has already created some tension between Republicans and Democrats. "The president has thrown a huge wrench into the works by insisting on an $18 billion wall and in fact, he is ready for a government shutdown if he doesn't get his wall, said U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii. As the debate continues, Congress has less than two weeks to reach a deal that will fund the government. About 800,000 people could be impacted by the decision from Congress. There is something else that could lead to even more tension Tuesday. The White House is ending the temporary protected status for Salvadorians who fled from earthquakes in 2001. Gov. Rick Scott used his final State of the State address to reflect on hurricanes Irma and Maria, job growth and the importance of law enforcement officers and first responders. Tuesday was Scott's final State of State address He looked back at Hurricane Irma's impact Governor also talked about fallen officers TRANSCRIPT: Gov. Rick Scott's full remarks RELATED: 5 things to watch in legislative session The Republican governor leaves office next January due to term limits. He is said to be considering a run for U.S. Senate. Tuesday's speech kicked off the new legislative session in Tallahassee. Scott started his speech by thanking his wife, Ann, for her support while he has been in office, then talked about his eight years as Florida's governor. "Working together, weve created an environment where our private sector has added nearly 1.5 million jobs," he said. "Our GDP has grown 26 percent; home values have skyrocketed; we've decreased state debt by $9 billion; and our unemployment rate has dropped from over 10 percent when I took office to a more than 10-year low of 3.6 percent even lower than the national rate." Scott said he was proud of how state residents responded in the days before and after the destructive Hurricane Irma ravaged the state in September of 2017. "And after the storm, we showed up. From handing out water, to working at food banks, so many Floridians and many of you in this room helped your neighbors in need," Scott said. "And I believe Florida has come back even stronger." The governor spoke on the one-year anniversary of the deaths of Lt. Debra Clayton and Deputy First Class Norman Lewis, who were killed during the manhunt for Markeith Loyd. He also talked about Sergeant Sam Howard and Officer Matthew Baxter. They were shot and killed in August of 2017 while on patrol in Kissimmee. "Since I have taken office, 41 officers have tragically been killed in the line of duty. These brave men and women died as heroes and it is important that the state does everything possible to take care of the families who lost a loved one who was working to protect our communities." Florida Neo-Nazi group leader Brandon Russell was sentenced to 5 years in prison on weapons charges. Neo-Nazi group leader Brandon Russell sentenced to 5 years in prison on weapons charges Russell pleaded guilty to having firearms, explosives and destructive device Russell had weapons at New Tampa apartment, where friend killed roommates Russell, 22, was sentenced Tuesday in federal court in Tampa. U.S. District Judge Susan Bucklew expressed concern for public safety when she sentenced Russell on charges of storing explosives and having a destructive device in a New Tampa home last May. An admitted Neo-Nazi group leader, Russell was charged with stockpiling the explosive material in the New Tampa apartment where a friend killed their two roommates. Russell, who was a private first class in the Florida National Guard, pleaded guilty in September to possessing illegal firearms, a destructive device and storing explosives at a New Tampa home. Devon Arthurs, Russell's friend, awaits trial in state court on charges of murdering their two roommates, Andrew Oneschuk, 18, and Jeremy Himmelman, 22, both of Massachusetts. Arthurs allegedly told investigators he killed his roommates for teasing him about his recent conversion to Islam. Russell set up a "mini-lab" in the garage, where investigators found explosive material stored in a cooler, near homemade detonator components and several pounds of ammonium nitrate, according to authorities. Inside Russell's bedroom, authorities said, they found several firearms, ammunition and a framed picture of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh on Russell's bedroom dresser. Investigators also found a North Korean flag, multiple copies of Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" and other neo-Nazi and white supremacist propaganda in the apartment. Russell wasn't charged in the May 2017 killings, which exposed the four roommates' membership in Atomwaffen Division, an obscure neo-Nazi group co-founded by Arthurs and Russell that formed on the internet. Atomwaffen is German for "atomic weapon." Information from the Associated Press was used in this report. The White House is trumpeting a bipartisan deal on immigration that addresses both border security and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy, also known as DACA. Meeting at the White House over immigration reform White House says bipartisan deal reached Legislation still needs to be crafted RELATED: White House hosting bipartisan meeting on DACA In a statement released by the White House, Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said: "President Donald J. Trump just concluded a successful bipartisan and bicameral meeting on immigration reform. During the closed-door portion of the meeting, they reached an agreement to negotiate legislation that accomplishes critically needed reforms in four high-priority areas: border security, chain migration, the visa lottery, and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy." Any legislation that does come to fruition will likely roll out in two phases, as suggested by the president: the first phase would address both "Dreamers" and border security, while the second phase will include more comprehensive immigration changes. Trump ended the DACA program last year. The program shielded more than 700,000 people from deportation because they were brought to the country as children, but worked a job and did not have a criminal record, among other requirements. The president said he would still insist on construction of a border security wall as part of the first phase of the agreement. Democrats are cautiously optimistic about the plan. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said it was encouraging that the president seemed to be open to a deal to protect the Dreamers and that the meeting "boded well," but the president would need to follow up. Some Congressional conservatives are skeptical of the deal, though, saying the problem with a two-step process is that the second step may not happen. Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) leader of the House Freedom Caucus, said it would be up to the American people to stop such a plan. Information from the Associated Press was used in this report. Soulful Americana Duo Performs at Central Oregon Coast's Lincoln City Cultural Center Published 01/08/2018 at 3:15 PM PDT - Updated 01/08/2018 at 4:35 PM PDT By Oregon Coast Beach Connection staff (Lincoln City, Oregon) - A new year brings some true Americana-Soul to the central Oregon coast, with the Lincoln City Cultural Center hosting a vibrant show by the duo Freddy & Francine, a Los Angeles-based group that is becoming legendary up and down the west coast. The duo comes with with voices reminiscent of Aretha Franklin and Van Morrison, performing their own blend of soul, R & B and folk to the central Oregon coast town on Wednesday, January 24. Showtime is 7 pm. Doors to the auditorium, inside the historic Delake School, will open at 6:30 pm. Tickets are $15 in advance, and $17 at the door, with a $2 discount for current LCCC members. Youth tickets for those 18 and younger are $10. Reserve online on the centers website, lincolncityculturalcenter.org, or call 541-994-9994. Freddy & Francine is comprised of Californians Lee Ferris and Bianca Caruso, who met at the 40th anniversary show of HAIR in L.A. In 2007. Before their connection, Caruso developed a comedy television show with ABC and Ferris racked up 500 performances as Carl Perkins in the Broadway musical Million Dollar Quartet. Freddy & Francine have released two EPs and three full length records since 2008. Their latest, Gung Ho, was produced by renowned producer Todd Sickafoose (Ani DiFranco, Andrew Bird, Anais Mitchell) and featured members of the touring bands of artists like Ryan Adams, Rufus Wainwright, and Andrew Bird. Freddy & Francine most recently performed at the 2017 Telluride Bluegrass Festival as well as Rocky Mountain Folks Fest as main stage performers. They are recording a new EP in Nashville with producer Dan Knobler (Rodney Crowell, Roseanne Cash, Lake Street Dive) and plan to release it later this year. This musical concert of a duo is also part of a duo in itself: the show is paired with a special pre-concert event in the Chessman Gallery. At 6 pm on Wednesday, January 24, before the Freddy & Francine concert, the LCCC will present the official unveiling of the 2018 Chessman Gallery season. Gallery director Krista Eddy will reveal the 12 artists and groups that will be featured in the LCCCs fine art space in the year to come. Eddy will also present the chosen designer for the 2018 Chessman Gallery collectible shirts, and offer information about the Art on the Edge Studio Tour in May and the LCCC Members Show in July. There will be refreshments, a new season brochure and the sale of raffle tickets. The winner of the raffle will receive a beautiful piece of art, chosen from the popular Chiaroscuro mosaic show that closed on Jan. 9. The public is encouraged to attend this official gallery announcement event, starting at 6 pm in the Chessman Gallery, inside the LCCC next to the auditorium. Lincoln City Hotels - Lodging for this event - Where to eat - Map and Virtual Tour The Lincoln City Cultural Center sits inside the historic Delake School building, at the corner of NE Sixth St. and Hwy. 101. The center, which is also home to the official Lincoln City Visitor Information Center, is open from 10 am to 4 pm every day except Tuesday. For details, head to www.lincolncity-culturalcenter.org, or call 541-994-9994. More on this area below: More About Lincoln City Lodging..... More About Oregon Coast Restaurants, Dining..... Coastal Spotlight LATEST Related Oregon Coast Articles Back to Oregon Coast Contact Advertise on BeachConnection.net All Content, unless otherwise attributed, copyright BeachConnection.net Unauthorized use or publication is not permitted This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate It's enough to make me wanna stop, drop and tooch. "America's Next Top Model" returns at 7 tonight on VH1. And most importantly, Tyra Banks is back, y'all. Tyra! It's got me feeling some kind of way. Banks returns after passing the reins to Rita Ora for one season cycle. I wasn't mad at Ora, who did a fine job hosting. Now Playing: VH1s Americas Next Top Model Returns January 9th At 8PM ET Video: People But she's not La Tyra. No one is. Where else are we going to get classic phrases like Pot Ledom? Booty tooch? Smize? H-to-T? Dreckitude? No-neck monster? And those classic/cringe Tyra moments? I am so ready. The new batch of hopefuls is again all women after two previous co-ed cycles. (No Houstonians in the mix, boo.) Tyra says the show has "changed the definition of beauty and empowered women when they needed it the most." To that end, the new episodes includes women of all sizes, and Tyra has dropped the age limit. The oldest model is 34, though most are in their 20s. That's all great. Really! But it's also where this has happened. And this happened. Annnd. This. Judging by previews, there's lots more fun to be had. There are dramatic makeovers and tears, of course. Shouting matches. Attitude. And appearances by "RuPaul's Drag Race" contestants (Valentina! Manila Luzon!), previous winner Eva the Diva and noted fashion photographer Nigel Barker. In case that isn't enough, Tyra has added a new twist. Any model can be eliminated at any time if the judges don't feel they're "next level fierce." Oh boy. Click through above to see the new faces competing and every previous "ANTM" winner. "America's Next Top Model" airs at 7 p.m. Tuesdays on VH1. Come back after every episode for Joey Guerra's GIF-filled recaps. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Hardin County's oldest capital murder trial, which began with jury selection today, could be delayed again after a last-minute request by the defense for a change of venue. Ryan Gertz, one of Jason Wade Delacerda's two defense attorneys, said he filed a change of venue motion on Thursday requesting the trial be moved out of the county. Gertz said he doesn't think his client can get a fair trial in Hardin County because of the media coverage surrounding the case. Delacerda, 40, of Kountze was indicted in 2011 on a capital murder charge along with his then-girlfriend Amanda Nichole Guidry, 36, in connection with her 4-year-old daughter's death. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in Delacerda's case. Gertz said a hearing on Friday will determine whether the case moves forward in Hardin County or is moved to a neighboring county. Jury summons were mailed to 500 Hardin County residents for the trial, Gertz said. About 130 of those potential jurors will be given a 10-page questionnaire today, which will include questions aimed at determining whether Delacerda can receive a fair trial in Hardin County, he said. The results of those questionnaires will be reviewed at the Friday hearing, he said. The preference of courts is to move a trial to a county adjacent to the original jurisdiction. In Delacerda's case, those would include Jefferson, Orange, Jasper, Tyler, Polk or Liberty counties. "The argument that we would make at that point is that all of those counties get their news from the same source, so we run into the same issue," Gertz said. Gertz said many Southeast Texans are familiar with the death of 4-year-old Breonna Nichole Loftin. Loftin died at a Beaumont hospital from blunt force trauma on Aug. 17, 2011. Hospital staff told Hardin County investigators the girl had burn marks, bruises and signs of sexual abuse, a sheriff's investigator wrote in a 2011 arrest affidavit for Guidry and Delacerda. Guidry, the girl's mother, was released from jail in December 2014 on a reduced $250,000 bond. Her original bond was set at $1.5 million. Hardin County District Attorney David Sheffield said in November that he plans to prosecute Guidry in 2018 but is not seeking the death penalty. She faces life in prison if convicted. MGstalter@BeaumontEnterprise.com Twitter.com/morgGstalt This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Although widely condemned as ugly and offensive, signs on a Groves resident's property that prod at sensitive subjects like race and religion are protected by the First Amendment, city police and legal experts say. The black signs with white block lettering are posted along the fence and the entrance to the driveway of the man's Taft Avenue home. They cover a variety of topics, from Catholicism to Abraham Lincoln's assassination. > > RELATED: LeBron James, Diddy join criticism of H&M over sweater ad One sign, which includes a swastika, reads, "The Third Reich: Big Benefactors were Catholics." Another states, "If black folks were good looking - hate would evolve into envy." A photo of the sign about blacks was shared on social media over the weekend, sparking anger and criticism that the signs draw negative attention to Groves. City Marshal Norman Reynolds said on Monday his officers have monitored the man's signs for several years. "Sometimes we drive by after lunch to see if there's anything new," Reynolds said. Some of the signs stay out for several weeks, others are changed out daily, he said. > > PHOTOS: Racist, controversial moments of Texas in 2017 While residents have complained to the police department and city manager's office, Reynolds said the man isn't breaking any laws. "He's not a dangerous person," Reynolds said. "He would have to threaten someone or post something really profane of vulgar; that's when we would step in." No one answered the door at the home on Monday afternoon when an Enterprise reporter knocked. Groves City Manager D.E. Sosa said officials investigate each complaint about the signs. He has even asked the FBI to review the signs. "We always take it seriously and we try to do everything reasonable to ensure safety of the public, but you can't abridge someone's freedom of speech just because you don't like it," Sosa said. H.W. Perry, a professor of law and government at the University of Texas at Austin, said there are only a few ways in which someone's freedom of speech on their private property can be challenged. "Provocative, insulting speech is allowed and is protected unless it poses a direct and specific threat that was aimed at a particular person or situation," said Perry, an expert in free speech case law. "It would have to be a one-on-one threat, and obnoxious or hateful speech does not rise to that threat level." The signs would have to incite someone to break the law or cause a certain person to feel immense fear, Perry said. Profanity and sexually explicit language are also protected speech, especially since there is a precedent for judges being stricter on depictions rather than words, Perry said. "It's rarely written language that's restricted," Perry said. "It's almost always visual." There is little a city can do to prohibit freedom of speech on private property, as long as it's not creating traffic jams or violating zoning restrictions, he said. Zoning restrictions, for example, "prevent someone from putting up a 100-foot billboard," Perry said. While the First Amendment protects the Groves man's speech, Perry said, it also allows for others to be vocal in their disapproval. "You have the right to say things, but others have the right to call you a bigot," Perry said. "You don't have the right to say anything you want without facing some consequences." Tory Stoneking, who owns a construction company and was working at a site down the street on Monday, drove to the house to take pictures of the signs. "I had to see if with my own two eyes," said Stoneking, who lives in Nederland. "I had to see if bigots like this still exist." MGstalter@BeaumontEnterprise.comTwitter.com/morgGstalt Shameema Begum weeps in Kupwara, Jammu and Kashmir, as she pleads for her son, Manan Bashir Wani, to leave Hizbul Mujahideen, Jan. 8, 2018. Manan Bashir Wanis relatives wept inconsolably as they begged him to shun the path of militancy, a day after an image of the Kashmiri PhD student holding a gun surfaced on social media. Wani, 26, who is from Kupwara district in Indian Kashmir, was pursuing a doctorate in applied geology at Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) in Uttar Pradesh state before he was reported missing from the campus last week. A picture of Wani, wielding an AK-47 assault rifle and bearing a message that he had joined Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), began going viral on social media on Sunday. HM, the largest and the oldest of the armed separatist groups in Indian Kashmir, confirmed that Wani had joined its ranks fighting against Indian rule in the disputed Himalayan region since the late 1980s. His decision to join militant ranks has left me shocked and heart-broken. With folded hands I appeal to him to leave the path of violence and return home, Shamima Begum, Wanis mother, told BenarNews on Monday. He has been a top student since his childhood. We were expecting that he would enter the civil service and make the family proud. But his step to join HM has shattered us, she said. Bashir Ahmad, Wanis father, said he too was shocked by his sons decision to join the militant group. He always consulted me before he took every small decision. This time, he took such a drastic step without speaking to me even once, Ahmad, a school teacher, told BenarNews. His sons move to join separatist ranks came as the Indian government struggled to bring back to the mainstream more than 100 Kashmiri youths who went over to the armed separatist side after the July 2016 killing of an HM commander. It is a negation to Indias propaganda that youth are joining militant ranks because of unemployment and economic problems. Educated youth are joining Hizbul to take the freedom movement forward, Syed Salahuddin, HMs chief, said in a statement while confirming Wani had joined the group. Meanwhile, Indian security forces gunned down two separatists in south Kashmirs Anantnag district on Tuesday, days after a bombing orchestrated by suspected militants killed four police in the regions Sopore town over the weekend, officials said. On Monday, Indian forces killed three suspected militants during a gunfight in Budgam district. Claimed in its entirety by India and Pakistan, the Indian side of Kashmir known as the state of Jammu and Kashmir has grappled with a separatist insurgency that has claimed over 70,000 lives since the late 1980s. Expelled Last year, at an international conference, Wani won an award for the best paper on Water, Environment, Ecology and Society. On Monday, as police conducted searches at his college in connection with the missing student, AMU officials announced that the university had expelled Wani, a PhD candidate in its geology department. His expulsion followed reports of his alleged involvement in highly objectionable activities, which can hamper the peaceful academic atmosphere and create disharmony, the university said in a statement posted on its website. The university said Wani had breached the campuss code of conduct for students, and that it had sealed his room at one of AMUs halls. Taking into account the gravity of the offense, the vice chancellor has ordered Wani to be expelled from the rolls of the University with immediate effect pending inquiry, said Professor M Mohsin Khan, AMUs proctor. The proctor added that the University campus and its institutions were now out of bounds for Wani. Humiliated by Indian forces Friend Javid Nasir said he believed Wani joined HM because he had been harassed by Indian soldiers recently. Last month, he had put up a Facebook post in which he described how he was humiliated by Indian security forces during his last visit to Kashmir in November, Nasir said. Wani alleged in the post that he was dragged out of a taxi he was traveling in at five checkpoints in his native district, Nasir said. This is slavery of the worst kind. I loathe this. Security personnel posed disgusting questions such as, why my hair was long, why I hadnt trimmed my beard, why I wear ankle-high boots and a shawl at such a young age, Wani said on his Facebook page. On Tuesday, police said they were verifying the authenticity of Wanis photograph. Investigations are on. It would be premature to say or confirm anything as of now, Munir Khan, Indian Kashmirs addition director general of police, told BenarNews. Updated at 5:38 p.m. ET on 2018-01-08 Bangladesh says it is unlikely that the voluntary repatriation of Rohingya refugees to Myanmar will start in two weeks as scheduled, because the logistics are not in place. A bilateral repatriation agreement inked Nov. 23 had called for the process to begin in 60 days around Jan. 22 but a joint working group tasked with working out the details has not held its first meeting. Repatriation is a complicated and huge task. This is not possible to do everything within a stipulated timeframe. So, I think it is unlikely that we can start the repatriation by Jan. 22, Mohammad Abul Kalam, Bangladeshs commissioner for refugee relief and repatriation, told BenarNews on Monday. We need more time. The delay was announced as Rohingya refugees continued to straggle across the border into Bangladesh and a Rohingya insurgent group said it had carried out an attack on Friday to retaliate for ongoing atrocities carried out by Myanmars military. Several Rohingya refugees who spoke to BenarNews said they were unaware of the repatriation plans being hatched by governments of Myanmar and Bangladesh, and expressed reluctance to return to Myanmar where their safety was not guaranteed. Jan. 15 meeting The process of starting to repatriate hundreds of thousands of Rohingya to Rakhine state, where ongoing violence has been reported in recent days, will also hinge on the first official meeting of a joint working group (JWG) to coordinate the repatriation, Bangladeshi officials said. The 30-member JWG will meet for the first time next week, according to an official with Bangladeshs foreign ministry. The joint working group will meet on Jan. 15 in Myanmar, Manjurul Karim Khan Chowdhury, a director general in-charge of the Southeast Asia desk at the ministry, told BenarNews, adding the meeting would be a step toward starting the repatriation process. Since late August 2017, at least 650,000 Rohingya crossed into southeastern Bangladesh as they fled a brutal military crackdown in Rakhine that followed attacks against police and security posts carried out by Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) insurgents. In total, about 1 million Rohingya are sheltering in Bangladesh, including refugees who escaped from earlier cycles of violence in Rakhine. Big task ahead Myanmar officials said they have sent forms to Bangladesh that need to be completed in order for Myanmar to verify the residency in Rakhine of refugees who opt to return there. The forms have been received in Bangladesh but not released to the press, and the procedure for completing them has not been announced. We have yet to start collecting the data Myanmar that seeks in the repatriation form. Filling forms of 100,000 people is a big task ahead, said Kalam, the refugee commissioner, referring to the first batch of refugees that Bangladesh is targeting for repatration. The commissioner said his department had formed a nine-member technical committee from different government departments to collect data about Rohingya refugees in the country. But many of the offices have yet to send the names of their representatives for the technical committee. We hope that, soon, we will get the names of the representatives from all departments and we can start collecting data by this week, Kalam added. In addition, he said, the immigration department has stored data of each refugee who had entered Bangladesh. But the data must be organized by family. This is because the repatriation approach is family-wise. You cannot leave a family member here and repatriate others. So, we need time to rearrange the data family-wise, Kalam said. Refugees unware of repatriation plan Meanwhile, some Rohingya refugees appeared to be in the dark about the process that could soon begin to send members of their community back to Myanmar. We have not heard anything about repatriation of the Rohingya. I do not think that the Moghs would allow us in, Abdu Jalil, 50, a refugee from Buthidaung township in Rakhine, told BenarNews on Monday, referring to members of Rakhines Buddhist majority. They have been torturing us for decades to obliterate us from Arakan [Rakhine]. They would not let us live, if we return there, said Jalil, who now lives in the Nayapara refugee camp in Teknaf, a sub-district of Coxs Bazar district. Lal Mia, an octogenarian who fled from his home village in Rakhines Maungdaw township, said he heard that Bangladesh and Myanmar had signed the repatriation deal. But I will not go back. They will not let us live in Arakan. I will pass the rest of my life here, he told BenarNews. Zahid Hossain Siddique, the administrative chief of Teknaf, said refugees continued to enter Bangladesh from Rakhine and some had reported that it was still unsafe there, saying violence was ongoing. Meanwhile on Sunday, ARSA rebels claimed responsibility for a roadside ambush in Maungdaw that targeted a military vehicle and wounded seven people, including six soldiers, on Friday. The attack was the first since Sept. 10, 2017, when the rebels declared a one-month humanitarian ceasefire. ARSA also accused the Myanmar military of not letting up in committing heinous crimes against Rohingya civilians, including raping and molesting women, burning down Rohingya villages and starving the Rohingya population to death. At this juncture, ARSA has [been] left with no option but to combat Burmese state sponsored terrorism against the Rohingya population for the purpose of defending, salvaging and protecting the Rohingya community with its best capacities in line with the principles of self-defense under international law, ARSA said in a statement posted on Twitter. On Monday, Myanmars government said it would fight back in response to ARSAs latest attack. We will respond to terrorists in the same manner, Zaw Htay, director-general of State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyis office, told the Myanmar Service of Radio Free Asia (RFA), a sister entity of BenarNews. The Myanmar government officially declared ARSA a terrorist group. These attacks by ARSA are planned to stop the Myanmar governments efforts to receive the refugees back and to help them resettle, Zaw Htay added. We cant let our process for repatriating the refugees and working on their resettlement be destroyed. We will strongly respond to any organizations, including ARSA, that try to destroy our process. Speakers at an international counterterrorism conference in Malaysia called on followers of Islam to practice moderation in their faith in helping to stem the scourge of violent extremism. Some 1,000 participants from 20 countries including Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Turkey, France and Britain took part in the two-day gathering, which emphasized holistic soft approaches to combating terrorism as well as more conventional ones like education and cutting terrorism financing. We believe we cannot fight the war of terrorism through force or punitive measures alone, Malaysias Home Ministry Secretary General Alwi Ibrahim told the conference Saturday, before reading out its final statement. We need to have two-prong approaches to defeat the threats of extremism and terrorism. We must attempt to win the hearts and minds of each and everyone who engaged in, or is prone to engage in the terrorist activities. The 12-point final statement called for a new language of moderation to promote tolerance of differences and to combat the ideology of takfiri in which some Muslims quickly accuse others of straying from the faith. Many speakers at the event, pointed to the role of religion in combatting extremist ideology. In his closing speech, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak cited two verses from the Quran that, he said, commit all Muslims to moderation, a crucial shield against extreme ideologies. Together they imply that being named a Muslim and belonging to a moderate people are the same. They further imply that, as the Prophet witnesses our efforts to be both Muslim and moderate, so must we bear witness to fellow believers that if we are Muslim we are also moderate, he said. Malaysia, which touts its multi-religious society as an example of peaceful co-existence, sponsored a resolution on moderation at the United Nations encouraging worldwide dialogue and tolerance to fight violent extremism around the globe. The resolution was adopted in December. At the Putrajaya conference, Najib underlined the ongoing need for vigilance against terrorism. Daesh continues to pose a serious and potent threat in Malaysia as well as in the wider Southeast Asia region, despite the weakened state of the group in Iraq and Syria, Najib told the gathering, using an alternate name for the so-called Islamic State group. A total of 95 Malaysians had joined IS in Syria and Iraq, Najib said. Of these, 34 were killed; eight returned to Malaysia, and were arrested; and 36 adults and 17 children were still there. Najib in Saudi Arabia One day after the close of the conference, co-hosted by Malaysias Home Ministry and the Saudi Arabia-based think-tank Rabitah Al-Alam Al-Islami (Muslim World League), Malaysias Foreign Ministry said Najib would be making a five-day working visit to Riyadh beginning Monday. During the visit, the Prime Minister is scheduled to have an audience with the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, His Majesty King Salman Abdulaziz Al Saud and His Royal Highness Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Abdulaziz Al Saud in Riyadh respectively, the statement released said. The three would discuss a range of issues including the establishment of the King Salman Center for International Peace (KSCIP) in Putrajaya, which the Saudi monarch announced during a state visit to Malaysia in March last year, the statement send. The Saudi-backed center will work to counter terrorist narratives. The Malaysian government has a two-year timeline for building the center, which is to be housed at a 40-acre site in Putrajaya. Malaysia already has an online counter-extremist messaging center overseen by the Royal Malaysia Police. It also has the Southeast Asia Regional Center for Counter-Terrorism, operated under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs with assistance from the U.S. State Department. Philippine military regional chief Lt. Gen. Benjamin Madrigal (left), and his Indonesian counterpart Rear Adm. Didik Setiyono sign an agreement to boost joint border patrols and establish a hotline to address cross border terrorism, in Davao City, Jan. 9, 2018. The Philippine and Indonesian militaries said Tuesday they had agreed to boost cooperation to monitor cross-border movements of their respective nationals, such as by establishing a hotline to alert one another about security and terrorist threats along their shared frontier. The neighboring countries agreed to the pact after a two-day meeting of a joint border committee that ended Tuesday, a week after President Rodrigo Duterte met with Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi here. During their meeting Duterte and Retno agreed that their countries would intensify the conduct of coordinated patrol operations to enhance maritime security, a joint statement said. The pact also aims to prevent the utilization of our respective territorial waters as an avenue for the proliferation of terrorism and other transnational crimes, said the statement, which was signed by the Philippine militarys regional chief, Lt. Gen. Benjamin Madrigal, and his Indonesian counterpart, Rear Adm. Didik Setiyono. Noting that the two archipelagic countries had porous shorelines, both agreed to increase the number of Border Crossing Stations to increase surveillance and facilitate the entry of citizens of the two Southeast Asian nations. This effort will provide a systematic scheme in closely monitoring the entry and exit of the nationals of both countries with the hands-on involvement of each countrys immigration, quarantine and customs bureaus, the joint statement said. The Philippines and Indonesia also agreed to boost measures at ensuring that Indonesian and Filipino fishermen were assured of safe passage and protection in the high seas, it said. The joint border committee also decided to set up a definitive hotline between the naval commanders of both countries to immediately address developing situations and other challenges. It did not expound on what these challenges were, but Filipino officials who were at the meeting said it was generally understood to mean terrorism. On the part of the Republic of the Philippines, we have discussed with our friends from Indonesia several agenda items focused on enhancing our maritime security that will contribute to our efforts in countering terrorism and transnational crimes in close coordination between our navies and coast guards through the conduct of an enhanced coordinated patrol in our common borders, Madrigal said. The Philippines, he said, had also pushed for the inclusion of other state agencies in the joint border effort, though there was no immediate answer regarding this. The agreement comes more than two months after the Philippines defeated Islamic State-linked militants who had occupied the southern city of Marawi, where they were joined by militants from Southeast Asia and the Middle East. When the fighting broke out in May, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore extended intelligence help and increased border security to thwart possible movements of militants across the frontiers. The Philippines defeated the militants in October, after Isnilon Hapilon and his men took over Marawi, provoking the worst fighting that the Philippines had seen in years. Hapilon was killed in Marawi, but the once prosperous city remains in ruins and the military has been pursuing remnants of the Filipino militants who dispersed across central Mindanao region. More than 1,000 combatants and civilians died in the five-month battle. Volunteers clean up Mapandi, a village in the southern Philippines city of Marawi, after it was cleared of Islamic State-linked militants, Oct. 19, 2017. The United States set aside another U.S. $6.6 million (332.3 million pesos) to help Marawi residents recover from last years five-month battle between Islamic State-linked militants and government forces that left their southern Philippine city in ruins. The funds, distributed through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), will go to programs aimed at helping people get back to work after the fighting left more than 1,000 combatants and civilians dead and the local economy in tatters. The latest U.S. aid infusion by the long-time Philippine defense treaty ally brings the total contribution to Marawi to $20.9 million (1 billion pesos). This new funding will support some of the most vulnerable populations affected by the conflict, U.S. Ambassador Sung Kim said. The United States is deeply committed to supporting our friend and ally in long-term recovery efforts to ensure a brighter and more peaceful future for the people of Mindanao, he said. Previously, the U.S. sent military personnel to Marawi to help in intelligence efforts when Filipino government troops were fighting IS-linked forces who were backed by foreigners in the battle, which began on May 23 and ended in late October. Regional social welfare director Bai Zorahayda Taha said nearly half of the 200,000 Marawi residents displaced by the fighting had returned since the government declared the city liberated from the militants. But residents in the main battle areas cannot return yet as the military continues their clearing missions for bombs, Taha said. At the same time, Taha said residents covered by the countrys conditional cash transfer program need not worry about losing their monthly stipend for failing to meet conditions set by the program. It requires children to stay in school and maintain class attendance of at least 85 percent each month. Pregnant women are required to avail pre- and post-natal care and delivery must be assisted by skilled health personnel, while parents are mandated to take family development sessions. This means that even if they are not attending schools or not going to health clinics, or not even attending the family development sessions, they will be receiving their monthly grants, she said. The USAIDs early assistance to Marawi involved restoring access to water and distributing much-needed desks to schools where displaced students were enrolled. The agency also helped set up health clinics to provide health services in evacuation camps. Mark Navales in Cotabato City, Philippines, contributed to this report. Von: By Nikolaus Blome, Christian Stenzel, Daniel Biskup (photos) BILD: Mr Orban, you were guest of honour at the CSU meeting in Seeon. This was criticized by people outside of the CSU. The head of the SPD, Martin Schulz, prompted the head of the CSU, Horst Seehofer, to set you some boundaries. Viktor Orban: I always respected Martin Schulz, because he is a good fighter. But to be entertaining as a good fighter and to have the responsibility to shape national policy are two different things. So what was good, even nice, in Brussels where you have no real, obvious consequences thats a different story than to be a party leader in Germany and to communicate with other countries. I think we deserve more respect. What for? Orban: Hungary is one of the few success stories of the last decade. The successful West and the poor East thats over! When I came into office in 2010, the unemployment rate was 12 per cent, now it is less than 4 per cent. The economic growth rate is more than 4 per cent. In 2009, it was still minus 6 per cent. The budget deficit is well under 3 per cent. It you give us a fair evaluation, we are doing quite well. Thats not the point of the criticism. How are the other EU states supposed to respect you if there is the feeling that Hungary is doing whatever it wants? You take money from the EU, but refuse to accept refugees that are supposed to be distributed between the member states. Auch interessant Orban: The so-called cohesion fund which benefits the Hungarian economy is just a kind of equilibrium, because we opened up our market for free competition. This has nothing to do with the refugee question. Since you mention fairness: how fair is it to be a member of a club the EU but not to follow its rules? Hungary was supposed to take in a mere 1294 refugees. You refused to do so, went to the European Court of Justice, and lost. You called the decision a disgrace and continue to refuse accepting the refugees. Orban: The quota was not fulfilled by more than twenty states, and still only we are being criticized. That is a case of double standards. The fact is that the verdict only applied to the EU decision, which, more or less, ran out at the same time as the verdict was passed Now we need a new discussion. Otherwise, you would have accepted the decision and taken in the refugees? Orban: Yes. The state of law is our basis. The EU, however, is not only based on laws, but also on solidarity. Why is Germany able to accept 2 million refugees and Hungary cannot even accept 2000? Orban: The difference is you wanted the migrants, and we didnt. We are doing our job by defending the Schengen external border with Serbia. This has cost us an additional one billion Euros since 2015, and Brussels is not paying a single cent. The solution of the problem is not to disperse people in the whole EU territory who are illegally staying in the EU. We think that one must help where the problem is located instead of bringing the migrants here. And why dont the Hungarians want refugees? Orban: We do not consider these people to be Muslim refugees. We consider them to be Muslim invaders. For instance, somebody who wants to come from Syria to Hungary must cross four countries that are not as rich as Germany, but stable. So they are not running for their lives there. They are economic migrants who are looking for a better life. Are they therefore less valuable as human beings? Orban: When somebody would like to come to your house, first they knock on the door and then ask: can we come in, can we stay? But they didnt do that; they crossed the border illegally. That was not a wave of refugees, but an invasion. Concerning the migration issue, I never understood how it is possible that in a country like Germany which is the best example of discipline and the rule of law the chaos, anarchy, and illegal crossing of borders could be celebrated as a good thing. Do you mean its our own fault? Orban: Politically, the refugee issue is a European problem, but sociologically, its a German problem. Since you mentioned the EU refugee quota: why could the Portuguese Prime Minister say: Welcome! Come to us! Because no refugee would like to go to Portugal. They all want to go to Germany. The reason why they are in your country is not that they are refugees, but that they would like to have a German life. I can only speak for the Hungarian people, and it doesnt want migration. Its impossible, in my understanding, that there is a will of the people on a very fundamental issue, and the leadership of the country rejects to follow the public will. We are talking about sovereignty and the cultural identity of the country here. We have to keep the right to decide who can stay in the territory of Hungary. Obviously, this is not supposed to be Muslims Orban: We think that a high number of Muslims necessarily creates parallel societies. Christian and Muslim societies will never merge into one. Multiculturalism is an illusion. We do not want that. And we dont want something forced upon us. Take Budapest as a positive example: a cosmopolitan melting pot without a parallel society. If you are so annoyed by Brussels, why dont you then leave the EU? Orban: The major threat now is that Brussels is trying, trickily, to transfer national sovereignty towards itself. But even when we criticize the Brussels elite, our attitude is not anti-European. I dont accept that the Brussels bureaucrats and elites consider themselves to be Europe. Brussels is not the same as the European Union. The EU is a wonderful project, and we are happy to be and remain a part of it. The most wonderful thing in Europe is the freedom of expression and the freedom of the press. You, however, are running a nation-wide poster campaign against your arch enemy the Hungarian Holocaust survivor and billionaire George Soros. Moreover, the organisation Reporters without Borders is concerned about the freedom of the press in your country. Orban: Mr Soros is also running a campaign against the Hungarian government, and in that, he is not restricted by anything. This is an open discussion that proves the freedom of the press. Mr Soros who has made his money with casino capitalism considers himself as a statesman without a state. With his money, he supports 60 non-government organisations that support migrants and illegal immigration. This is not about the freedom expression, but national security. At this point, I have to become active. And concerning the media: I dont think the German press has more freedom than the Hungarian press. I cant imagine that. In the world-wide ranking of Reporters without Borders, Hungary is at number 71 Germany is at least at number 17. Orban: I do not know how this list was made. More than 80 per cent of the Hungarian media are privately owned. A major proportion of them are very critical of the Hungarian government. The EU Commission has confirmed in writing that our media law conforms with EU standards. PS: Sind Sie bei Facebook? Werden Sie Fan von BILD.de-Politik! For Immediate Release, January 8, 2018 Contact: Brian Segee, (805) 750-8852, bsegee@biologicaldiversity.org Congressional Hispanic Caucus Urges Court to Oppose Trump's Border Wall SAN DIEGO The Congressional Hispanic Caucus filed an amicus brief today in U.S. District Court in support of the Center for Biological Diversitys lawsuit against the Trump administrations border-wall and prototype projects near San Diego. The lawsuit challenges the Department of Homeland Securitys authority to waive more than 30 environmental laws, and both the lawsuit and the brief assert the waiver is unconstitutional and oversteps the authority of the executive branch. The Hispanic Caucuss brief sheds light on Trumps blatant disregard for the law in his reckless rush to build this destructive wall, said Brian Segee, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. Hispanic members of Congress are unified in their opposition to the wall, and theyre sending an important message to the court that the borderlands must be protected. The amicus brief, drafted by the Stanford Environmental Law Clinic, argues that the Trump administration has overstepped its authority under the REAL ID Act of 2005 and that the Homeland Security waivers represent a violation of the Constitutions separation of powers principle. The REAL ID waiver authority does not apply. Congress did not grant perpetual power to any administration to ignore environmental laws on any border project until the end of time, said Segee. Trumps obsession with this ridiculous wall doesnt mean laws can be thrown out. Were fighting for the 30-plus laws that protect our environment and communities in the borderlands. Background On Aug. 2 the Center expanded its lawsuit against border-wall and prototype projects in San Diego, challenging the Trump administrations authority to waive environmental laws and calling for an end to the unconstitutional maneuver. A hearing is scheduled Feb. 9 before U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel in San Diego. The waiver would speed construction of replacement walls, roads, lighting and other infrastructure without any analysis of the environmental impacts or any public input. This region of coastal San Diego County contains wetlands, streams and other rare wildlife habitats, as well as critical habitat for numerous endangered species, including the Quino checkerspot butterfly and the coastal California gnatcatcher. A study by the Center identified more than 90 endangered or threatened species that would be put at even greater risk of harm by proposed wall construction along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border. The 2005 REAL ID Act amended the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 to give unprecedented and sweeping authority to the Department of Homeland secretary to waive federal, state and local laws to expedite construction of the double- and triple-layer border fencing in San Diego. This waiver authority was later interpreted to apply to border wall construction under the 2006 Secure Fence Act, which requires Homeland to build 700 miles of border barriers. Homeland met this mandate several years ago, using the REAL ID authority five times to waive more than 35 laws on 625 miles of border-wall and barrier construction. Beyond jeopardizing wildlife, endangered species and public lands, the U.S.-Mexico border wall is part of a larger strategy of ongoing border militarization that damages human rights, civil liberties, native lands, local businesses and international relations. The border wall impedes the natural migrations of people and wildlife that are essential to healthy diversity. Laws suspended by the Aug. 2 waiver are listed below. Waived Laws National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq. Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq. Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 701-706. Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq. National Historic Preservation Act, Pub. L. 89-665. Migratory Bird Treaty Act, 16 U.S.C. 703 et seq. Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq. Archaeological Resources Protection Act, 16 U.S.C. 470aa et seq. Paleontological Resources Preservation Act, 16 U.S.C. 470aaa et seq. Federal Cave Resources Protection Act of 1988, 16 U.S.C. 4301 et seq. National Trails System Act, 16 U.S.C. 1241 et seq. Safe Drinking Water Act, 42 U.S.C. 300f et seq. Noise Control Act, 42 U.S.C. 4901 et seq. Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq., and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (Superfund), 42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq. Archaeological and Historic Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C. 320301 et seq. Antiquities Act, 54 U.S.C. 320301 et seq. Historic Sites, Buildings, and Antiquities Act, 54 U.S.C. 3201-320303 & 320101-320106 Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, 16 U.S.C. 1281 et seq. Farmland Protection Policy Act, 7 U.S.C. 4201 et seq. Coastal Zone Management Act , 16 U.S.C. 1451 et seq. Wilderness Act, 16 U.S.C. 1131 et seq. Federal Land Policy and Management Act, 43 U.S.C. 1701 et seq. National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act and National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act, 16 U.S.C. 668dd-668ee National Fish and Wildlife Act of 1956, 16 U.S.C. 742a et seq. Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, 16 U.S.C. 661 et seq. Wild Horse and Burro Act, 16 U.S.C. 1331 et seq. Pub. L. 106-398 Otay Mountain Wilderness Act of 1999, Pub. L. 106-145 Sections 102(29) and 103 of Title I of the California Desert Protection Act, Pub. L. 103-433 Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899, 33 U.S.C. 403 Eagle Protection Act, 16 U.S.C. 668 et seq. Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 25 U.S.C. 3001 et seq. American Indian Religious Freedom Act, 42 U.S.C. 1996 Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. 2000bb. For Immediate Release, January 9, 2018 Contact: Patrick Donnelly, (702) 483-0449, pdonnelly@biologicaldiversity.org Federal Records Sought in Political Meddling With Gold Butte Management Plan LAS VEGAS The Center for Biological Diversity submitted a Freedom of Information Act request today seeking public records from the Bureau of Land Management about the abrupt postponement of the Gold Butte National Monument management plan process. The Trump administration has recommended shrinking the monument. In December the BLM specifically sought public input on management of Gold Butte National Monument as part of the revision of its Southern Nevada Resource Management Plan. However, a Jan. 9 Las Vegas Review-Journal article reported that BLM now is saying Gold Butte is off the table. BLM did a complete about-face on the Gold Butte management plan, and the public deserves to know why, said Patrick Donnelly, the Centers Nevada state director. Our national monuments are under attack by the Trump administration. The least federal officials can do is be transparent about how these horrendous decisions are being made and whos responsible. Gold Butte National Monument was created by President Obama on Dec. 28, 2016. The presidential proclamation establishing the monument instructs BLM to prepare and maintain a management plan for the monument and provide for maximum public involvement in the development of that plan. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has recommended stripping protections from portions of Gold Butte as a part of his review of national monuments. Trump in December ordered more than 2 million acres eliminated from Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments in Utah. His actions are being challenged by tribes, the Center and other conservation groups. The decision to suspend or terminate the Gold Butte National Monument management planning process calls into question the future of the monument and BLMs presence there. Zinkes sham monuments review was a pretense for implementing a radical, anti-public lands agenda pushed by a small handful of Trump donors, said Donnelly. Were seeking these records to shine a light on Trump and Zinkes efforts to exploit our precious protected lands for private profit. For Immediate Release, January 9, 2018 Contact: Randi Spivak, (310) 779-4894, rspivak@biologicaldiversity.org Republicans Advance Bill to Eliminate Bears Ears National Monument WASHINGTON The House Natural Resources Committee will consider legislation today to eliminate Utahs Bears Ears National Monument and create two smaller monuments. H.R. 4532, sponsored by Rep. John Curtis (R-Utah), mirrors President Trumps illegal executive order from December that rescinded the monument and gutted protections for more than 1 million acres of protected public land. The bill would erase the 1.35 million-acre Bears Ears National Monument, established by President Obama in 2016 following years of stakeholder and public input, and create two small monuments: Shash Jaa (211,983 acres) and Indian Creek (86,447 acres). One million acres would be opened to destructive resource-extraction activities, including uranium mining and oil and gas drilling. Curtis has no regard for the 2.7 million Americans who urged the Trump administration to keep our national monuments intact, said Randi Spivak, public lands program director at the Center for Biological Diversity. Like other extreme, anti-public lands Republicans, Curtis is looking out for the profits of special interests that want to exploit and destroy our beautiful wild places. The legislation would create a tribal management council for Shash Jaa that excludes three of the five tribes that advocated for protection of Bears Ears. The Indian Creek tribal management council would include state and local officials and allow only one Utah tribal member. The bill also allows the same local elected officials that sought to undo Bears Ears to select the members of the new management councils. This bill claims to give a voice to native people, but these tribal management councils are a sham, said Spivak. The bill goes even further than Trumps executive order by shifting management of federal public lands to local officials in Utah. These are the same politicians who agitated to eliminate protections for Bears Ears National Monument in the first place. Background In 2016 President Obama, using the Antiquities Act, created the Bears Ears National Monument to protect some of the most culturally important heritage sites and landscapes in our nation. The 1906 Antiquities Act grants the president the authority to create national monuments on federal lands to protect significant natural, cultural, historic or scientific features. The Antiquities Act does not grant authority to presidents to diminish or rescind the monument designations. In an unprecedented step, Trump issued a proclamation Dec. 4 to rescind Bears Ears National Monument. American Indian tribes immediately challenged the executive proclamation as an abuse of presidential power and a violation of the law, and conservation organizations, including the Center, filed suit a few days later. Trump also ordered nearly 900,000 acres slashed from Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah. The Center, tribes and other conservation organizations have also challenged this action in court. The moves to eviscerate these monuments are part of a larger attack on public lands by Trump and members of Congress who want to slash protections and allow more oil and gas drilling, mining, logging and other industrial uses. In 2017 Republicans introduced more than 85 bills that attacked public lands, weaken environmental safeguards on those lands or turn over control to states and local governments. These attacks come despite the fact that the vast majority of voters across political parties support protecting and maintaining forests, national parks, monuments and other public lands and waters. For Immediate Release, January 9, 2018 Contact: Ileene Anderson, Center for Biological Diversity, (323) 490-0223, ianderson@biologicaldiversity.org George Hague, Sierra Club, (951) 313-0395, gbhauge@gmail.com Drew Feldmann, San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society, (909) 881-6081, drewf3@verizon.net Lawsuit Challenges Massive 'Zombie' Sprawl Project in Rural Riverside County Villages of Lakeview Threaten Wildlife Refuge, Water Supplies, Air Quality RIVERSIDE, Calif. The Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra Club and the San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society sued Riverside County today for approving the Villages of Lakeview, a massive 8,725-unit sprawl development that will threaten the nearby San Jacinto Wildlife Area and worsen air quality and traffic for county residents. As todays lawsuit notes, even though the development will use an astonishing 1.5 billion gallons of water per year, the county refused to even consider the impacts of additional water use on California rivers and streams. As climate change pressures Californias water supplies, county supervisors are ignoring the risks of building another remote city in arid Southern California, said Ileene Anderson of the Center. This massive development is an enormous threat to air, water and wildlife. Because the development is located far from existing jobs and services, residents would generate approximately 500 million miles of vehicle trips per year. These added trips would disproportionately increase greenhouse gas emissions and further contaminate the countys air, which routinely receives F ratings from the American Lung Association because it is dangerously unhealthy. This ill-conceived sprawl project will undermine Californias climate goals, exacerbate traffic and increase air pollution for county residents, said George Hague of the Sierra Clubs San Gorgonio Chapter. The project would radically reshape rural San Jacinto Valley and destroy habitat for imperiled wildlife species, including burrowing owls, Swainsons hawks, tricolored blackbirds, willow flycatchers and Stephens kangaroo rats. Adding tens of thousands of people next to the sensitive San Jacinto Wildlife Area is incredibly irresponsible planning, said Drew Feldmann of the San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society. Why is the county so intent on ignoring the wishes of the rural Nuevo community and rolling out the red carpet for a mega-developer? The Center and allies successfully challenged the development in 2012, when a judge blocked the project due to its environmental impacts. Now the developer has made minor changes and the county has reapproved the project. Todays lawsuit is one of a series of court challenges to push Riverside County to seriously consider the far-reaching harms and risks of sprawl development in California. The California Environmental Quality Act requires that when environmental impacts are significant, the approving agency must adopt all feasible mitigation measures and alternatives to reduce those impacts. The county did not require adequate mitigation for the developments impacts on air quality, greenhouse gases, and wildlife. From "Africa Reeling" to "Africa Rising", there's a new narrative for the African continent, now showing promising signs of sustainable growth under more stable governments. Leon Swart via 123RF McKinsey & Company, a global management consulting firm, predicts that Africas combined GDP will be $2.6 trillion by 2020 and that Africas consumer spending by 128 million households with discretionary income is expected to be around $1.4 trillion. Among the countries attracting investors are Cote dIvoire, Benin, Morocco, Rwanda, Senegal and Togo. But a new report from the United Nations Development Project (UNDP), finds that Africas new wealth is increasingly concentrated in a few hands. Disappointingly, 10 of the worlds 19 most unequal countries are in sub-Saharan Africa. Economic inequality, sometimes referred to as income inequality, is the unequal distribution of a countrys wealth. In highly unequal societies, such as South Africa, most people live in poverty while a minority amasses enormous wealth. South Africa, the continents most developed economy, is also the worlds most unequal. Botswana, Namibia and Zambia are also among the top 19. While Ethiopias economy is growing at 8%, it is impossible to miss its impoverished citizens in the streets of its capital, pulling on donkeys to transport goods while the rich and famous drive around in luxury cars. In Nigeria the scale of inequality has reached extreme levels, reports Oxfam, a UK-based charity, in a study published in May 2017. Five of Nigerias wealthiest people, including Africas richest man, Aliko Dangote, have a combined wealth of $29.9 billionmore than the countrys entire 2017 budget. About 60% of Nigerians live on less than $1.25 a day, the threshold for absolute poverty. Everything [in South Africa is] was skewed raciallyeducation, access to finance, and access to land, maintains Haroon Bhorat, an economics professor at the University of Cape Town. Inequality drivers Several factors drive inequality in Africa, according to the group of economists who authored the UNDP report, Income Inequality Trends in Sub-Saharan Africa: Divergence, Determinants and Consequences. First, under Africas two-track economic structure, growth often occurs in sectors characterised by low absorption of unskilled labour, high earnings inequality and high capital share in total income. The authors note that growth in those sectors may spur GDP headline growth but will also exacerbate inequality. Its a rising tide that doesnt lift all boats. Second, infrastructure, human labour and land are highly concentrated in Eastern and Southern Africa. Third, authors of the report make reference to the natural resource curse, an urban bias of public policy and ethnic and gender inequalities. It appears, they note, that countries with abundant natural resources, such as Botswana and Zambia, are also some of the most unequal. Inequality also results from regressive taxes [tax rate decreases when taxable income increases], unresponsive wage structures and inadequate investments in education, health and social protection for vulnerable and marginalised groups. In the 1980s and 1990s, many African countries buckled under pressure from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and Western nations to implement structural adjustment programmes (SAPs), which led to cuts in subsidies for health, education, transportation and other sectors that help poor citizens. Some historians and economists now say those cuts fostered inequality. Under the influence of Western donors, austerity became African leaders default coping mechanism for periods of economic stress, writes Nicholas William Stephenson Smith, a freelance researcher and historian. Social unrest For many countries SAPs widened the wealth gap rather than providing macroeconomic stability, argues Said Adejumobi, director of Southern Africas subregional office for the UN Economic Commission for Africa. Adejumobi adds that structural adjustment stalled mobility, frayed communities and sharpened divisions along socioeconomic lines. Currently a tiny group of 4% captures a large chunk of the income and wealth in Africas changing tide of capitalist progress, he says. Inequality now threatens social cohesion on the continent. In recent months thousands of Ethiopians have been on the streets protesting harsh economic conditions, forcing factories, hospitals and public transportation to shut down operations. Economic inequality is fueling conflicts in the Central African Republic, Libya, Nigeria and South Sudan, says Adejumobi. The warped motive of Boko Haram insurgency may not relate to inequality but ignorance and deprivation are two factors that may have made it possible for the terrorist group to recruit young people to kill and maim their fellow citizens. Expect deprived people to push back against inequality at some point, says renowned French economist Thomas Piketty, because the rich will always try to protect the status quo and resist efforts to achieve an egalitarian society. Pikettys book, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, makes a moral argument against excessive wealth accumulation, describing it as unfair and unjust and something to be resisted. Countries adopted the Millennium Development Goals (20002015) to, among other targets, halve the number of people living in absolute poverty. Globally, after 15 years, some 50% of participating countries had met that target, 30% had made progress and 20%, mostly developing countries, had not made significant progress. The Gambia and Ghana met the target, but Ethiopia was among the countries that did not. The authors of Income Inequality Trends in sub-Saharan Africa argued that poverty reduction efforts do not necessarily bridge the inequality gap, which was a conceptual underpinning of the MDGs. To achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, an offshoot of the MDGs, experts hope countries will embrace a range of policies that tackle various forms of inequalities, not just poverty. Policies that help reduce poverty are not necessarily the same as those that help reduce income inequality, writes Abdoulaye Dieye, director of UNDPs regional bureau for Africa, in the preface to the report. Closing the gap Quality education may dent poverty but will not close the inequality gap unless accompanied by progressive taxation [tax rate increases with increases in taxable amount] and well-targeted social protection, Dieye further explains. Also, countries need to focus on growth pattern rather than growth rate, because inequality falls when growth is in labour-intensive sectors, such as agriculture, manufacturing, and construction, and it rises when growth is in sectors high in capital and the use of skilled labour, such as mining, finance, insurance and real estate, according to the UNDP economists. Currently most African countries allocate a significant share of their national budgets to recurrent overheads and/or debts, leaving little or nothing for other projects. Corruption, mismanagement and illicit financial flows (IFFs) also deplete state coffers. According to a 2015 report by a high-level African Union panel on IFFs headed by former South African president Thabo Mbeki, Africa loses up to $50 billion annually to illicit financial flows. Mbeki urges countries to punish multinational companies that are overinvoicing, underpricing or funneling money to tax havens. Empowering women Gender inequality is costing sub-Saharan Africa on average $US95 billion a year, peaking at US$105 billion in 2014or 6% of the regions GDPjeopardising the continents efforts for inclusive human development and economic growth, according to the UNDP publication Africa Human Development Report 2016: Advancing Gender Equality and Womens Empowerment in Africa. The authors of the UNDP report highlight that in sub-Saharan Africa, household income disproportionately favours adult males and gender discrimination is acute and endemic. The UNDP correlates gender equality with human development. Mauritius and Tunisia Mauritius have low levels of gender equality and high levels of human development. Conversely, Chad, Mali and Niger have high levels of gender inequality but low levels of human development. Former vice president of the World Banks Africa division Obiageli Ezekwesili said last November that men are mostly to blame for Africas economic problems. When many more women are at the decision-making level, there is less corruption. Ayodele Odusola, the lead author of the UNDP report, maintains that no single solution can address inequalities on the continent. You have to take countries context into consideration, he says, advising countries to adopt progressive taxation, invest in education and agriculture, increase direct taxation and institute efficient tax administration. Source: United Nations Africa Renewal. Deutsche Welle's history project African Roots addresses young Africans and uses animation in an attempt to reveal more about the continent's history. Feije Riemersma via 123RF DW's new series African Roots uses online comics and radio broadcasts to highlight 25 important African personalities. The project, funded by the Gerda Henkel Foundation, is aimed at young audiences and the content is available in six languages (English, Amharic, Hausa, Kiswahili, French, Portuguese). The portraits cover a long period of time, ranging from Dinknesh, the Mother of Mankind in present-day Ethiopia; to legendary rulers of the Middle Ages, such as Mali's King Sunjata Keita, to key figures from the African independence movement, such as Patrice Lumumba. These animated online stories by the successful Nigerian graphic design team, Comic Republic, will primarily be shared on Facebook once a week. DWs Facebook platforms for Africa have more than four million subscribers. There will also be broadcasts of supporting content on radio, reaching nearly 40 million African listeners per week. African history discourse DW users have raised concerns saying that public discourse on African history is often based solely on the perspective of the continent's former colonial powers. One commented on Facebook that "young Africans don't have easy access to historical documentation". African Roots hopes to help close this gap. The project, spearheaded by DW's Africa service, employs African sources, and was developed in collaboration with African historians, cultural scientists and writers. It targets Africa's young generation, which makes up the vast majority of the population on the continent. Claus Stacker, DW's head of Africa, initiated the project. He stresses that, "African history is in particularly high demand in our programming. Young listeners and users in particular complain about the fact that much of their history lessons are taught from a European point of view, and that they learn so little about African protagonists." Michael Hanssler, chairman of the board at the Gerda Henkel Foundation, explains that, "the promotion of various research projects in Africa aimed at safeguarding and preserving both written and oral historic accounts", are at the heart of the foundation's work. "The foundation wants to support the core idea of 'African Roots' - to communicate the history of the continent to a young audience using African voices." *Watch video here . TOKYO, Japan: Toyota's former president Tatsuro Toyoda, who helped the Japanese auto giant establish a foothold in North America, has died at the age of 88. Bjoern Wylezich via 123RF Toyoda, an uncle of current Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda, died of pneumonia on 30 December 2017, the firm said in a statement. His funeral has already been held and was attended by close relatives, but Toyota said it plans to hold a separate farewell ceremony. Toyoda joined the company - founded by his father Kiichiro Toyoda - in 1953 and in 1984 became the first president of a new firm formed by Toyota and General Motors. The California-based joint venture was part of Toyota's push to expand production and increase its share in the North American market. The plant produced nearly 8 million vehicles until its closure in 2010, according to the company. Toyoda served as Toyota president between 1992 and 1995. Source: AFP Vega Game Jam 2018 is set to put aspiring young game developers to the test. The annual 48-hour Global Game Jam will be taking place from 26-28 January 2018 at Vega's Johannesburg and Cape Town campuses. The event is part of Global Game Jam (GGJ), the worlds largest event of its kind, taking place at various locations around the globe. Considered a hackathon focused on game development, the event sees some of the greatest young minds coming together to share their creativity and create unique video game experiences. While it is compulsory for second-year Vega students to attend, the school also invites programmers, animators, artists and designers to take part in the event. The school will also host a series of workshops to provide insight into some of the mechanics of the development process, including helpful how-to tips on creating the various complex components that make up a game. For more, go to the Global Game Jam website. STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Swedish clothing giant Hennes and Mauritz on Monday apologised and removed an advertisement of a black child after the company was accused of being racist on social media. A photo on the company's online website of a black boy wearing a green hoodie with the inscription "coolest monkey in the jungle" triggered outrage among observers. "Whose idea was it at @hm to have this little sweet black boy wear a jumper that says 'coolest monkey in the jungle'?" style blogger Stephanie Yeboah tweeted on Sunday. "You do know that monkey is a known racial slur to black people right?" she added. "The image has now been removed from all H&M channels and we apologise to anyone this may have offended," the company told AFP. A generic photo of the hooded sweatshirt without the modelling child is still available online. H&M is not the only major company to be hit by an advertisement scandal in recent years. Spanish clothing brand Zara in 2014 removed a striped pyjamas with a yellow star after facing outrage over its resemblance to clothes worn by Jewish prisoners in concentration camps. And in October last year, personal care brand Dove apologised after it was accused of racism for airing a commercial showing a black woman turning into a white woman after removing her top. Source: AFP ROME, Italy - Think Italian fashion and you are likely to think of chic central, Milan. But "Made in Italy" actually has its roots in Florence, where the hotly anticipated Pitti Uomo trade fair opens this week. The most famous men here may be naked from Michelangelo's David to the sea-god Neptune but every year the Tuscan city becomes the capital of men's fashion, putting on four heady days of ready-to-wear shows. The event, which kicks off Tuesday, is a must for buyers, journalists and fashionistas drawing some 36,000 last year who gather to gawp, gossip and go mad over the latest trends at the city's imposing Fortezza da Basso fortress. Some 1,200 brands are expected to present their autumn-winter collections at the 93rd edition under headliner Karl Lagerfeld, with old hands like Paul&Shark alongside newcomers such as M1992 by Italian DJ Dorian Stefano Tarantini. It was Tuscan businessman Giovanni Battista Giorgini who organised the first Italian fashion show, hosting a gathering with US and Canadian buyers, journalists and distributors at his home in 1951 -- largely in a challenge to French fashion. Then relatively unknown labels such as Simonetta, Pucci, Fontana and Cuppucci went down a storm and Giorgini replicated the shows the following year in a grand hotel, before they became a fixed feature at the majestic Pitti Palace. It was under the Pitti's glass chandeliers that the biggest houses Gucci, Schiaparelli, Ferragamo showed off their creations until the 1980s, making "Made in Italy" a byword for the highest quality and most sought-after fashion. "Florence's relationship with fashion is rooted in its economic, political and cultural history, dominated by powerful craft guilds," says Angelo Cavicchi, president of the Pitti Discovery Foundation and the Florence Center for Italian Fashion. From the 12th to the 17th century, the city boasted 21 such bodies protecting the interests of the rich and influential in the art and crafts world, the most powerful of which were known as the Arti Maggiori. The elite Arte di Calimala, the guild of cloth finishers and foreign cloth merchants, was among them. It imported raw fabrics before transforming them into refined materials and exporting them in a trade that drove the city's economy. The Calimala competed with other guilds like the wool or silk merchants over who could finance the greatest architectural and artistic works in the city, from the bronze doors of the Baptistery to the Cathedral's famed dome. "It was comparable to the key support private companies, including many fashion houses, bring today to cultural projects," says Saverio Pacchioni, a member of the Associazione Partners Palazzo Strozzi, which persuades firms to promote the arts in Florence. The modern-day city manages to defend its position as a fashion leader by preserving local craftmanship and working in partnership with its close neighbour Prato, the country's leader in supplying fabrics to the ready-to-wear industry. Florence boasts historical gems such as the Antico Setificio Fiorentino, a silk factory founded in 1786 which still produces jacquard weaves and damasks by hand on looms that once belonged to the city's noblest families. And the city's traditional skills are protected from the march of time thanks to fashion schools like Polimoda, which ranks among the top 10 such institutes in the world. Source: AFP "A developed country is not a place where the poor have cars. It's where the rich use public transport." These are the paraphrased words uttered by Enrique Penalosa, the former Mayor of Bogota, Colombia, and they ring equally true in South Africa. Sandton City Mall New York City is distinguished by its low ownership of personal vehicles and the highest rate of public transport use in the United States. It is the only city in which over half of all households do not own a car, and in Manhattan this figure even reaches 75%. A large part of this advantage comes from its complex public transport network, including the largest subway system in the world, as measured by stations and track. Focus on sustainability More and more developed countries are sharpening their focus on sustainability, and the use of public transport brings environmental and economic benefits from the increased energy efficiency. City Improvement Districts (CIDs) are about creating exceptional places. A citys character is defined by its public space, not its private space. Globally, the ability for attractive, active, well-functioning public space can jumpstart economic development in a community from a small rural town to a big city is increasingly recognised. Place making promotes a simple principle: when you plan cities for cars and traffic, you get cars and traffic. When you plan for people and places, you get people and places. With the right balance, streets can accommodate vehicles and become destinations worth visiting. Commercial nodes like Sandton Central can be designed as grand spaces where it is safe to walk and cycle, allowing for both through and local traffic. Streets that are planned for people, and that are not completely auto-centric, contribute positively to social cohesion in communities. They achieve this by fostering human interaction and providing safe public spaces that promote the identity of the area. Investment in eco-mobility Sandton Central hosted the second World Eco Mobility Festival in 2015. Its concept is to introduce everything to do with eco-mobility in a neighbourhood for one whole month. Because of the successful event, the City of Johannesburg stepped up to invest in improving the public space. Together with the city, Sandton Central officially opened and launched the R120m Complete Street Project and introduced the Public Transport Loop in September 2017. It creates easy and convenient access for passengers to connect to public transport and enjoy shorter travel times. Sandton Central is now stepping ahead when it comes to being more people friendly in keeping with the principle of place making. Rea Vaya (Joburgs public rapid bus transport system) is planned to link into Sandton in 2018/2019, better connecting it with the rest of the city, including neighbouring Alexandra. Creating spaces of hope Cities must create spaces of hope for the poor because they both create and take advantage of the economic benefits that cities generate. To support this, we should be lowering transport costs, shortening travel distances, reducing the cost of housing, and encouraging as much market-based interface as possible. Progressively more people and communities around the world are beginning to recognise, and to fight for, the power of place in transforming cities and the everyday lives of their residents. Across the world, both governments and citizens are working together around the common goal of place to create safer, healthier, and more inclusive communities. CIDs can pull communities together to address the challenges in an area. When a district is managed with the people who visit, work and live in it, it improves the quality of the space and creates business opportunities in the area. It sets that district apart from the rest. Sandton Central Management District (SCMD) is home to three business improvement districts. It provides distinct advantages for property investors by creating and sustaining an excellent property investment location. Funded by Sandton Centrals commercial property owners, SCMD was founded to ensure an exceptional experience of this key node of Johannesburg. Here are some of the 'hot spots' in the local stainless steel sector over the next year... 1. Africa is still rising! Mozambique will be a hot spot for the local stainless steel industry to focus on for international exports in 2018 as it will finally see the launch of a liquid natural gas plant between Pemba and Palma in northern Mozambique. This is an offshore project, backed by Eni, which was signed with commitment from the Mozambican government on 1 June 2017. Another onshore project is being undertaken by Anadarko, where other ancillary projects, including hotels, housing and hospitals, will be developed alongside the project. This also means the ancillary port in Pemba will now start its development plan, which will take just five months to complete from signing. Other top countries to focus on in 2018 in terms of potential for local stainless steel exports are Tanzania, Zambia, Kenya and Madagascar. 2. Solving SAs water woes one stainless steel pipe at a time Stainless steel has the potential to play a larger role in rectifying SAs current water woes and easing the dire water crisis South Africa finds itself in, during 2018. The potential for stainless steel water supply installations in the municipal area is potentially huge. Globally, as much as 35% of all treated water is lost to leaking piping systems with that figure rising to 41% in South Africa. This has prompted a stainless steel test project to get underway in Paarl between the Southern Africa Stainless Steel Development Association (Sassda), local municipal authorities and South African manufacturers in search of the most environmental and economic solution for the countrys water-wise future. Looking ahead, 2018 will see a renewed focus/ramping up of local production of corrugated stainless steel pipe for both external (service) and internal (domestic) pipes. Manufacturers have had meetings with Johannesburg Water in terms of external usage and they also plan to work more closely with the Institute of Plumbing SA to sell the tube also for domestic applications through retail outlets 3. Against the odds Despite a slew of dire South African macro-economic indicators, the local stainless steel industry continues to battle on and, in certain instances, even defy expectations. Proof of this is that despite the current crop of tough macro-economic conditions, our latest member-based Short Track survey revealed surprisingly positive sentiment, with 48% of Sassda respondents now having a positive response to the current order situation, which represents the best figure seen since the survey began. After two consecutive years of double digit contraction, we therefore expect the stainless steel sector to stabilise i.e. more-or-less no growth/contraction with the potential for recovery in 2018. 4. Proudly South African pots! South Africas hollowware sector (pots, pans, cutlery etc.) has felt the effects of an influx of Chinese imports over the last five/ten years which has all but smothered local production. The good news is that a couple of new local manufacturing concerns will come on line in 2018. The most exciting is Le Morgan which has refurbished a KwaZulu-Natal plant and has already produced 2,500 pots with a view to ramping up production by May 2018, when a range of imported, world-class additional machines arrive in South Africa to beef up its local facility. Its hoped that this will see the reintroduction of proudly South African stainless steel pots pans and cutlery in kitchens across the country. 5. Digital manufacturing South Africas local stainless steel industry will continue to incorporate digital innovation into its production processes. This against the backdrop of the Fourth Industrial Revolution phenomenon where a product is no longer enough in and of itself and the realisation that there needs to be something extra. It could be bespoke designs, being a global technology leader in a certain field, having an associated indispensable service attached to the products or allowing for the complete customisation of the product. A practical local example of this type of innovation is a locally developed world-first technology from Star Weld which has particular relevance for the food and beverage processing sector. Local producer Steve Hutchinson has developed a robotic welding technique which has relevance for wine, dairy and agro processing sectors in particular, and will represent a huge step forward for the local industry in 2018. Suspected human trafficker Chibuike Innocent Nwosu (39) has been remanded in custody by the Cape Town Magistrate's Court. Nwosu made a brief appearance in court this morning for allegations of human trafficking. He was arrested last week Thursday in Milnerton when a multidisciplinary team -- consisting of members of the Hawks Anti-human Trafficking Unit, K9 and local police - followed up on information regarding an apparent human trafficking case. The raid resulted in two female victims, both aged 22, being freed and taken to a place of safety. The victims had been allegedly forced into sex work after they were reportedly lured from Mpumalanga and Free State respectively in 2017, with offers of employment. The Hawks say investigations continue. Meanwhile, two suspects believed to be part of a wider vehicle theft syndicate have been remanded in custody. Haajibu Ken Issah (30) and Adam Alli (24) appeared briefly at the Makhado Magistrates Court today and their case was postponed pending further investigations. Issah and Alli were caught allegedly driving a stolen vehicle on the N1 road between Makhado and Musina whilst en route to Beitbridge. Preliminary investigations revealed that the vehicle was reported stolen in Wayville, KwaZulu-Natal, in December 2017. Additionally, it was found that the same had false registration plates and licence disc. Being ahead of the curve is something I love to challenge myself and my team on, hence we also take pride in it being synonymous with the Trafalgar brand. Here are my seven trends for 2018. Why seven? Simple: it is the world's favourite number. There are seven days of the week, seven colours of the rainbow, seven seas and seven continents. And, there is no value in increasing the number purely for numbers' sake. Let's take-off... Gavin Tollman, CEO, Trafalgar 1. Off-season travel Travel has become a way of life. Exploring, adventuring, relaxing, escaping, reconnecting all of these have become a part of what we do, and shape who we are. The numbers of travellers are growing annually, dramatically. Clearly, however, in key cities, the industry cant build accommodation fast enough to accommodate high season peaks, and travelling on your own can result in long queues that simply exhaust the desire to fulfil a travel dream. Readjusting our mindsets to embrace year-round travel as a genuine prospect allows travellers to fully enjoy every moment and not have that sinking feeling of worrying about battling crowds at each turn. Lack of crowds means lack of frustration of time and space lost as you embark on the same bright idea to travel to the same place at the same time as everyone else. The following three variables are being increasingly considered and I believe we will see more travellers shifting to embrace year-round travel: If youve ever been to the same destination during the typical peak season and the off-season, you could relate to me instantly. The way locals treat visitors when there arent many of them is also worth noticing. Welcomes are warmer and sincerer you will feel more like a traveller than a tourist. You will also see more. Without traffic and queues, one acquires more time and the opportunity to discover a whole new range of activities to enjoy and take part in during the less-traditional peak periods. Finally, there are the prices. From air to activities to transport, depending on the time of year and season, rates can vary significantly. Discounts are for times of low demand. The plus points make it all a rather obvious alternative. 2. True sustainability will become a requisite, not a nice to have "Over-tourism is a growing concern. During the peak European summer travel months, destinations such as Venice, Barcelona and Dubrovnik find themselves simply overwhelmed, local residents growingly angered by the takeover of tourists. The insurgence of what I have termed the ice cream tourist. We have all just read about the changes coming for cruises in Venice, which will serve only to increase the concerns. For travel to remain true to people and place, we must ensure that we work to grow tourism in a sustainable manner assisting local communities to celebrate who they are, respecting their uniqueness, as a prelude to building their economy and protecting their environment. Through JoinTrafalgar, as well as our TTC-aligned Treadright Foundation, we must all play our part in ensuring that tourism remains a force for good. The term sustainable has been increasingly paired up with travel and tourism to denote a desired way of operating. We are hearing more and more from our travellers that they are becoming increasingly engaged with spending their money on sustainable ventures. It is not about being eco-friendly, it is about being environmentally-conscious being part of the bigger picture, preserving something for the long term. But how do we really give meaning to the term sustainability? These are my three criteria for sustainable travel in 2018 and beyond: 1. Economic the business model that supports an enduring tourism economy 2. Cultural being sensitive to the history, traditions, identity and ideologies of a people and place 3. Environmental preserving, protecting and promoting the gifts of natural environment all around us As previously referenced, differentiated seasonality will diminish no more FOMO for those that dont travel in summer in Europe, for example. We will see people travelling at traditional off-peak or shoulder periods as is, not only to avoid excessive crowds but also to avoid compromising some of those destinations that cannot cope with the burgeoning influx. It will help pace the tourism intake and also sustain businesses that might otherwise be stretched with having the highest percentage of their business boom during the key summer months. 3. Technology, enriching the travel experience From AR and VR and IoT (Internet of Things) they are all becoming integrated into daily life. In 2018, I envision them further assimilating into the traveller experience, making them an integral part of the journey to the ultimate destination. It shouldn't be surprising that holidaymakers in 2018 will want to ensure that technology works for them to leverage their travels before they go, whilst travelling, and after, especially when sharing reviews. As an industry, we need to ensure we are tapping into this trend, embracing technology that genuinely enriches our experiences. There is no doubt that the written form is quickly evaporating and today consumers are ever-increasingly looking at video for inspiration - and particularly short-form video (from 5 30 seconds). I know that when a video starts, I look at the time bar and if its long, I click off. In 2018, we will see short-form video help drive original content as well as engage and inspire travellers. Finally, if I recall correctly, last year, we reached the tipping point when we viewed more websites on our smartphones and tablets than our desktops. This milestone highlights how our interaction with technology is rapidly shifting. With this distinct trend and seeing how our guests use technology whilst travelling with us in 2018, Trafalgar will be introducing an innovative new way for our guests to get information via mobile pre, during and post their travels, as well as enabling them to engage with fellow travellers and share their experiences across their social channels. Todays travellers are more ambitious and adventurous, both in their travelling and in their travel-sharing. Its no longer about checking boxes. 4. Its all about personalisation Lest we forget: when travelling, personalisation is no longer a pleasant surprise for customers, it is an absolute expectation. There is no reason at all why the power of touching one should be lost to the masses. Todays connectivity means that consumers are rightfully expecting, and demanding, more. From our perspective, for every single one of our Trafalgar guests around the world, no one matters more than each of them. Their needs and expectations, are simple: recognise, understand and respect me for the individual that I am. Why? Because consumers want to feel like their interests and preferences are not only taken seriously but also applied. They want their holiday to be as individual as they are. And rightly so. And because they have invested time to research and finally choose their holiday with us over others, it is expected that we reciprocate by honouring not just their choice, but honouring them. Their happiness is our unequivocal goal. 5. HDD - Holiday Deficit Disorder An expression given to me by my wife. It wasnt that long ago that taking all of ones holiday time was almost frowned upon. Today the importance of unplugging is greatly understood. Never before has there been such awareness of the strong relationship between wellness and taking time off. Today, holiday shaming is rapidly becoming an ideal of the past. Encouraging personal time off is the evolved way of looking at employee wellbeing, on and off the job. At the same time, travellers recognise that regularly recharging, refreshing and rejuvenating is part of a healthy work-life balance. What better way than to travel to new places, get away from the day-to-day and completely escape. The need to learn more to increase ones productivity, creativity, sense of purpose and sense of participation is not only acquired in the workplace. There is no better school for personal growth and decompression than the travel world that surrounds us all. 6. Off the beaten track destinations Discovering the mysterious and the new remains vital to travellers. I continue to see more and more people visiting cities that were, until recently, overlooked, unheard of or inaccessible. There is no doubt that the proliferation of low-cost airlines is having a profound, positive impact on these lesser known places. Regional low-cost carriers continue to proliferate globally, making discovery of somewhat unexplored destinations a delightful reality. In so doing, these new air routes unlock previously unseen economic, social and cultural uplift. Over the past decade, airlines have added over 10,000 new routes serving more than 37,000 city pairs. There are now 1,280 international airports serving 48,977 routes worldwide. What does this mean for travellers in 2018? More choices, more exploration, more learning, more opportunity to create more in life for the people accessing these remarkable new jewels of travel. 7. Bragging rights If there is one thing that is going to distinctly differentiate this travel generation compared to those of years and generations past, it is the articulation of feedback posting, rating, bragging. Todays travellers are more ambitious and adventurous, both in their travelling and in their travel-sharing. Its no longer about checking boxes. Travellers want adventurous, participatory experiences. Sight-seeing is important but not enough. Sight-doing is the way to touch their travel souls and make memories to last a lifetime. The quest for realness - living local has put heightened pressure on the most overused word in travel, authentic. What must never be forgotten is what travellers are ultimately looking for: getting below the surface of destinations, understanding their uniqueness and very essence. In 2018, I think there will be an increased swathe of people fully engaged in the sharing economy, communicating to the world the wonderfully enriching experiences that they have discovered but that their friends havent. Yet. So, these are my top seven travel insights for 2018 my truths for the year ahead. May they serve you and your aspirations well as the new year unfolds. I believe that 2018 is going to be a fascinating and challenging year. There are a number of developments that I think we will see accelerating or landing in the next 12 months. The first thing that I think is important is the trend weve been seeing towards increasing customisation of messages to customers. While the logic of trying to find a specific way to connect with each person is seductive, I worry that we are moving away from the fundamental driver for brands. For the longest time, a brand has been predicated on the notion of meaning one thing to a large group of people, that the logo or colours or iconography represent a particular promise that that brand delivers to its customers. I fear that in an age where digital media allows us to communicate with an audience of one, the temptation to stretch a brands equity to fit that particular person is a potentially dangerous path. The other risk I see with regard to traditional notions of brand building is the tendency towards short-termism. As a person operating in a business, I appreciate the difficulties of understanding what a businesss financial future looks like 18 months from now, let alone five years. The past decade has been characterised by unprecedented change, and more importantly the pace of this change. I feel that this has meant that many people and brands we engage with seem to have adopted the notion that the best way to cope with the fluid and uncertain waters around us is to take a far more short-term approach to things. History tells us that short-term thinking will, over time, erode quality and consistency, which will in turn hurt brand equity. No speculation about the future would be complete without a view on the digital advertising landscape. Im confident well continue to see significant growth of digital adspend in South Africa despite the tougher climate. Or maybe even because of it. As a result, I suspect that were going to see a maturing of approach to digital advertising over the next year or so. Only five or six years ago, I was working with large advertisers who approached digital media investment on the basis of a target spend number, rather than trying to work out what was relevant to the task at hand, where to engage most effectively with customers and how to utilise these powerful new tools to their maximum potential. I get the sense that a euphoric headlong rush into digital investment (oftentimes mandated because this was how things were happening in Europe or the US) will be tempered now, and mapped more carefully. This is a great thing for the sector as more application of thought and intelligence into the deployment of budgets should yield better results. This improvement in rigour and approach to digital advertising will also be led by better data management. Companies like Pick n Pay are becoming very sophisticated with their loyalty programmes. The Smart Shopper programme is a fantastic example of data-driven communication and insight. And although it might be a bit trite, data really matters. I was recently in a presentation given by one of Kantars top global minds, where I learned that four out of 10 South Africans believe that theyve seen a piece of online communication or advertising that is relevant to them in the past year, with a further four saying they have seen an online ad that was irrelevant to them. The remaining two out of 10 havent seen any online ads that they can recall. This sounds like a coin toss to me in terms of whether advertisers are wasting money on irrelevant impressions. What gave me comfort is that in a very sophisticated digital advertising market like Australia, only one in 10 people report seeing a relevant piece of online communication. And seven out of 10 say they havent these figures are staggering in terms of wasted advertising investment. What strikes me about these statistics is that the problem is unlikely to be the algorithms driving ad placement, but rather a problem with target audience data and insights. So hopefully a more rigorous approach in the deployment of investment will help solve this in 2018. By way of example, we recently took onboard a new client in our Bionic business, where we were able to generate more new customers for a client in one month on the Facebook platform than they had generated from Facebook in the entire nine months preceding this, combined. This was achieved largely through good discipline and understanding of the customer, backed by a brilliant algorithm. The more things change, the more they stay the same In 2018 Im hoping for more macro-economic stabilisation; less disruption in terms of account moves; more innovation in the OOH space with regards to interactivity, scheduling and utilising beacon technology; image recognition; and seeing much more of those things that will create more data. I also think that were going to see some very serious strides in the connection between digital advertising and real-world purchasing in physical stores. I am also convinced that we will finally start to see a decrease of data costs in South Africa, which will fuel growth in over-the-top technologies, amongst other things. This in turn brings more competition to the television landscape and a whole new set of rules and viewer behaviour to get our heads around. I think it would be amazing to see a telecoms business bringing pre-bundled bandwidth to market to support content strategies Cell Cs recent announcement around Black hints in this direction. I guess its probably good to bear in mind though that the more things change, the more they stay the same. In the end, great content will always attract audiences its just the method of delivery thats changing. As the first serious example of this, consider the dramatic decline of readership in print vehicles. It may be severe, but then look at the growth of those brands online. I hope that in the coming year, we start to see the global regulatory environment try and deal with fake news it is an incredibly destructive force. Sadly, its not even new news, so to speak. Things are easier to deal with if you can label them, so perhaps now that these sort of tactics have a name, well see an acceleration of some sort of action from reputable publishers, governments and media platforms that amplify content to protect the integrity of our news. Overall, I feel quite invigorated by the year ahead. If you enjoy change, learning and new frontiers, then I think 2018 is a year to watch. Opportunity is always present during flux and we have the privilege of being in a front-running industry in terms of disruption. Onwards and upwards as they say. While the South African business sector is faced with many challenges, there is significant opportunity for growth sectors of the local industry during 2018. We have an economy with a GDP of approximately $296bn and a population of almost 60-million people to fuel it. Certain tactics need to be changed in order to adapt property businesses and refocus on growth nodes within the sector. My predictions for the property market in 2018 include significant focus and growth in the affordable and gap housing market. People considered too well-off to receive government-subsidised houses, yet do not qualify for bonds with banks, will encounter alternative solutions and funding being introduced to this sector. Within the urbanised inner-city CBDs, medium-rise and affordable gap housing will be introduced in 2018. This is both challenging and exciting given that the backlog in this sector is estimated to be around 60,000 units per year, with just a 10% delivery rate. Substantial government budget allocations from the Department of Human Settlement and Department of Housing are in place for the coming year, which will create massive employment opportunities in the struggling construction sector. Another big budget allocation is student housing, where pressure has been placed on government to provide accommodation close to tertiary education campuses. There is still a significant under-supply, returns are great, and exits are easy due to new JSE-specialised student housing REIT listings. Semigration to continue Semigration from Johannesburg, Pretoria and Durban down to Cape Town and the Winelands will continue, as the city is seen to be better run, safer to live and work in, and provides good schools, scenery and leisure. Industrial usage will be driven by export manufacturers and online shopping distribution centres, which are growing faster than most other sectors. Amazon are building distribution centres in South Africa and I believe we will see the likes of Alibaba and others following suit shortly with the weak rand stimulating the export market. However, importers using warehousing will be adversely affected by a weaker rand, and they will require downward rent reversions if it doesnt strengthen over the short-medium term. Tough economic conditions will see the office market narrow down. Many listed corporates are already focused on streamlining or reducing their fixed costs, which includes the quantum of rented space. This shrinkage of space, as well as retrenchments, creates office vacancies, however, the positive aspect is that these vacancies can be absorbed by converting the voids to serviced offices or increasing the ever-popular co-working spaces. Decentralised business nodes Office workers will be pleased to note that traffic congestion will see the rise of more decentralised business nodes. For example, I predict that Midrand in Gauteng will increase in popularity, as it is central and easily accessible with great infrastructure. I also foresee corporates moving away from nodes like Sandton, Illovo and Rosebank to newer nodes and developments that are less congested, have better access, and offer renewable energy, grey water, smart technology and specialised security. The retail property sector will be heavily affected by the current tough economic conditions, more competition from popular foreign brands such as Zara and H&M, and a weaker rand which affects imports, online shopping, and expensive rentals. There is a trend in the US of older low performing centres being converted into china-town type malls, with cheaper imported goods on sale. Landlords have made significant profits by cutting these centres up and selling them off to owner-operators on sectional title or known as 'condominiumised centres' in the US. International retailers to impact local market Shoppers can also expect to see a change in the layout of the newer retail centres, and ones which are due to be built. Traditionally, South African design has favoured the typical 'H-or figure 8 design'. This describes a pattern whereby the shopper walks around the centre, and is drawn towards the likes of Pick n Pay or Checkers, which are located on one side of the centre, then having Edgars, Stuttafords and Clicks in the middle, and Woolworths on the other side of the centre. I foresee this trend changing as the international retailers make their impact felt on the local clothing retailers, and more grocery retailers like Carrefour, Walmart, and others express desire to enter the Sub-Saharan African market. This will change the dynamic, and make shopping more exciting, more international and certainly more price competitive. Expected tax hikes in the February 2018 budget will have an impact on all corporates and SMMEs. Africa - the last frontier The sub-Saharan continent is completely under-serviced and under-supplied in all sectors of the property market. But Africa is the last frontier with its population of 1.1-billion people. At an average age of 22 years old, the continent is headed for 30 years of strong economic growth. This is not only because of increasing demand from these commodity-rich countries, but largely because the opportunity now exists to supply consumer credit to boost a growing middle class, which in turn will create demand for new homes, cars and businesses, etc. South African businesses are well positioned to inject capital and expertise, as well as export product and set up manufacturing plants into these new Sub-Saharan African markets. Businesses who want to succeed must now be focused on the continent, rather than on a single country. We need to look at it as though it is a euro-zone in which to expand our businesses into neighbouring countries. The proliferation of mobile phone networks in Asia-Pacific and Africa has transformed how people connect, communicate and shop. Africa's e-commerce market is rapidly gaining traction, with e-commerce expected to account for 10% of retail sales by 2025, while Asia-Pacific's e-commerce market will have an estimated value of $1.4 trillion by 2020 . I believe 2018 will continue the surge in emerging markets' mobile and e-commerce growth, catalysing big opportunity for businesses. Mark Mahoney For many, mobile is a communication lifeline and an opportunity to access the internet in places where connection is limited or non-existent. This is one of numerous factors fuelling the growth of emerging markets. Id also credit fast-paced technological change, online banking and the increased globalisation of customers and retailers in highly populous countries. The worlds more connected than ever before however, this connectivity comes at a cost. To accelerate access, savvy data solutions need to pair with well-designed e-commerce platforms. For example, leading Nigeria e-tailer Jumia has partnered with MTN, so MTN sim card holders can browse the online shopping site and app for free, with zero data usage. I believe well see more of these kinds of partnerships emerging. In Africa, cell phones are now just as widespread in South Africa and Nigeria as they are in the US, where 90% of adults own one or more phones. This is vastly different from a decade ago when roughly only one in ten adults owned a mobile phone in Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya and Ghana. This reliance on mobile means developing countries have a much faster e-commerce-via-mobile adoption rate than developed countries. Its therefore likely these markets will exert the greatest influence on e-commerce in the year to come. Top trends for the e-commerce industry in 2018: 1. Unparalleled opportunity: Its estimated that some countries like India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, for example, have a relatively modest collective mobile penetration rate of only 35%, yet have a combined population of close to two billion, so the e-commerce market growth potential is enormous. I predict more businesses will expand into these areas in the coming year. 2. The battle of the big players in import-ance: Our inbound shipments reflect that the USA still accounts for 70% of all e-commerce orders to South Africa, with the UK following at 13% and China at 10%. Imports from online stores in China are the fastest growing, with Alibaba going head to head with Amazon. 3. More people are shopping the world: From Amazon to Asos and Alibaba, South African online consumers are embracing ordering from overseas websites, with over 43% choosing to make purchases from the USA, UK and China. There are a few reasons behind this: - Online consumers are now more comfortable with payment security. Additionally, the buying process is better, with improved shipping options and site design. - Access to newly launched or unobtainable products, new fashion styles, and cheaper prices and deep discount sales are the main reasons people look overseas when shopping online. - Faster and more cost-effective global logistics services are providing international shoppers with door-to-door delivery options that are meeting their delivery time expectations. - Many small businesses and entrepreneurs are importing products that are not available in their own countries from global online stores and then selling these products locally. Orders can be taken locally and drop shipped to the end consumer without the need for high capital outlay or expensive business resources. Ive noted a few customers who invest in Lego and other kids toys, for example, and set up small side ventures to sell to their family and friends. The Vanderbilts did more than dictate the fate of Park Avenue, the boulevard hovering above the old track path of the New York Central Railroad. The scions of this New York family also changed the fate of a little street called Sutton Place. Anne Harriman Vanderbiltaalong with other society mavensahad mansions built there in 1920, quickly turning it into a pocket colony for the wealthy. aYou have to be way up in Whoas Who to gain admission into this selected settlement,a explained the New York Evening World in 1921. So why does the little park on East 57th Street, tucked into proper little Sutton Place, contain a garish bronze sculpture of a boar sitting next to a hideous frog-eating snake? Even the boar has a pedigree! Itas a copy of Pietro Taccaas 1634 sculpture IlA Porcellino from Florence, Italy, installed here in 1972, a gift from Hugh Trumbull Adams, a descendent of the colonial governor of Connecticut Jonathan Trumbull. Mr. Adams donated many public works of art to the city including the stunning Armillary Sphere located as the pocket park further south on 54th Street. Taccas Italian boar, a copy of an ancient marble sculpture, is much beloved in Florence. Visitors to Il Porcellino put a coin into the boars gaping jaws, with the intent to let it fall through the underlying grating for good luck, and they rub the boars snout to ensure a return to Florence. Here in Sutton Place, given the neighborhoodas early history with abattoirs and stockyards, we canat help but think that it was placed here as a bloody homage. You may also know this view, similar to the one from the Woody Allen film Manhattan. A Pondicherry class minesweeper operational in the Indian Navy. An Indian Navy photo NEW DELHI (PTI): The Government will start a fresh process this month to procure 12 advanced minesweepers for Indian Navy after negotiations for the Rs 32,000-crore project between the Goa Shipyard and a South Korean company hit a dead-end. The Navy badly needs the minesweepers or mine counter-measure vessels to guard India's critical sea lanes in the backdrop of China's growing naval might in the Indian Ocean region. "We will issue fresh EoI (Expression of Interest) for the project very soon. It will be issued this month," Chairman of state-run Goa Shipyard Ltd Rear Admiral (retd) Shekhar Mital told PTI. Sources said the Goa Shipyard Ltd had to call off the negotiations with Kangnam Corporation following differences over a host of issues including terms and conditions for technology transfer. The EoI is likely to be issued to a number of major foreign defence majors which build minesweepers. According to original understanding, the Goa Shipyard and the Kangnam Corporation were to build 12 minesweepers in India under the Make in India initiative and the deliveries were to be completed within nine years of the start of the project. However, both sides struggled to finalise various key aspects of the project. A parliamentary standing committee on defence last year had slammed the Government for delay in procurement of the minesweepers and asked it to make efforts to fill the gap in the Navy's capability. The minesweeper ships detect and destroy underwater mines and are considered vital for keeping the critical sea lanes safe. US fashion retailer Forever 21 is pulling out of Ireland due to spiraling losses. The store, which was the first branch in Europe, opened in the Jervis Centre on Henry Street in Dublin in 2010. Accumulated losses have mounted to 44 million, with 11 million being set aside for redundancy payments and to exit the lease agreement. No formal date has been given for the closure. More to follow. Digital desk Jaguar Land Rover sales have risen 7% to a record 621,109 vehicles in 2017 but the UKs biggest carmaker says it faces tough conditions in its home market due to weakening consumer confidence and a planned diesel tax rise on new cars, writes Costas Pitas. The company has embarked on a major turnaround plan since being bought by Indias Tata group in 2008. This includes investment in new models and expansion of production with the aim of building around a million vehicles a year by the turn of the decade. It said growth in China, its largest market, and in the US helped to offset difficult conditions in the UK and the rest of Europe, where demand was flat. We have once again delivered year-on-year sales increases thanks to a world-class product range and new models such as the E-PACE and Velar, as well as China-specific models such as the XFL, group sales operations director Andy Goss said. He added: But we are facing tough times in key markets such as the UK where consumer confidence and diesel taxes will hit us. However, the company does expect domestic sales to rise this year from 2017s 118,000 vehicles. The UKs car industry body said last week that 2017 sales recorded their biggest drop since 2009, blaming plans to increase a levy on new diesel cars and weakening consumer confidence in the wake of Brexit. Around 90% of Jaguar Land Rover sales in the UK are diesel models, which compares with around 45% globally. The UKs Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond said in November the vehicle excise duty would rise from April for those buying almost any new diesel car, potentially costing hundreds of pounds more for top-end models. Its difficult to fathom the latest decision in the budget, Goss said. Major carmakers are scrambling to meet tougher emissions targets and growing demand for cleaner technologies. Jaguar Land Rover said last year that all of its new cars would be available in an electric or hybrid version from 2020. Goss said the firm would decide this year whether to build electric models in the UK. Peugeot-maker PSA will cut a further 250 jobs at its Vauxhall car plant in the north of England, reducing the workforce by a third as part of efforts to make the plant more efficient by reducing its output to one shift. - Reuters JP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon has backtracked on criticism of Bitcoin, saying he regrets calling the cryptocurrency a "fraud". The Wall Street boss was one of the most high-profile critics of the digital currency, having said last autumn that he would fire employees found to be trading the digital currency for being "stupid". But when asked to address the topic, Mr Dimon said those were comments "which I regret making". Mr Dimon admitted that elements of Bitcoin-related technology warranted attention, including distributed ledger technology or the blockchain, which is seen as an opportunity for financial services to strip costs, speed up transactions and serving as a central ledge to track and verify transactions that cuts out the industrys middlemen. "The blockchain is real," he told Fox Business today. "You can have crypto yen and dollars and stuff like that. ICOs you have to look at individually", he added referring to Initial Coin Offerings which allow investors to exchange cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin for proprietary "coins" or "tokens" linked to a specific firm or project. "The Bitcoin to me was always what the governments are gonna feel about Bitcoin as it gets really big, and I just have a different opinion than other people," the JP Morgan CEO said. "Im not interested that much in the subject at all." Dimon on cyber security: "Cyber's a big deal, we'll be spending more... we'll do whatever we have to do. That's like, you just have to protect yourself." pic.twitter.com/jcS4RPfA0h FOX Business (@FoxBusiness) January 9, 2018 But Bitcoin was unmoved by the admission and was trading lower by 4.2% at $14,330.10, according to prices listed by Coindesk this afternoon. The cryptocurrency has fallen from its most recent peak in mid-December when it touched nearly $20,000 on some exchanges, though is still up significantly from the $900 mark it was sitting at one year ago in January 2017. Bitcoin prices have been buoyed by the launch of bitcoin futures by both the CME and CBOE last month following US regulatory approval which has been hailed by proponents as helping to legitimise the use of the virtual currency. Major international figures including Christine Lagarde of the International Monetary Fund have said "it may not be wise to dismiss virtual currencies". But Britains Treasury has announced plans for closer scrutiny of the cryptocurrency as part of EU-wide plans that will require online platforms that trade in Bitcoin to carry out due diligence on customers and report suspicious transactions. There are worries over the lack of regulation - as no Government or authority has jurisdiction over its use - and the fact that transactions are encrypted and hard to trace, making Bitcoin attractive to criminals. Paddy Power-Betfair shares fell by over 2%, before recovering, on analyst concerns that an expected surge in online revenue may not materialise and that competitors may outpace its growth, writes Geoff Percival. Morgan Stanley has forecast that the Dublin-based betting and gaming groups share price could fall by around 14% this year and has cut its recommendation on the stock to underweight. In a research note, Morgan Stanley analyst Ed Young offered 75 as a 12-month share price target for Paddy Power-Betfair. The companys shares are currently trading at around 87.95 in London and just under 100 in Dublin. On the day that Peter Jackson took over as Paddy Power-Betfair chief executive Mr Young said the company needs to address some major strategic issues and that industry consolidation may erode its scale advantage, which hasnt seen it generate market share gains. We are now seeing signs that the industry may consolidate around it, forming combinations with similar revenues and competitive technology. We do not see obvious acquisitions for Paddy Power-Betfair that would not either reinforce concentration in relatively more mature markets like the UK or dilute the very high regulated mix that has been central to the companys strategic decision making, he said. On the strategic questions facing the groups new boss, Mr Young offered: Will the company maintain its focus on regulated markets and what does that mean for revenue growth prospects? Will the company focus operationally on one brand or the other, or is the current dual brand model working? Is another brand needed to boost gaming growth and how much of a short-term hit to earnings could launching a new brand be? He added he sees no silver lining from regulation changes in Australia, one of Paddy Power-Betfairs key markets, and that expectations for online revenue growth are too high. In its most recent trading update, published in November, Paddy Power said third quarter online sales fell 3%, year-on-year, but it expects online revenues to surge after migrating its Paddy Power customers onto a new group betting platform from next month. Mr Young also downgraded Ladbrokes-Coral, despite saying a merger with online gaming group GVC is attractive. The merger of the businesses presents an opportunity for material synergies, a group with greater diversification of geographies and product, a strong management team and scale providing further optionality in new markets and for further deals, he said. Shares in Dublin-based drugmaker Shire yesterday fell more than 5% after it reined in its medium-term revenue targets, writes Geoff Percival. The biotech giant, which is headquartered in Ireland for tax purposes, expects total revenues to reach $17bn-$18bn by 2020; a downgrade from its previous target of $20bn by that date. The latter aim was set out when Shire acquired biopharmacutical firm Baxalta two years ago. The Forsa trade union is to hold a series of meetings over the coming days with Ryanair pilots over a pay offer from the company. The union - formerly called Impact - is to write to the airline informing it of its plans to ballot members on the issue. By Eoin English The Catholic Bishop of Cork and Ross has asked priests to suspend the sign of peace handshake during Masses and religious ceremonies amid fears that a new strain of the flu virus has hit Ireland. Most Reverend Dr John Buckley has written today to some 150 priests in 68 parishes across the diocese formally asking them to suspend the handshake gesture until the flu outbreak eases. It follows a similar move last week by the Bishop of Down and Connor, Noel Treanor, and local decisions by parish priests in several parts of the country, including Kilbarron Parish in Ballyshannon, Co Donegal. Bishop Buckley said he has met dozens of people during hospital visitations in recent days who are suffering from respiratory illnesses, including the flu. Bishop John Buckley. He also said he has received a number of letters and phone calls from parishioners, and those in the medical profession, who expressed concerns about the spread of the flu. Hand contact is the usual way for the flu virus to spread and Bishop Buckley said given that between 60,000 and 70,000 people attend religious services across the diocese every week, he felt the Catholic Church should do what it can to minimise the risk of the flu spreading. It is in this context that Bishop Buckley asks that you would suspend the Sign of Peace and, perhaps, replace it with another gesture at this time, such as a silent prayer for peace, in the interests of the health of those who attend Mass, his letter said yesterday. According to the Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC), the number of reported cases of flu-like illness in Ireland continued to increase in the past three weeks - in all age groups with the highest rates reported in babies and young children. The HPSC said influenza is expected to increase over the coming weeks and to circulate for at least the next four to six weeks. By Louise Roseingrave A five-year-old girl who was trapped under a gate while playing with friends died of head injuries, an inquest has heard. Sienna Joyce, from The Ward, Ashbourne, Co Meath died on June 27, 2016. Gardai will submit a file in relation to the childs death to the Director of Public Prosecution within days, Dublin Coroners Court heard. Little Sienna, who was described by her cousin Kellie Joyce at her funeral as "beautiful, cherished and adored" was rushed to Temple Street Childrens Hospital following the accident, where she was pronounced dead by Dr Roisin McNamara. The little girl had been playing when the gate collapsed on her near her home at Wotton Bridge, The Ward between Finglas and Ashbourne, when the tragedy happened. Her grandfather David Joyce Senior identified her remains in hospital following her death. In his deposition, Mr Joyce Senior said he identified his granddaughter to Sergeant Peter Hayde of Finglas Garda Station in hospital at 10pm that night. Sgt Hayde said he remained at Temple Street Childrens Hospital and spent some time with the family, including the childs father David Joyce, that night. He was clearly very distraught at the passing of his daughter, Sgt Hayde said. A post-mortem examination conducted by pathologist Dr Deirdre Devaney gave the cause of death as severe head injuries. Inspector Seamus DAlton of Store Street Garda station appeared on behalf of Gardai in Ashbourne seeking a six-month adjournment of the inquest. The investigation file is nearly completed and will be submitted in the coming days, Insp DAlton said. The inquest was adjourned under section 25 subsection 1 of the Coroners Act for further mention on June 14 2018. Sienna, who had just finished her first year of school, was related to little Logan Joyce (aged 4), who died tragically at the Nationally Aquatic Centre in July 2012. A man in his 20s is due before the courts this morning charged in connection with a Dublin burglary. A woman in her 80s was robbed by a man on St Margaret's Road in Finglas yesterday. Professor Adrian Bracken at Trinity College Dublin has been awarded 218,000 to study a rare but highly-aggressive childhood brain cancer known as DIPG (diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma). Worldwide Cancer Research said that work looking into rare cancers is far behind in comparison to other types, meaning outcomes for patients with those cancers can often be much worse. University of Limericks Governing Authority has voted unanimously to appoint former Tanaiste Mary Harney as chancellor of the university and chairperson of its Governing Authority. Ms Harney will take up the post, which is honorary, immediately and hold it until 2022. She retired from politics in 2011 and is now the director of a number of private companies in the pharmaceutical, healthcare, technology and financial services sectors. Dr Des Fitzgerald, President, University of Limerick, said: "I wholeheartedly welcome the decision of the Governing Authority and know that the appointment of Mary Harney as our Chancellor will allow us to draw on her extensive experience as a leader and as an eminent public figure in Ireland and internationally. "Mary has always been a pioneer in her field and a mould breaker in her political and public life. "I look forward to her bringing that same pioneering spirit to ULs new Governing Authority at a time of change and renewed ambition for this great institution." Ms Harney said she was "deeply honoured and delighted" to be appointed. She said: "UL is a nimble, responsive university at the forefront of innovation in pedagogy, delivering research with significant real world impact and yet has huge potential to grow and mature. "I look forward to working with the President and the Governing Authority to develop further and enhance the education and research potential of this great university." Ms Harney, who was born in Galway, studied economics at Trinity College and was the first woman auditor of the Hist debating society. After graduation she spent a year teaching mathematics and economics in Castleknock College. In 1977, her political career began when she was appointed to the Senate, becoming the youngest ever member of Seanad Eireann. She served as Tanaiste for nine years and became the first woman to lead a political party in Ireland. She was also the longest-serving female TD in the State's history. - Digital Desk The deputy leader of Britain First, Jayda Fransen, has been filmed on the seat of the Lord Mayor in Belfast City Hall saying she intends to fight the charges over comments made at a rally in the city last year. Ms Fransen faces a spring trial in Belfast after she appeared at Belfast Magistrates' Court today on two hate charges related to a speech she made at a Northern Ireland Against Terrorism rally in the city in August. A BBC presenter was taken off air due to impartiality issues after she expressed solidarity with colleague and equal pay campaigner Carrie Gracie. Winifred Robinson, presenter on Radio 4 show You And Yours, was a notable absentee from Tuesday's edition of the radio show, two days after posting her views on the BBC. Ms Gracie, the BBC's former China editor, took a dramatic stand on the issue, accusing her employer of unlawful salary discrimination. Scores of her colleagues, including Ms Robinson, backed Ms Gracie's stance on social media following the fall-out, with the likes of Naga Munchetty, Sarah Montague and Emma Barnett pledging their support. Ms Robinson, too, wrote: "Superb journalist, great China Editor. "What a mess to lose her from that post. @BBCCarrie #equalpay #istandwithcarrie". Superb journalist, great China Editor. What a mess to lose her from that post. @BBCCarrie #equalpay #istandwithcarrie Winifred Robinson (@wrobinson101) January 7, 2018 It was one of around 150 tweets and retweets addressing Ms Gracie's accusations to feature on Ms Robinson's Twitter account. Equal pay for equal work - it's the law - as Carrie says. See her letter@the times #carriegracie #IStandWithCarrie #EqualPay ~bbcwomen pic.twitter.com/F6ln38wsUJ Winifred Robinson (@wrobinson101) January 8, 2018 Her removal from today's edition of the consumer focus radio show meant she was not present to join in the discussion which focused on equal pay. BBC guidelines state: "When dealing with controversial subjects concerning the BBC, our reporting must remain duly impartial, as well as accurate and fair. "We need to ensure the BBC's impartiality is not brought into question and presenters or reporters are not exposed to potential conflicts of interest. "It will be inappropriate to refer to either the BBC as 'we' or the content as 'our'. "There should also be clear editorial separation between those reporting the story and those responsible for presenting the BBC's case." A BBC spokesman confirmed Ms Robinson would return to the show tomorrow. The publication of a controversial dossier about President Donald Trump's alleged links with Russia, authored by a former MI6 spy, has already resulted in a death, it has been claimed. Glenn Simpson the co-founder of Fusion GPS, the firm which commissioned the dossier written by Christopher Steele, was giving evidence to a congressional committee during a closed-door interview last year. A transcript of his testimony was released by the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Dianne Feinstein, on Tuesday, who said making it public would "set the record straight". Quizzed on whether he had taken any steps to assess the credibility of Mr Steele's sources, Mr Simpson declined to comment. Coming to his defence, his lawyer Joshua Levy said it was a "voluntary interview", and stated that he "wants to be very careful to protect his sources". He added: "Somebody's already been killed as a result of the publication of this dossier and no harm should come to anybody related to this honest work." The emergence of the dossier - containing a series of lurid claims that the Russians had gathered compromising material on the president prior to his election campaign - caused outrage in the Trump camp. Mr Steele, who runs the London-based Orbis Business Intelligence, was temporarily forced into hiding when he was identified as the author. During hours of questioning, Mr Simpson also revealed Mr Steele took the dossier to the FBI in July 2016, and said his concern was "whether or not there was blackmail going on, whether a political candidate was being blackmailed or had been compromised". He also divulged that the FBI believed Mr Steele's information might be credible "because they had other intelligence that indicated the same thing and one of those pieces of intelligence was a human source from inside the Trump organisation". When asked who that source may have been an answer was declined on the basis of "security", with Mr Simpson adding that "people who get in the way of the Russians tend to get hurt". The dossier was reportedly the result of an investigation initially funded by Republicans who were seeking to block Mr Trump from becoming the party's presidential candidate, before being taken over by Democrats after his nomination. Mr Steele was said to have passed on his findings to both US and UK intelligence in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election due to concerns about national security for both countries. Mr Trump has derided the dossier as politically motivated, and several Republican-led committees are investigating whether it formed the basis for the FBI's initial investigation into Russian election interference. Democrats say those investigations are a distraction. The transcript reveals Mr Simpson also told the committee that Mr Steele was the "lead Russianist at MI6 prior to leaving" and was someone he had worked with since 2009. He said Mr Steele was someone who "delivered quality work in very appropriate ways" who had a "sterling reputation", and who "doesn't exaggerate, doesn't make things up, doesn't sell baloney". Earlier this month two senior Republican senators referred Mr Steele, over statements about the "distribution of claims contained in the dossier", to the US Department of Justice (DoJ) - urging them to investigate him. Senate judiciary committee chairman Chuck Grassley and Lindsey Graham said they had passed a classified memorandum to the DoJ relating to communications between Mr Steele and "multiple US news outlets". At the time RPC, the UK law firm representing Mr Steele, declined to comment. Ivanka Trump has been mocked for backing Oprah Winfreys "inspiring" speech praising women for speaking out against sexual harassment. Winfreys impassioned call for "a brighter morning even in our darkest nights" at the Golden Globe Awards on Sunday had Democratic Party activists buzzing about the media superstar and the 2020 presidential race Republican President Donald Trumps daughter endorsed her message - if not a political future - in a tweet saying: The backlash on Twitter was swift, with actress Alyssa Milano and others noting that Ms Trumps father has been accused by several women of sexual harassment and was recorded bragging about sexual assault. Great! You can make a lofty donation to the Time's Up Legal Defense Fund that is available to support your father's accusers.https://t.co/A8HCVa715v Alyssa Milano (@Alyssa_Milano) January 9, 2018 For Democrats in early voting states, and perhaps for a public that largely disapproves of Mr Trumps performance, the notion of a popular media figure as a presidential candidate is not as strange as it once seemed, given the New York real estate mogul and reality TV star now in the White House. "Look, its ridiculous - and I get that," said Brad Anderson, Barack Obamas 2012 Iowa campaign director. "At the same time, politics is ridiculous right now." Winfreys speech as she accepted the Cecil B DeMille lifetime achievement award touched on her humble upbringing and childhood wonder at civil rights heroes. But it was her exhortation of the legions of women who have called out sexual harassers - and her dream of a day "when nobody has to say me too again" - that got some political operatives, in early voting states such as Iowa and New Hampshire, thinking she might be just what the Democrats need. Liz Purdy, who led Democrat Hillary Clintons 2008 New Hampshire presidential primary campaign, said: "I think we need more role models like her that are speaking to young women and trying to restore some hope. "The election of Donald Trump was a devastating setback for little girls." Mr Trumps job approval rating was just 32% in December, according to an Associated Press-NORC poll. He is the least popular first-year president on record, and has also been accused by multiple women of sexual misconduct, although he has vehemently denied the allegations. Winfrey, in September and October, publicly dismissed the notion of seeking the nations highest office, though she noted that Mr Trumps victory made her rethink the requirements of the office. Winfreys longtime partner, Stedman Graham, told the Los Angeles Times that "its up to the people" whether she will be president, adding: "She would absolutely do it." Winfrey, 64, has become a cultural phenomenon over the past 30-plus years, born into a poor home in Mississippi but breaking through as a television news and talk show personality in the 1980s. Over 30 years, she became the face of television talk shows, starred and produced feature films, and began her own network. Mr Trump himself has lavished praise on her over the years, including in 2015, when he said he would consider her as a running mate on his Republican ticket. "I like Oprah," he told ABC News in June 2015. "I think Oprah would be great. Id love to have Oprah. I think wed win easily, actually." It echoed comments he made in 1999 when he was weighing a presidential candidacy in the Reform Party. "If shed do it, shed be fantastic. I mean, shes popular, shes brilliant, shes a wonderful woman," Mr Trump told CNNs Larry King. Late-night show host Jimmy Kimmel said at a press conference on Monday that he thought Winfreys speech was "preaching to the choir" with her Hollywood audience. "That said, given the choice between Oprah and our current president, Im on the bus with Oprah travelling the country encouraging people to sign up and vote," he said. AP Senior South Korean officials are heading to the Demilitarised Zone for rare talks with their North Korean counterparts. The officials departed Seoul early on Tuesday for the border. A senior US politician has released a transcript from an interview with the co-founder of the firm that commissioned a dossier of allegations about President Donald Trump's ties to Russia. The top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, California Senator Dianne Feinstein released the transcript from an August closed-door committee interview with Glenn Simpson after the Republican chairman of the committee, Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, declined to. Victims of "black cab rapist" John Worboys must be contacted by liaison officers urgently, a UK MP has said, as she warned that he knew their addresses. Labours Yvette Cooper said some of the victims had "still heard nothing" and do not know what the Parole Board terms are. Speaking in the UK Commons following a statement on Parole Board transparency by UK Justice Secretary David Gauke, she said: "Some of the victims still have heard nothing from victim liaison officers, still dont know what the Parole Board terms are, and whether this man may end up living near them." The chairwoman of the UK Home Affairs Select Committee and former shadow home secretary added: "Given that he had their addresses, will he urgently ensure that all of the victims are contacted by victim liaison officers before this man is released?" Mr Gauke replied: "There will be cases where people do not want to be informed, there will be cases where people will want to receive a great deal of detail - we need to have a system that is sensitive to what victims want. "She raises the point about where Worboys will be and whether he could be close by to victims. "The conditions of the licence are for the Parole Board but I think, I suspect, I speak for the House ... that we would expect the Parole Board to be sensitive of the concerns that victims may have as to their own safety, and indeed the trauma of finding themselves perhaps accidentally in the presence of someone who has committed such terrible crimes." Tory former minister Anna Soubry called for the UK Parole Board to place a condition on his release that he is "not allowed back into Greater London". She said: "I and many others are struggling to believe that Worboys is no longer a danger, because its the nature of this sort of offending that these particular men are often extremely cunning. "We have to trust the Parole Board, I pay tribute to the work they do and they must retain their independence, but if nothing else, and I know its not within the gift of the Secretary of State, they must put a condition upon his release that he is not allowed back into Greater London because thats what the victims need to hear - they are very frightened of this man." Mr Gauke said he understood Ms Soubrys concerns, and that it was for the Parole Board to determine the conditions. PA A 24-year-old man is facing a slew of felony charges for illegal straw purchase of 21 guns at gun stores, almost exclusively in Bucks County. Leonard Truesdale was arraigned on Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2022, on 21 counts each of making false statements on firearm purchase forms, criminal conspiracy to make false statements on firearm purchase forms and selling or transferring... latest news October 31, 2022 Buddy TV In November, there are hundreds of new and returning TV showsit can be overwhelming to try and choose what to watch. That's why we've selected some of the best options... Bespoke PVC-U windows and doors have opened up a big, new market for merchants, but those merchants who create a seamless customer experience between the virtual and real world will really scoop the benefits of sustainable growth. Purchasing behaviours have changed significantly in recent years, in our personal lives and now in business. Some prefer to buy the way they have always bought; others prefer everything digital and online. Most of us though want to buy in a variety of ways, depending on what were buying, when and where we are. Many start their buying journey online, doing their research to learn about the product they have in mind, what it might cost them, and where they can get them. Others now want to get a long way down the path and look at a virtual showroom, much as we do when buying cars, kitchens and bathrooms and other desirable products before they make contact. But then most still want to go and see the product in real life and talk to someone knowledgeable who can show them and clear up the uncertainties, and find out who can install it before they actually buy. Having done a lot of their research first customers are more confident, making the final stage of buying quicker and more focused. The challenge for merchants is to be prepared for different entry points on the journey - online and virtual, in branch and hands on, or increasingly both and creating a good continuous experience along the way. They need to match how they sell to the way people prefer to buy, whether thats a homeowner or trade customer. Merchants who sell PVC-U windows and doors with the help of in-branch and virtual showrooms, and online configurators sell much more, and more easily than those who dont. Tippers builders merchants, for example, has recognised the benefits of combining brick and mortar with virtual reality, and changing how they sell to create a seamless, effective customer journey. Investing in a new Crystal showroom and online visualiser, Tippers is creating a more engaging, immersive customer experiences for builders and contractors, making it really easy for them to buy. The company's trade customers can look online and show their customers, and touch the products in-branch. Its easy to create an aspirational visualisation of the installed product; easy to price a project and easy to order. Each stage completes the loop, and takes the thinking and work out of their customers hands. Its important that merchants and suppliers continue working together to deliver an Omnichannel approach to marketing high-ticket home improvement products. Smart customers go online first, to find helpful, relevant content and their perceived product solution. Then, ready to buy, they need help from merchants at the branch level to follow through with knowledgeable staff and strong representation of the product, backed by reliable, on-time deliveries. Steve Halford, Group Managing Director, The Crystal Group. Customers of the Kingsfold builders merchant D.W. Nye have helped to raise 252 for Horsham charity Born Free. Throughout December, D.W. Nyes eye-catching and edible Gingerbread House baked and constructed by Horsham resident Kat Gianni was on display at the depot. Local residents were invited to guess how many sweets were hidden inside it in return for a suggested donation to the charity of 1 per entry. The winner with the closest estimate was announced as Kevin Winlow from Denne, who was only four sweets short of the actual total of 658. Depot manager Duncan Tidy presented Mr Winlow with a Luscious Hamper worth 75 courtesy of Cocoa Loco at Swan Walk. D.W. Nye Managing Director, Rex Nye, said: Congratulations to Mr Winlow and thanks to everyone who took part and helped raise funds for such a worthy cause. We are proud to be a local, family-run business so we are delighted that we have been able to support our friends at Born Free in Horsham. The Ridgeon Group has appointed Suzanne Britter as its new Human Resources (HR) Director. She joins the business following six years at Ladbroke Coral Group in senior HR roles. Among her responsibilities Suzanne will develop Ridgeons brand reputation as an attractive employer, promoting the companys longstanding reputation for providing a supportive, trusted and enterprising working environment for employees. She said: I am delighted to join Ridgeons as a company which has maintained its status as an excellent employer for many years. Although it is a business in a traditional industry, it sets itself apart from other builders merchants. It supports staff through professional development and offers plenty of progression opportunities, while developing a high-performance culture and providing excellent customer service. Ridgeons is well known within the industry, however, people who may not be familiar with the trade need to know that it offers a great place to work. In fact, it was the companys values and culture that partly attracted me to my new role. I look forward to refining our employer value proposition and communicating it to new audiences. In addition, Suzanne will be identifying areas for development in the companys employee engagement strategy to ensure staff continue to be inspired and motivated, and to make Ridgeons a first-choice employer in the industry by 2020, as outlined in the business 2020 Vision. Another of Suzannes priorities is the development of the business apprenticeship scheme, which will provide more opportunities for people of all ages and to develop current employees through apprenticeships training, enabling them to build skills and gain qualifications. She will also be building on Ridgeons technical training programme. The two Tata group-owned airlines Vistara and AirAsia India are busy chalking out their international expansion plans, but limited bilateral flying rights and a capacity shortage at are among the challenges before them, company executives and analysts said. on Tuesday has signed an Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) with the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS), reducing its tax burden in the US by one percentage point till 2021 and giving clarity on tax obligations in the country. Under the APA, and the IRS have agreed on the methodology to allocate revenues and compute the taxable income of the companys US operations. This agreement covers financial years from 2011 to 2021. The APA will enhance predictability of the companys tax obligations in respect of its US operations, it said. also has to pay $233 million in taxes, which is the difference between the taxes payable for prior periods as per the APA and the actual taxes. This has to be paid over the next few months. The reversal of the tax provisions of approximately $225 million will have a positive impact on the consolidated Basic EPS for the quarter ending December 31, 2017 by approximately $0.10. Further, on account of the APA methodology, the firm expects its overall effective tax rate to be lower by about 100 basis points for future periods covered under the APA. We are glad that the APA has been executed in one of our key markets. The APA provides greater predictability of our taxes and minimizes uncertainties, M D Ranganath, chief financial officer at Infosys said in the statement. Unlock 30+ premium stories daily hand-picked by our editors, across devices on browser and app. Full access to our intuitive epaper - clip, save, share articles from any device; newspaper archives from 2006. Curated newsletters on markets, personal finance, policy & politics, start-ups, technology, and more. Pick your 5 favourite companies, get a daily email with all news updates on them. 26 years of website archives. Indian Oil Corporation Ltd (IOCL) is upset with the Odisha government for delay in allotment of land contiguous to its 15 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) crude oil refinery at Paradip. The oil marketing company, in February 2017, had asked for an additional 2,290 acres of land to commission different units of its petrochemical complex where fresh investments could cross Rs 500 billion. Homegrown cab aggregator is planning to set up operations in Australia and New Zealand as it looks to explore new avenues for growth and play a part in investor Didi Chuxings plans to dominate the global ride-hailing ecosystem. Anil Ambani-controlled Reliance Infrastructure on Tuesday said it has moved an application before Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission (MERC) for its approval to assign RInfra's Transmission and Distribution Licenses and transfer the integrated Mumbai Power Business to Adani Transmission. Two family firms on Tuesday presented to the Mumbai Bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) what they referred to as documentary evidence to prove mismanagement at Tata Sons. American whistleblower on Tuesday came out in support of a daily reporter, who has been booked for exposing alleged flaws in Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) system. Taking to Twitter, Snowden said instead of an investigation, the journalist needed to be rewarded for exposing that the Aadhar data was not fullproof and could be obtained at a cost of only Rs 500. In his tweet, the former United States government contractor, who has taken an asylum in Russia, also suggested that action should rather be taken against UIDAI, the body that runs the programme. "The journalists exposing the # breach deserve an award, not an investigation. If the government were truly concerned for justice, they would be reforming the policies that destroyed the privacy of a billion Indians. Want to arrest those responsible? They are called @UIDAI," Snowden tweeted. The journalists exposing the #Aadhaar breach deserve an award, not an investigation. If the government were truly concerned for justice, they would be reforming the policies that destroyed the privacy of a billion Indians. Want to arrest those responsible? They are called @UIDAI. https://t.co/xyewbK2WO2 (@Snowden) January 8, 2018 Meanwhile, Union Minister for Electronics and Information Technology had said on Monday that the administration was "fully committed to freedom of press" and that an FIR filed is "against unknown". "Govt. is fully committed to freedom of Press as well as to maintaining security & sanctity of # for India's development. FIR is against unknown. I've suggested @ to request Tribune & it's journalist to give all assistance to police in investigating real offenders," Prasad tweeted. Govt. is fully committed to freedom of Press as well as to maintaining security & sanctity of #Aadhaar for India's development. FIR is against unknown. I've suggested @UIDAI to request Tribune & it's journalist to give all assistance to police in investigating real offenders. (@rsprasad) January 8, 2018 On January 5, Snowden had hinted that the Aadhaar database conceived and introduced by the Indian government can also be misused and abused. The transgression incident in Arunachal Pradesh, where Chinese workers entered Indian territory constructing a track, has been resolved, Army Chief General Bipin Rawat said on Monday. He also said that there was a major reduction in the number of Chinese troops in the Doklam area. Speaking on the sidelines of an event here, the Army Chief said the "Tuting incident has been resolved". General Rawat said a Border Personnel Meeting (BPM) took place "two days back" on the issue. Talking about the situation along the India-China border in Sikkim sector, where the two countries were involved in a 73-day-long standoff in Doklam, he said there was a major reduction in the number of troops on the Chinese side. A Chinese road construction party entered India on December 26, 2017, and were constructing a track, around two kilometres away from the nearest Indo-Tibetan Border Police post. An almost 600-metre-long and 12-feet wide track was constructed on Indian territory when the Chinese party was stopped. The Chinese labourers had entered the area inadvertently, according to a government report on the incident. The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) troops were not involved in the incident. Indian troops pushed back the labourers and seized their equipment. The incident came nearly four months after the end of the Dokalam standoff that went on from June 16 to August 28, 2017. Earlier, speaking at the Army Technology Summit here, the Army Chief pitched for modernisation of the force and said India needed to be ready for "future wars". "There is a huge requirement of modernisation of our armed forces, in every field," he said. "Future wars will be fought in difficult terrains and circumstances and we have to be prepared for them," he added. "We would like to gradually move away from imports (in defence technology) because for a nation like ours, the time has come to ensure that we fight the next war with home-made solutions," he said. #oldmonk became a top trend on Tuesday after reports of the death of Kapil Mohan, the chairman of Mohan Meakin, which produced the famous dark rum. People from all walks of life from soldiers, climbers to actors and journalists poured their grief out for the creator of . While some tried to point out how the company was originally owned by the father of General Dyer of Jallianwala Bagh fame, most connoisseurs were busy tying up with friends and acquaintances to share a bottle. In death, Mohan seems to have given one last boost to sales. Jet Airways has terminated the services of two senior pilots who were involved in a mid-air brawl while operating London-Mumbai flight on January 1. A senior pilot had allegedly slapped a female commander during the flight and following the incident the two were grounded by the airline. "Consequent to the review of the events on board Flight 9W 119 London-Mumbai of January 1, 2018, Jet Airways has terminated services of both the cockpit crew with immediate effect," a Jet Airways spokesperson said in a statement on Tuesday. Aviation regulator DGCA has already suspended the flying licence of the male pilot. About the incident, the spokesperson had earlier said there was a "misunderstanding" between the cockpit crew and the same was "resolved amicably" and "quickly". The information technology (IT) sector is relieved that there will be no disruption in projects for clients and the movement of people back to India, after the US government clarified that it didnt intend to bring any regulatory changes to force holders out of the country. A row has erupted following media reports that two "personal aides" of Lalu Prasad were sent to a Ranchi prison to "serve" him, hours before the RJD supremo was lodged there after being convicted in a fodder scam case, drawing criticism from rival JD(U). The RJD, however, jumped to its leader's defence, insisting the presence of the two Lakshman Mahto and Madan Yadavwas "conicidental". Mahto and Yadav, who were reportedly charged with minor offences, were claimed to be serving Prasad as helper and cook. The superintendent of Birsa Munda Central Jail, where the RJD boss is lodged since December 23 after his conviction in a relating to fraudulent withdrawal of Rs 8.9 million (Rs 89.27 lakh) from the Deoghar treasury 21 years ago, could not be reached immediately for comments. Other officials were tight- lipped. The JD(U) latched on to the news report to attack the RJD leader, with its spokesman Neeraj Kumar issuing a statement in Patna saying, "Prasad is a person with feudal mindset who could make his party workers go to any extent to serve his personal interest." "This shows that Lalu Prasad's commitment to social justice is a sham and he cares only for himself and his family members," Kumar, a JD(U) MLC, said. RJD spokesman Shakti Singh Yadav rubbished the allegation that Lalu "managed" to have his two aides behind bars to serve him, saying their presence in jail was "coincidental", and that the two had criminal cases against them. The nature of offences for which they were in jail was, however, not clear yet. He asked those making the claim that Mahto and Yadav were serving Prasad in jail to come up with evidence to back it. "They (the accusers) should show any video footage of the two serving the RJD supremo," Yadav, an RJD MLA, said. When asked if he would want an inquiry into the matter, Yadav shot back, saying "Why? They have been, after all, sent to jail after an inquiry by the police administration and it is for the administration to say anything on the matter. Union Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan on Tuesday said the primary job of state-run company Gail was to lay gas infrastructure in the country; marketing could be done by anyone. The Directorate General of Safeguards Duty (DGS), in its preliminary report investigating the dumping of solar cells, (whether or not assembled in modules or panels), has suggested a 70 per cent safeguards duty on imports from China. The DGS has identified serious injury to the domestic industry caused due to increasing imports and declining prices of Chinese . The Union government has issued a draft notification to allow all businesses to offer fixed-term contracts to workers. This will enable industries to hire workers for short-term assignments and terminate their services once the projects are completed. The Labour and Employment Ministry brought back the proposal, junked earlier last year, after receiving a demand from various quarters of the industry, especially food processing and leather sectors. The government had allowed only for apparel manufacturing sector so far and had proposed to extend it to footwear, leather, and accessories sector workers in a decision taken by the Union Cabinet recently. The government had said that the move would help "attract large-scale investments at a global scale". Under fixed-term employment, workers are entitled to all statutory benefits available to a permanent worker in the same factory. The benefits include the same working hours, wages, and allowances. However, employers may not give notice to a fixed-term worker on non-renewal or expiry of his or her contract. Additionally, the employers are not mandated to provide retrenchment benefits to workers hired on fixed-term contracts. The move will enable employers to hire workers directly from the market without mediation by a contractor that poses a big hurdle for both industries and employees, a labour ministry official said. "A is a workman who has been engaged on the basis of the contract of employment for a fixed-term," as per the proposed Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Central (Amendment) Rules, 2018, dated January 8. It said that workers hired on fixed-term contract should be eligible for all statutory benefits "proportionately according to the period of service rendered" by the worker. "At present, the contract labour has to be hired by contractors and apart from devoid the contract worker from all facilities that a permanent worker enjoys, they are also paid low as contractor charges a fee," said M S Unnikrishnan, Chairman of Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)'s National Committee on Industrial Relations. However, central trade unions said it would oppose the move, as the government did not hold consultations before bringing out the draft rules. "The government cannot have varying definitions of a worker. Moreover, without consultations, the government cannot bring changes to labour law. In fact, every worker should be given a permanent status after two years of continuous employment," said Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh president Saji Narayanan. However, government officials said that the Industrial Disputes Act 1947 always had allowed provisions for but it was not "explicitly mentioned" in other rules and regulations definition the working conditions and other employment-related benefits. "The measure will have more implications for the export sector rather than domestic manufacturing since continued demand and seasonal spikes in orders ensure that manufacturing continues for 10 months every year on an average," Rahul Mehta, President of Clothing Manufacturers Association of India and Managing Director of Creative Group said. The industry would also be watching the government's decision to extend statutory benefits currently accorded to permanent employees such as similar wages and working hours to fixed-term employees as well. Mehta pointed out certain unique challenges and said providing provident fund benefits to a person hired for a couple of months is not only cumbersome, it may also dissuade employees from taking up a job where his in-hand salary is reduced. The NDA government had mooted allowing fixed-term contracts for employment in April 2015 by issuing draft rules to amend the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Central (Amendment) Rules, 2015. However, Bandaru Dattatreya, who was then labour and employment minister, had shelved the proposal last year after strong opposition from trade unions. The previous NDA government in 2003 had allowed hiring fixed-term workers but the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government in 2007, following pressure from central trade unions, scrapped it. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be looking to increase investments to India when he visits the annual meet in Davos, Switzerland, later this month. The benefits of Aadhaar, Indias biometrics-based unique national identity systemthe worlds largestare unclear and the impact of direct benefit transfers it will be used to deliver to the poor is not studied enough, a new study published by an arm of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has concluded. The Union government is holding discussions to set up a sovereign wealth fund that might be structured on the lines of funds set up by non-oil exporting nations such as Singapore, Vietnam, and Malaysia. Tentatively named Investment Management Company, the sovereign wealth fund may also become a holding company for assets in all public sector undertakings, including nationalised banks, government sources, on the conditions of anonymity, said. The Investment Management Company may not be a listed entity and could be partly funded by the Union Budget. It may invest in various forms of assets, including private debt, private equity, infrastructure, and other . The investment arm might also be mandated with divesting and consolidating public sector companies, along with acquiring various businesses in both domestic and international markets, officials added. The government is examining building the investment arm on the lines of Singapores state-owned investment company Temasek, Malaysias strategic investment fund Khazanah Nasional Berhad, and Vietnams State Capital Investment Corporation, government officials, familiar with the development, said. All these state-run investment funds owned and managed investments and assets previously held by their respective governments. The objective of forming such an arm was to enable the government to focus on its core objective of framing policies and allowing the entity to manage and commercially run the governments investments. In 2011, the erstwhile Planning Commission, now known as NITI Aayog, had proposed setting up a $10-billion sovereign wealth fund, partly funded by the countrys foreign-exchange reserves, to invest in energy assets abroad. A group of ministers, chaired by then finance minister Pranab Mukherjee in the previous United Progressive Alliance government, had agreed to the idea of setting up such a fund but the Ministry of Finance later junked it in December 2013. Various suggestions were received from different stakeholders for creation of Indian Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF). During the course of consultations/deliberations, it was concluded that the setting up of the SWF is not feasible under the present scenario, the finance ministry had said in December 2013. Most countries that have set up have current account surpluses. There are very few investment arms carved out of the Union Budget itself. The rationale doesnt exist in India, Kavaljit Singh, director at policy research institute Madhyam, said. However, CRISIL Chief Economist D K Joshi said there was no harm in trying to set up a government-owned investment arm, which has been a success in countries like Norway. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT COMPANY To undertake strategic investments on behalf of the Centre in private equity, private debt, infrastructure, listed equities domestic and abroad To become a holding company for assets of public sector companies, including banks May also deal with consolidation and merger of public sector units along with acquisitions Centre examining models of government-owned holding investment companies of Singapores Temasek, Malaysias Khazanah Nasional Berhad, and Vietnams State Capital Investment Corporation Holding company may not be a public listed entity Bracing up early for the summer season of 2018, when electricity demand is likely to flank 20,000 megawatts (Mw), the Yogi Adityanath government has urged the Centre to provide adequate supply of coal for the thermal power stations in Uttar Pradesh. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will travel to Switzerland on January 22 on a two-day visit during which he will deliver the keynote address at the plenary session of the (WEF) in Davos. This will be the first participation by an Indian prime minister in the WEF in over two decades. In 1997, the then prime minister H D Deve Gowda had attended the Davos Summit. Announcing the prime ministerial visit on Monday, the external affairs ministry, in a statement, said the prime minister will also have a bilateral meeting with Alain Berset, the President of the Swiss Confederation on January 22. The theme for this year's WEF is 'Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World'. "Prime Minister will deliver the keynote speech at the plenary session of the (WEF) in Davos- Klosters, Switzerland, on January 23, 2018," the ministry said. The plenary session will be moderated by Prof Klaus Schwab, the Founder and Executive Chairman, WEF. To be attended by over 3,000 global leaders, including CEOs, heads of state and government, artists and civil society members, the Davos Annual Meeting of WEF will conclude on January 26. The WEF, which describes itself as an international organisation for public-private cooperation and was established in 1971 as a not-for-profit foundation, hosts its annual meeting in Davos every year in January. In a statement last month announcing its co-chairs for the 2018 meeting, the WEF had said that over 3,000 leaders, representing 100 countries, will gather in a collaborative effort to shape the global, regional and industry agendas, with a commitment to improve the state of the world. Desi cuisine and yoga will mark the start of the five-day annual jamboree of the rich and powerful from across the world in the snow-laden Swiss ski resort town of Davos. This is the first time India will host the welcome reception at the summit. The Indian presence is set to be the largest-ever with as many as six Union ministers, two chief ministers, several top government officials and over 100 CEOs, figuring among the registered participants. The official sessions at the WEF will also have special India-focused discussions including one on "India's role in the world", how it is rethinking economics with the use of big data in policymaking and the country's role in securing peace and stability in the Asian century. The registered participants from India, include Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Railways Minister Piyush Goyal, Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu, Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, Minister of State for External Affairs M J Akbar and Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Development of North Eastern Region of India Jitendra Singh. Others expected to be present at the elite global gathering are Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi along with a number of his cabinet colleagues, as well as Pakistan People's Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. China is also expected to have a significant presence and its Belt Road Initiative will feature as a key theme in a number of panel discussions, including those attended by Pakistani leaders. Feng Gang stood in front of 150 people in a conference hall in Beijing that Amway, the American marketing giant, calls its flagship experience center. Introduced endearingly as Big Brother, he pitched the companys newest product to an audience of recruits, men and women, young and old, one a street sweeper still in his orange municipal jumpsuit. Chinese President Xi Jinping and French counterpart Emmanuel Macron met today for talks and to oversee the signing of business deals as the two global leaders seek closer ties. After touring Beijing's sprawling Forbidden City, Macron met with Chinese business leaders and held talks with top officials at the imposing Great Hall of the People. Xi, who had already hosted Macron and his wife Brigitte for dinner last night, treated the French leader to a military honour guard at the hall before their meeting. Macron, who has positioned himself as the leading voice of the European Union, came to Beijing to discuss an ambitious agenda with Xi, the most powerful Chinese leader in decades. Macron has put on the charm during the visit, giving Xi a Republican Guard horse as a gift and delighting Chinese social media users by releasing a video of him learning to say his climate slogan, "Make the planet great again", in Mandarin. France, which runs a $30 billion euro ($ 36 billion) deficit with China, wants to "rebalance" its trade relationship with Beijing and, like other European nations, has demanded reciprocal access to the huge Chinese market. "China is conducting its economic development strategy and, given the size of this market, it has an impact on globalisation as a whole," Macron said while visiting a startup incubator, which offers new companies office space and other services, in Beijing. "This requires a strong France. If France can't adapt, it will fall behind," he said. The two presidents are expected to oversee the signing of some 50 agreements, including in the strategically key sectors of nuclear energy and aviation. Macron came to China with some 50 business leaders, including the heads of European aerospace giant Airbus and French state nuclear energy company Areva. Ahead of the ceremony, Chinese online retailer JD.com announced plans to sell French goods worth two billion euros ($ 2.4 billion) to Chinese consumers over the next two years - including high-end wine and cognac - and spend 100 million euros on French industrial products. In a keynote speech yesterday, Macron urged the EU to participate in Xi's cherished $1 trillion Silk Road trade infrastructure project despite misgivings, though he warned that the initiative should not create a "new hegemony". It is the first state visit by a European leader since China's Communist Party congress in October, which reinforced Xi's grip on power as he was formally handed a second term and his name was enshrined in the party's constitution. Beijing has praised Macron's decision to make China his first state visit to an Asian nation. US President Donald Trump visited the Chinese capital in November and was given a lavish welcome. Earlier, Macron and his wife Brigitte were accompanied by students from the French school and a French historian as they walked along the red-walled palaces of former Chinese emperors at the Forbidden City. On a sunny but bitterly cold day, Macron asked historian Patrice Fava to translate a banner which read "With fairness, govern from the centre". "It's important. It's symbolic," said Brigitte Macron, whose husband campaigned as a centrist candidate in the French presidential election. At the Forbidden City's pavilion of Supreme Harmony, Macron drew a parallel with the 19th Communist Party congress. "This also allows us to better understand one of the themes of the 19th Congress raised by President Xi Jinping," Macron said. "This also comes from a profoundly anchored history in this country. The worlds busiest air route isnt London to Paris or New York to Los Angeles, but the trip between Seoul and a tiny island off the coast of South Korea. Planes made 65,000 trips between the Korean capital and Jeju island a journey of little more than an hour in 2017, equivalent to 178 flights a day, according to data from OAG Aviation Worldwide. Thats nearly double the 35,000 trips on the busiest North American route: Los Angeles to San Francisco. Asian cities dominated the list, cementing the regions status as the worlds fastest-growing travel market. FLYING HIGH Asia dominates the world's busiest air routes Here are some of the busiest air routes Total jet departures and arrivals in 2017 FLYING HIGH Asia dominates the world's busiest air routes Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak has met with Saudi King Salman in a visit to the kingdom that highlights the close and at times controversial relationship forged between them. Najib has clung to power despite a corruption scandal that involved nearly $700 million. Malaysia's attorney general cleared Najib of wrongdoing, saying the millions transferred to his personal bank account were a donation from the Saudi royal family and that most of it was returned. Meanwhile, the state investment fund he established is under investigation in the US amid allegations of a global money-laundering scheme. The state-run Saudi Press Agency says the two leaders discussed areas of cooperation during their meeting on Tuesday, which was attended by Saudi royal court advisers as well as Malaysia's minister of Islamic affairs. North Koreas chief negotiator Ri Son Gwon struck a jovial tone as he sat down on Tuesday morning for his countrys first formal talks with South Korea in more than two years. He joked about how the sub-zero temperatures reflected frosty ties and asked for the proceedings to be broadcast live a request that South Korea turned down. After a few hours, South Korea announced that North Korea would join the Olympics next month in Pyeongchang, a ski town not far from their shared border. Yet as the day wore on, and South Korea proposed talks on ending North Koreas nuclear weapons programme, the mood appeared to sour. Ri issued a strong complaint that Seoul dared to even raise the possibility of denuclearisation at such an early stage. North Koreas participation in the Winter Games starting February 9 brings potential benefits to the troubled Korean peninsula, which has been divided for more than 70 years. Kim Jong Un gets the opportunity to ease the global pressure on his isolated regime, while South Korean President Moon Jae-in can bet on a more peaceful Olympics and claim a victory in his push for dialogue. But the long-term dilemma remains: North Korea sees its nuclear weapons and the ability to use them against the US as the only thing protecting against an American invasion. At the same time, US President Donald Trump views Kims nuclear arsenal as an intolerable threat, one that must be eradicated by war if necessary. All of North Koreas high-end strategic weapons are targeted at the US, Ri said at the conclusion of the talks Tuesday, according to South Korean media. Ahead of the talks, the US and Japan sought reassurances from Moon that he would continue to press Kim over his weapons program. In his annual New Years Day address, Kim blasted the vicious sanctions and American efforts to isolate North Korea on the world stage. He also taunted Trump boasting of a credible nuclear deterrent that would prevent the US from starting an adventurous war. In pitching talks with South Korea, Kim sought to exacerbate tensions in Seouls alliance with the US. He called for Koreans to solve their own problems, a sentiment that was repeated in the joint statement from the talks on Tuesday. For Moon, its a tempting message. Earlier this year, as US officials signalled they would tolerate casualties in Seoul in a preemptive strike against North Korea, the South Korean leader pledged to prevent war at all costs. At the same time, South Korea doesnt want to see the US cut a deal with Pyongyang that freezes its nuclear program in a way that eliminates a threat to Washington while leaving Seoul exposed, according to Youngshik Bong, a researcher at Yonsei Institute for North Korean Studies in Seoul. Then South Korea will be left cold and dry, with North Korea still possessing nuclear weapons and missiles, Bong said. For now, the US remains on the sidelines, even as Trump on Saturday suggested he could meet Kim under the right conditions, calling the talks over the Olympics a big start. Despite the frictions over nuclear weapons, the two sides also agreed on Tuesday to hold a military dialogue and resolve problems through negotiations. They plan to hold another round of talks, though havent yet agreed on the exact date. At the same time, Kim had another message for the US on Tuesday. A commentary in the state-run Minju Joson said itll be wise for the US to face reality and accept North Korea as a nuclear state. Kim Jong Un wants time, Gordon Chang, author of "Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes on the World, told Bloomberg Television earlier Tuesday. He doesnt want the US to strike his nuclear and missile facilities, so really what he is trying to do is make sure the status quo continues. And one of the ways to do that is to create optimism in the world. Nearly 200,000 people from El Salvador who have been allowed to live in the US for more than a decade must leave the country, government officials announced Monday. It is the Trump administrations latest reversal of years of immigration policies and one of the most consequential to date. A disaggregation of market performance, sector by sector, throws up some interesting details for 2017. First, the went up by 28 per cent from January to December 2017. Smaller stocks did better with the Midcaps 100 free-float up by 46 per cent and Smallcaps 250 up by 55 per cent. (All percentages are rounded). (GVKPIL) was locked in upper circuit for the second straight day, up 5% at Rs 22.15 on BSE after the company on announced the signing of the concession agreement with City and Industrial Development Corporation (CIDCO) for the Navi Mumbai International Airport project. Institutional investors put in bids worth Rs 9.76 billion on Tuesday for buying government's part stake in state-owned miner NMDC. The government had originally planned to sell 1.5 per cent stake in the company, with a green-shoe option to retain an equal quantum. Based on the response from institutional buyers, however, it has decided keep the issue size at 2.52 per cent, according to a finance ministry official. The sale of 2.52 per cent in NMDC by the government after exercising green-shoe option would fetch about Rs 12 billion to the exchequer. FIIs and institutional investors have bid for over 63.6 million shares 1.68 times of the 37.9 million shares reserved for them, according to the NSE data. At the floor price of Rs 153.50 apiece fixed by the government, bids for over 6.36 crore shares by institutional buyers would fetch Rs 976 crore to the exchequer. The two-day offer for sale (OFS) will open for retail investors tomorrow. The NMDC stock closed at Rs 154.70, down 4.42 per cent, on BSE. The government has already raised over Rs 525 billion in the current fiscal through stake sale in PSUs, including listing of insurance PSUs and exchange traded fund. It has set an ambitious target of raising Rs 725 billion for disinvestment in the current fiscal. Of this, Rs 465 billion is to be raised through minority stake sale in PSUs and Rs 150 billion from strategic sale. Another Rs 110 billion is to come from listing of insurance companies. At least three terrorists belonging to the Islamic State (IS) group have been killed in airstrikes carried out in eastern Kunar province of Afghanistan. The Khaama Press quoted the 201st Silab Corps in the East as saying that the airstrikes were carried out on Monday in the vicinity of Suki district. Several weapons belonging to the terrorists were also destroyed in the airstrike, according to the Silab Corps. IS has not commented on the incident so far. Earlier this week, at least 20 militants affiliated with the IS were killed in an airstrike in the Laghman province. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Balochistan Chief Minister Sanaullah Zehri on Tuesday resigned prior to a no-confidence motion being taken up against him in the provincial assembly. The chief minister arrived at the Governor House and tendered his resignation to Mohammad Khan Achakzai, Geo News quoted sources, as saying. Pakistani Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi had, earlier, advised Zehri to resign in light of the no-confidence motion. Sources told Geo News that Abbasi took this decision in order to control the unstable political situation in Balochistan. The Pakistani prime minister had also noticed the performance of the party lawmakers in the province. Speaking to Geo News, Jan Achakzai, the spokesperson to the Balochistan chief minister, however, rejected reports and said the chief minister would face the no-confidence motion in the assembly. However, Balochistan Opposition Leader Maulana Wassay said it would be better, if Zehri followed suit to Abbasi's advice to resign. The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), which has a government both at the Centre and in the province, had made futile efforts to stem the political crisis in Balochistan. A no-confidence motion was submitted against Zehri last week, which gained momentum and is said to have had the support of majority lawmakers of the provincial assembly, leading to fears of his removal from the chief minister's post. The Balochistan chief minister required the support of 33 members from a house of 65 members, to survive the no-confidence motion. The motion was expected to be taken up in the assembly today at 4 pm The Pakhtunkhawa Milli Awami Party, the ruling party's ally in Balochistan, has 14 seats in the assembly, while, the National Party has 11 seats. Earlier, on January 1, Balochistan Home Minister Sarfaraz Bugti had submitted his resignation to Abbasi. Abbasi also held meetings with the governor and chief minister of Balochistan. Zehri had reportedly said that he would fight against the no-confidence motion and will prove his support in the house. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A research suggests replacing of the common birth control shot, known as DMPA, with alternative methods of contraception as it is linked to the risk of HIV infection. "Human studies suggest DMPA use may raise the risk of HIV infection in exposed women by about 40 percent," said Zdenek Hel, co-author of the study. "Importantly, we know that some other forms of contraceptive methods do not show the same deleterious effect on the immune function in cell culture, small animals or human studies." As of 2016, 36.7 million people worldwide were living with HIV, according to UNAIDS, the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS. More than half of those people live in eastern or southern Africa. AIDS is the most advanced stage of the HIV viral infection. DMPA -- or depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate -- is the predominant contraceptive in sub-Saharan Africa, administered as a birth control shot every three months. It is estimated to be used by more than 50 million women worldwide. In the research review, first author Janet P. Hapgood, Hel and Charu Kaushic examined the underlying biological mechanisms that could contribute to increased risk of HIV infection for certain hormonal contraceptives but not others. "To protect individual and public health, it is important to ensure women in areas with high rates of HIV infection have access to affordable contraceptive options," Hapgood said. "Increasing availability of contraceptives that use a form of the female hormone progestin different from the one found in DMPA could help reduce the risk of HIV transmission." In addition to these clinical studies, the authors examined animal, cell and biochemical research on the form of progestin used in DMPA -- medroxyprogesterone acetate, or MPA. The analysis revealed MPA acts differently from other forms of progestin used in contraceptives. In the cells of the genital tract that can come in contact with HIV, MPA behaves like the stress hormone cortisol. "The increased rate of HIV infection among women using DMPA contraceptive shots is likely due to multiple reasons, including decreases in immune function and the protective barrier function of the female genital tract," Hapgood said. "Studying the biology of MPA helps us understand what may be driving the increased rate of HIV infection seen in human research. These findings suggest other forms of birth control should rapidly replace DMPA shots." "Access to safe, effective and affordable contraception is critical for women's health worldwide," Hel said. "Up to 50 percent of unintended pregnancies in Africa end in abortion, often performed in an unsafe manner. We have to do everything in our power to rapidly replace DMPA with a safer alternative. The word 'replace' is critical; DMPA cannot just be taken off the shelves as many women would be left with no available option. Ideally, women should have access to a full range of contraceptive choices and should be informed regarding the benefits and potential dangers associated with each option." To offset the immunosuppressive effect of DMPA, a new formulation called Sayana Press has recently been developed that administers 31 percent less hormone via a subcutaneous administration. In a manuscript released this week, Chelsea Polis, Ph.D., Guttmacher Institute, and Sharon Achilles, M.D., Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh, together with Hapgood and Hel, address the potential effect of reducing the dose of DMPA. The authors conclude that, while the lower dose is likely to result in a partial reduction of the systemic concentration of the hormone shortly after delivery, it is not likely to ameliorate the overall negative impact of MPA on biological responses. The findings have been published in the journal Endocrine Reviews. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi High Court on Tuesday issued a notice seeking reply of businessman Moin Qureshi on the Enforcement Directorate's (ED) plea seeking cancellation of his bail in a money laundering case. The ED had challenged the bail granted to the meat exporter and alleged bribery of senior officials. Qureshi, who was arrested on August 25 after a case was filed against him last year under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) on charges of illegal forex dealings and tax evasion, was granted bail by a Delhi court on December 12. While opposing Qureshi's plea in an earlier hearing, the ED and the Centre contested that "questioning of his arrest was an abuse of the legal process" and told the court that there were serious charges of hawala transactions against him. Qureshi is accused of transactions through Delhi-based hawala operators Parvez Ali of Turkman Gate and M/s South Delhi Money Changer (DAMINI) in Greater Kailash-1. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi High Court on Tuesday ordered the release of businessman Yogesh Mittal, who was arrested in connection with a post-demonetisation money laundering case. The accused had allegedly converted demonetised notes into valid currency and was arrested by the Enforcement Directorate (ED). The ED, on June 6, arrested Mittal, who is a close associate of advocate Rohit Tandon. The ED had, earlier in February, issued a provisional order order attaching movable and immovable properties worth Rs 6,84,26,500 of Tandon, Kolkata-based businessman Paras Mal Lodha and others in money laundering case post demonetisation. The investigation conducted so far has revealed that post demonetisation, Lodha along with others illegally exchanged demonetised currency of Tandon and others into monetised form on commission basis with the help of Suman, Amranjay Kumar, Atul Kumar Aggarwal, Manoj Kumar Aggarwal and others including Hawala operators. Lodha was held in Mumbai by the Enforcement Directorate after they recovered a huge cache of new currency notes of Rs 500 and Rs 2,000 from a Delhi law firm, which belonged to advocate Tandon and Chennai based businessman Sekhar Reddy. Tandon was arrested last year in December, after the Crime Branch and the Delhi Police carried out raids at the office of his firm T&T Law and seized nearly Rs 13.5 crore, of which Rs 2.6 crore was in new banknotes released after demonetisation. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Consulate General of China Ma Zhanwu on Tuesday said the Doklam issue is a thing of the past and now Beijing was hoping for an improved bilateral relationship with India. "Regarding Doklam, I think it is an old page. We are hoping to work together with India to turn a new page of further growth and development of the bilateral relationship, including the field of economy and trade," Zhanwu said. The 73-day Doklam stand-off came to an end on August 28 after the two sides agreed to withdraw their respective troops from the plateau and the Chinese troops stopped building a key road close to India's corridor. The road was being built by China in an area also claimed by Bhutan. The Consulate General also reiterated China's support to Pakistan. He, however, maintained Beijing's good relations with Islamabad were similar to its friendly relations with many other countries, including India. "It is simplistic to say that China is supporting Pakistan. I would say that China has good relationship with Pakistan as we do with many other countries, including India. Right now, we have a good relationship with India," he said. China had earlier backed Pakistan and stated that all should recognise "Pakistan's endeavour and sacrifice to fight against terror." This came in the wake of the United States denying military aid to Pakistan, alleging it was not doing enough to fight terrorism and that it had been providing safe havens to terrorists. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The family of a research scholar at the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) has urged him to return home after his photos went viral showing he had joined the terrorist organisation -- Hizbul Mujahideen. The family of Mannan Bashir Wani, belonging to Tekkipora Lolab of Kashmir's Kupwara district, was in for a shock when photos of Wani holding an AK-47 went viral on the social media. The picture, reportedly uploaded by Hizbul Mujahideen, said Wani had joined the terrorist outfit on January 5. Wani's mother, who was distressed and cried continuously, urged her son to shun the path and come back home. "I haven't hurt you nor refused any of your any decisions. If I ever did anything, please forgive me and come back. Shun the militancy path and join the family members again," Wani's mother said. "It was not expected that Mannan would join the militant groups. All family members are in a serious shock," said Wani's grieving father. His father said that his son used to discuss his next step with him. "Mannan was like a friend to me and I had never expected him to make such a decision." "The only heart breaking decision Manan took in his life was that he joined the terrorist outfit without letting me know. I wouldn't curse Mannan for the decision because he is mentally-sound and a well-qualified man. Mannan always took decisions that would benefit his career," Wani's father added. According to friends and family, Wani was last seen holidaying in his hometown, after which he had gone missing. Wani's mother and sister were so shocked by the news that they could not utter a word. While the mother cried uncontrollably, Wani's sister was in an unconscious condition, and kept murmuring that she wants "my brother back." Meanwhile, Wani has been expelled by the university. However, the police earlier said that they could not rely on a photograph to conclude that Wani had joined the terror group. The police is tracing Wani and his whereabouts as of now. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A team of Indian Air Force (IAF) officers visited the Amity University campus here on Tuesday to promote the air force as a career option amongst graduate students. The IAF organised the career awareness event along with the Corporate Resource Center (CRC) of Amity Law Schools. The IAF's Induction Publicity Exhibition Vehicle (IPEV) provided hands on experience to students on Flight Simulator, Glasstron, Aircraft Models, display of flying clothing and other youth-oriented gadgets with the aim of showcasing facets of the IAF. Group Captain M.Sabharwal, Director Personnel Officers-3, Air Headquarters, briefed the students about the fighter operations of IAF, including air defence and offensive operations. He stressed on the fact that the IAF is the first to induct women in combat roles amongst the defence forces. A detailed briefing was provided on various qualifying exams and eligibility criteria, including UPSC (NDA and CDSE), AFCAT, MET, NCC and SEC. Students were informed about the three IAF branches where they could apply as per age, physical attributes, qualification, inclination and interests -- Flying, Technical and Ground Duties. Group Captain Sabharwal said selection for the IAF takes almost an year and advised aspiring candidates to have both patience and perseverance. Group Captain Sabharwal was accompanied by Wing Commander Sangeeta and eight other team members. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Dr. H. Wiranto, Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia, on Tuesday called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Prime Minister warmly recalled the successful visit of Indonesian President Joko Widodo to India in December 2016, and said that he is looking forward to welcoming the President in India again later this month, when leaders of ASEAN countries will visit the country for the ASEAN-India Commemorative Summit and will also be the chief guests at the Republic Day celebrations thereafter. The Prime Minister said that as maritime neighbours, there is a vast scope for cooperation between India and Indonesia on the development of Blue Economy as well as in the domain of maritime security. In this context, Prime Minister Modi welcomed holding of the first meeting of the Security Dialogue between both the countries. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Israeli forces have detained 17 Palestinians for their suspected involvement in terrorist activities from West Bank. The Israeli Army on Tuesday claimed, in a statement, that arrests were made in overnight raids in the occupied West Bank. Around 6,400 Palestinians, which includes 62 women and 300 minors, are languishing in Israeli prisons. As per the official data of PPS, around 740 Palestinians, including 190 children and 15 women, have been detained by Israeli forces ever since US President Donald Trump recognised Jerusalem as Israel's capital on December 6 last year. Protests in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip erupted after Trump announced the relocation of its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Since then, Israeli forces have killed 12 Palestinians. At least 2,900 others have been injured and more than 400 arrested. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan's office on Tuesday denied reports of using Okchi relief fund to pay off expenses incurred on his helicopter ride to cyclone-hit areas. The statement also said that the concerned order was issued without the knowledge of the Chief Minister and his office. Vijayan's office further added that officials were not in the know of things and as soon as they came to know, the order was withdrawn. Vijayan flew on board a chartered chopper on December 26 from Thrissur, where he was attending a Communist Party of India-Marxist meeting, to the state capital to meet a central team that had come visiting from Delhi to study the damage caused by the cyclone on November 30. After the meeting, Vijayan flew back to Thrissur. His government had allegedly debited the chopper ride's expenses to the relief fund. The government had also ordered to pay an amount of Rs. 8 lakh to the aviation company. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Shia Central Waqf Board Chairman Wasim Rizvi on Tuesday said that most of the madrasas in the country were not recognised and the Muslim students studying in such institutions were moving towards terrorism. Rizvi's assertion came after he wrote a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, claimming that Madrasas bred terrorists and efforts should be made to shift them into mainstream . Speaking to ANI, Shia Central Waqf Board chairman Wasim Rizvi asked, "How many Madrasas have produced engineers, doctors, IAS officers? Yes but some Madrasas have produced terrorists." He also said that the madrassas should be converted to convent schools which offer an optional subject of Islamic . "Madrasas should be affiliated to CBSE, ICSE, and allow non-Muslim students, and religious should be made optional. I have written to the prime minister and Uttar Pradesh chief minister in this regard. It will make our country even stronger," he added. Rizvi, reportedly, has mentioned in the letter that several Madrasas were being used to aid terrorist activities. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Maldivian Foreign Minister Dr Mohamed Asim will arrive in New Delhi tomorrow for a three-day visit to India. Mohamed will also meet External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj at Jawaharlal Nehru Bhawan. Later in the day, the Maldivian Foreign Minister will call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi at his residence. Earlier in December last year, Maldivian President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom had reaffirmed that India was the nation's closest friend and ally. "While appealing for restraint in criticism and asking to not engage in negativity towards India, especially in the media, President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom reaffirmed that India is the Maldives' closest friend and ally," the President's office had said, in a statement. While highlighting that Indian assistance formed an invaluable contribution to the Maldives, President Yameen had said his administration would never entertain negative sentiments towards India. He had further said the government was currently working towards a free trade agreement between the Maldives and India. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) An eight-year-old girl's body has been recovered from a farm, stuffed in a bag, after she was allegedly gangraped and murdered in the district, police said on Monday. The victim was abducted on Sunday when she had gone out of her house to a shop and the body was recovered on Monday. She was allegedly abducted by men from her village. The police have also found blood stained clothes during the searches at a house of one of the accused persons. Kannauj Additional Superintendent of Police Keshav Chandra Goswami said the culprits would be captured soon. Meanwhile, the villagers, on Monday, staged a protest accusing the police of inaction. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) President Asaduddin Owaisi on Tuesday called Shia Central Waqf Board chairman Wasim Rizvi a 'buffoon' and an opportunist for claiming that Madrasas bred terrorists. Speaking to ANI, Owaisi added Rizvi had sold his soul to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). "Wasim Rizvi is the biggest joker, an opportunist person. He has sold his soul to RSS. I challenge this buffoon to show one Shia or Sunni or Madrasa where such teachings are imparted. If he has proof then he should go and show it to the home minister," he added. Rizvi, earlier in the day, said that most of the Madrasas in the country were not recognised and the Muslim students studying in such institutions were moving towards terrorism. Speaking to ANI, Shia Central Waqf Board chairman Wasim Rizvi asked, "How many Madrasas have produced engineers, doctors, IAS officers? Yes, but some Madrasas have produced terrorists." Rizvi's assertion came after he wrote a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, claiming that Madrasas bred terrorists and efforts should be made to shift them into mainstream education. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) At least one person was killed and eight others were injured in shelling from Pakistan, the other side of the Durand Line in eastern Kunar province of Afghanistan. The Khaama Press quoted the local officials as saying that the incident took place on Monday after the Pakistani military opened artillery shelling on the Sarkano district. The district administrative chief of Sarkano Hanif Khairkhwa confirmed the incident, saying a woman was killed in the shelling. This is not the first time that shelling from across the border has been reported. Earlier in December, one person was injured after Pakistani forces resumed missile shelling in the province. At least 1,500 missiles were fired on Kunar province from Pakistan during the month of September last year, as per the official information. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The United States Vice-President Mike Pence will embark on a three-nation tour to the Middle East, on behalf of the US President Donald Trump. According to a statement released by Pence's office, it said that he will visit Egypt, followed by Jordan and Israel. However, he would not be visiting Palestine. Pence is undertaking this visit, in order to address the need to combat terrorism jointly with other countries and to assist the persecuted religious minorities. The US Vice-President's first port of call would be Egypt, where he will stay for two days, before travelling to Jordan for one day and then ending the tour in Israel. "The Vice-President is travelling to the Middle East to reaffirm our commitment to work with the United States' allies in the region to defeat radicalism that threatens future generations. He is looking forward to meeting with the leaders of Egypt, Jordan, and Israel to discuss ways to work together to fight terrorism and improve our national security", said Alyssa Farah, Pence's press secretary. Pence was earlier supposed to visit Israel in December last year, including a visit to Bethlehem and Jerusalem, followed by a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Palestine. However, relations between the US and Israel turned sour when on, December 6 last year, Trump announced the decision of recognising Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and the relocation of its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The Palestinian authorities then cut off all contacts with the US officials as a protest, and also said that it will not meet with Pence, prompting a delay in the visit and a change in plans. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has also rejected the US' peace efforts and called on the European Union (EU) to take the lead in the Israel-Palestine peace process. Jerusalem is considered a sacred place, which is home to Jewish, Christian and Muslim holy sites. However, it is also a disputed territory, contested by both Israel and Palestine, which sees it as the capital of its future state. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) At least 200 persons were injured on Tuesday morning in a train crash on the outskirts of Johannesburg, according to country's emergency response group. Two Metrorail passenger trains collided at the Geldenhuys Station in Germiston, the local media reported. A statement from ER24 says there are no fatalities in the crash. Paramedics are present at the scene. The details around the crash are not yet clear. However, an investigation is underway. The incident is second in a week. On January 4 passenger train crash took place near Kroonstad in South Africa's Free State province, claiming 18 lives and injuring around 254 lives. The Shosholoza Meyl train was heading to Johannesburg from the coastal city of Port Elizabeth, according to the reports. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Students for Free Tibet (SFT) on Monday called on the Chinese government to release Tashi Wangchuk, who has been jailed in China for "inciting separatism". Wangchuk's trial was held last week and reports indicate that the trial was adjourned without a verdict being delivered. The SFT activists gathered at the Main Square of Mcleodganj here and screened a short film on Wangchuk to make the people aware about the issue. Wangchuk is a 32-year-old Tibetan entrepreneur and an education advocate, who was detained by the Chinese police on January 27, 2016, after he appeared in a New York Times video in which he advocated for the rights of Tibetans to learn and study in their mother tongue. In March 2016, he was charged with "inciting separatism", and could face up to 15 years in prison, if convicted. In 2015, the New York Times released the video "A Tibetan's Journey for Justice", which reported Wangchuk's attempts to file a lawsuit over the wafer thin usage of Tibetan language as medium of instructions in Tibetan schools. "I want to try to use the People's Republic of China's laws to solve the problem," Tashi had said in the documentary. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A top Islamic Hamas leader was critically wounded on Tuesday when he accidentally fired a gunshot from his gun which hit his head. According to a Hamas spokesperson, Fawzi Barhoum, who was quoted by Xinhua, said in an e-mailed press statement: " Our leader Emad Alami is in critical condition after he was hit by a gunshot from his personal pistol while he was checking it". Alami was the Hamas ambassador to Iran during the 1990s. When he returned back to Gaza Strip in 2011, he served as the deputy chief and also as the vice-chairman of the Hamas. The leader lost his right leg when a missile was struck by the Israeli forces in an underground tunnel while he went hiding in 2014. The Hamas has been designated as a terrorist organisation by Israel, the United States, the United Nations and few other countries. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The United Nations on Tuesday called on Israel to halt its policy of deporting over 33,000 Eritreans and Sudanese people. "The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is again appealing to Israel to halt its policy of relocating Eritreans and Sudanese to sub-Saharan Africa," William Spindler, the agency's spokesman, said in a news conference on Tuesday in Geneva, as reported by Anadolu news agency. This comes after 80 cases were identified last year, in which the refugees risked their lives by taking dangerous journeys to Europe via Libya and Egypt. On January 1, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had ordered thousands of African refugees to leave the country by April or face imprisonment. Many activists have expressed their outrage over the decision. "We have had a history of being migrants, and we find this treatment of African migrants disturbing and racist", said Jessica Sherman, the spokesperson for Jewish Voices for a Just Peace (JVJP). "Since Israel took over refugee status determination from UNHCR in 2009, only ten Eritreans and one Sudanese have been recognized as refugees. Israel has not received any Eritreans or Sudanese since May 2016," the UNHCR's spokesman said. According to a UN estimate, there are some 27,000 Eritreans and 7,700 Sudanese people residing in Israel. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Founder and chairman of the World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab on Tuesday lauded Prime Minister Narendra Modi's credo of "Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas" and asserted that India will play a greater role in shaping the future of global economy. "India's extraordinary achievements corroborate that the country possesses a robust institutional mechanism for deftly counterbalancing pervasive diversity while projecting a single identity," Schwab said in an article written for the Narendra Modi App. He expressed delight to host the Prime Minister at the annual summit and praised India's efforts, saying that the country will play a great role at the global economic front. "India will undoubtedly have a great role and influence in shaping our common future by enriching the global policy debate as well as assisting in designing and developing better policies for a prosperous world," Schwab said. The annual meeting 2018 of the World Economic Forum will be held from January 23 to 26 at Davos in Switzerland with the theme of 'Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World'. "India presents an image of optimism and promise. Its unique demographic dividend, rising tide of entrepreneurial spirit, breakthrough innovations across sectors, and remarkable pace of bold and structural reforms have boosted the macroeconomic fundamentals and enhanced India's long-term economic outlook," Schwab wrote. He also appreciated India expanding its leadership in a wide range of global initiatives. Schwab further notes India's leading role in the Paris climate agreement and International Solar Alliance, efforts to become a permanent member of the UN Security Council and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. The chairman feels that it demonstrate a quest for a more pivotal role in global geo-politics and a relentless pursuit of a renewed international identity akin to its potential as a major global player. He goes on to add that this is "a fact which bears important lessons for the world struggling to find equilibrium and move towards a harmonious multiconceptual existence." "The time is right for India to amplify its global influence and accelerate the development of robust and resilient economic, social and political foundations," he concluded. The event which will showcase opportunities in India as well as make the world familiar with the Indian heritage, will be attended by several top government officials. Finance Minister, Arun Jaitley; Minister of Commerce and Industry, Suresh Prabhu; Rail and Coal Minister, Piyush Goyal; Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister, Dharmendra Pradhan; among others will be present at the World Economic Forum. The Ministers will represent India in around 25 sessions organized on Next Generation Industrial Strategies, Infrastructure acceleration, Fourth Industrial Revolution, Future of employment in manufacturing and production. They will further elaborate on the Prime Minister's vision of transforming the nation into 'New India' by 2022. 11 roundtable meetings will also be organised by 'Invest India' and Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) with existing and potential investors. Others likely to be present at the global gathering are Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi along with a number of his cabinet colleagues, as well as Pakistan People's Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Actress Rose McGowan, who was one of the strongest voices in the #MeToo campaign, revealed that she wishes to have "more middle fingers" to hold up to those who have been accused of sexual harassment in Hollywood. A first look at Rose's new documentary series 'Citizen Rose' was aired on Monday, in which the 44-year-old actress spoke candidly about her decision to speak up, and said she wants more action to be taken, reports People Magazine. In the clip, she noted, "I was in the middle of my second movie for his company, and I get assaulted. And I decided not to stay silent. I knew others were out there, and I knew there were a lot of us. Being brave doesn't mean your ankles don't shake and that you're not scared. I wish I had more middle fingers." McGowan, 44, was one of the first women to come forward with allegations against power producer Harvey Weinstein, publicly accusing the 65-year-old of sexual abuse last year. 'Citizen Rose' documents the 'Charmed' star's journey as an outspoken advocate for women's rights and the #MeToo movement. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Coal India surged 5.84% to Rs 304.65 at 10:25 IST on BSE after the company's board at its meeting held on 8 January 2018, approved revision of non-coking coal prices with effect from 9 January 2018. The announcement was made after market hours yesterday, 8 January 2018. Meanwhile, the S&P BSE Sensex was up 56.21 points, or 0.16% to 34,409. On the BSE, 9.15 lakh shares were traded in the counter so far, compared with average daily volumes of 3.83 lakh shares in the past one quarter. The stock had hit a high of Rs 310 and a low of Rs 297 so far during the day. The stock had hit a 52-week high of Rs 332.10 on 27 February 2017. The stock had hit a record low of Rs 234 on 11 August 2017. The large-cap company has equity capital of Rs 6207.41 crore. Face value per share is Rs 10. Coal India said that the company's board at its meeting held on 8 January 2018, approved revision of non-coking coal prices with effect from 9 January 2018. This will be applicable to all subsidiaries of Coal India including NEC for regulated and non-regulated sectors. Due to this revision, Coal India will earn incremental revenue of about Rs 1956 crore for the balance period of FY 2018, the company said. The projected annual incremental revenue would be Rs 6241 crore, it added. All add-ons viz for non-regulated sector, WCL, Rajmahal etc would be as per the extant practice. Coal Sales bills will be raised on GCV (Kcal/Kg) basis with effect from 1 April 2018 or earlier once the requisite system is ready. Till then, the present mode of raising bill would continue, Coal India said. On a consolidated basis, Coal India's net profit fell 39.8% to Rs 368.86 crore on 11.9% growth in net sales to Rs 17478.52 crore in Q2 September 2017 over Q2 September 2016. Coal India is an organized state owned coal mining corporate and is the single largest coal producer in the world. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Worldwide semiconductor revenue totalled $419.7 billion in 2017, a 22.2 percent increase from 2016, according to preliminary results by Gartner, Inc. Undersupply helped drive 64 percent revenue growth in the memory market, which accounted for 31 percent of total semiconductor revenue in 2017. "The largest memory supplier, Samsung Electronics, gained the most market share and took the No. 1 position from Intel the first time Intel has been toppled since 1992," said Andrew Norwood, research vice president at Gartner. "Memory accounted for more than two-thirds of all semiconductor revenue growth in 2017, and became the largest semiconductor category." The key driver behind the booming memory revenue was higher prices due to a supply shortage. NAND flash prices increased year over year for the first time ever, up 17 percent, while DRAM prices rose 44 percent. Equipment companies could not absorb these price increases so passed them onto consumers, making everything from PCs to smartphones more expensive in 2017. Other major memory vendors, including SK Hynix and Micron Technology, also performed strongly in 2017 and rose in the rankings. Second-placed Intel grew its revenue 6.7 percent in 2017, driven by 6 percent growth in data center processor revenue due to demand from cloud and communications service providers. Intel's PC processor revenue grew more slowly at 1.9 percent, but average PC prices are on the rise again after years of decline following the market's shift from traditional desktops toward two-in-one and ultramobile devices. The current rankings may not last long, however, "Samsung's lead is literally built on sand, in the form of memory silicon," said Mr. Norwood. "Memory pricing will weaken in 2018, initially for NAND flash and then DRAM in 2019 as China increases its memory production capacity. We then expect Samsung to lose a lot of the revenue gains it has made." 2017 was a relatively quiet year for mergers and acquisitions. Qualcomm's acquisition of NXP was one big deal that was expected to close in 2017, but did not. Qualcomm still plans to complete the deal in 2018, but this has now been complicated by Broadcom's attempted takeover of Qualcomm. "The combined revenues of Broadcom, Qualcomm and NXP were $41.2 billion in 2017 a total beaten only by Samsung and Intel," said Mr. Norwood. "If Broadcom can finalize this double acquisition and Samsung's memory revenue falls as forecast, then Samsung could slip to third place during the next memory downturn in 2019." Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Overall effective tax rate expected to be lowered by 100 bps Infosys announced the successful conclusion of an Advance Pricing Agreement with the US Internal Revenue Services (IRS). Under the APA, the Company and the IRS have agreed on the methodology to allocate revenues and compute the taxable income of the Company's US operations. This agreement covers financial years from 2011 to 2021. The APA will enhance the predictability of the Company's tax obligations in respect of its US operations. In accordance with the APA, the Company expects to reverse tax provisions of approx. USD 225 million made in previous periods which are no longer required. Further, in line with the APA, the Company expects to payout approx. USD 233 million due to the difference between the taxes payable for prior periods as per the APA and the actual taxes paid for such periods. This amount is expected to be paid over the next few quarters. The reversal of the tax provisions of approx. USD 225 million will have a positive impact on the consolidated Basic EPS for the quarter ending 31 December 2017 by approx. USD 0.10. Further, on account of APA methodology, the Company expects its overall effective tax rate to be lowered by about 100 basis point for future periods covered under the APA. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) To promote road safety Maruti Suzuki India has joined hands with the Delhi Police to implement a Traffic Safety Management System in the national capital. A Memorandum of Agreement was signed on 09 January 2018 between Delhi Police and the Company. The TSMS will be set up along the Ring Road corridor from Dhaula Kaun to Sarai Kale Khan, a stretch of around 14 kms. Maruti Suzuki will set up the TSMS and maintain it for 2 years. The commencement and operation of the TSMS will be under the charge of Delhi Police. The Company will spend nearly Rs 15 crore on this project. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) At least six persons, including four police personnel, were killed on Tuesday in an explosion near the Balochistan Assembly building in Pakistan's Quetta city. The explosion took place near a police truck parked on Zarghoon Road, in the city's high-security Red Zone, 300 metres from the provincial assembly building, Geo News reported. Hospital sources confirmed the death toll to Geo and said 17 others were injured in the blast. The exact nature of the blast was not known yet, said the police. However, according to initial reports, a suicide attacker on a motorcycle was attempting to target the Balochistan Assembly building but detonated his explosives near the high-security Red Zone area. A large number of security personnel had been present near the site of the blast as a session of the Balochistan Assembly had just concluded. The area also houses several important government buildings. A bus was also damaged in the blast. Security officials said a bomb disposal team was present at the location conducting necessary search and sweep exercise. --IANS soni/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The much-awaited movie "Agnyaathavaasi" of leading Telugu actor Pawan Kalyan, releasing on Wednesday, will have seven shows in cinema theatres in Andhra Pradesh and five in Telangana. Two days after the Andhra Pradesh government granted permission to cinema halls to screen three special shows in addition to four regular shows, the Telangana government on Tuesday allowed theatres to screen a special show. The star's fans and cinema enthusiasts in both the Telugu states are expected to enjoy 'Sankranthi' holidays as both the states relaxed the rules for screening the movie between January 10 and January 17. While theatres in Andhra Pradesh can screen special shows from 1 a.m. to 10 a.m, in addition to regular shows between 10 a.m. to midnight, theatres in Telangana have been permitted to have one special show from 8 a.m. Directed by Trivikram Srinivas, "Agnyaathavaasi" is the most awaited movie of Tollywood and the advance booking for the tickets has already received huge response. It is expected to be a blockbuster at the office box. Popular as a power star, Pawan Kalyan, who is also founder of political party Jana Sena, has a huge fan following in both the Telugu states. --IANS ms/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Flaying the BJP government in Assam for "excluding a large section of Bengali- and Hindi-speaking people from the NRC's list" in that state, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday urged her state's people to offer shelter to those from Assam seeking refuge here. "There is a trend in Assam to drive away and oppress the Bengali-speaking people in the name of determining the state's original inhabitants. The names of a lot of genuine residents have been omitted from the National Register of Citizens list. Out of 3.39 crore people in Assam, 1.29 crore have been excluded. This includes Bengali- and Hindi- speaking people," Banerjee claimed at a public meeting in Alipurduar district. "How can they be driven away like that? I urge all of you to be alert. If someone comes (to Bengal) after torture there, please give them shelter; do not drive them away," she told her audience. Taking a dig at the Bharatiya Janata Party and its ideological mentor Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the Trinamool Congress supremo alleged that an NGO funded by them was "injecting RSS ideology into tribal students on the pretext of providing them education". "The BJP, RSS and Bajrang Dal have formed a new organisation. They have appointed teachers with handsome salaries in tribal areas and are giving RSS lessons to tribal students in the name of . They are trying to brainwash the tribal brothers and sisters," Banerjee alleged. "They are publishing their version of textbooks and asking the students to read them at home. Do not believe them," the Chief Minister said. Banerjee said an FIR has been lodged against the publisher of Class 2 textbook in West Bengal's Uluberia on Monday on charge of publishing "bad things" about Prophet Muhammad and distributing them among students. --IANS mgr/tsb/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Sanaullah Zehri resigned on Tuesday after Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi failed to resolve a political crisis in Pakistan's biggest province. Balochistan lawmakers had expressed a lack of confidence in the Chief Minister citing "unfulfilled commitments" while key ministers and advisers had turned dissidents, sparking a series of resignations and sackings, Dawn reported. Abbasi is said to have advised Zehri to resign after Baloch opposition leaders rejected his invitation for a meeting, during which he was expected to attempt garnering some support for the beleaguered Chief Minister. "We have decided not to meet the Prime Minister," opposition leader Maulana Abdul Wasey was quoted as saying. The opposition was expected to table a no-confidence motion against Zehri in the provincial assembly. Balochistan, Pakistan's largest province in land area, is also home to a simmering insurgency for which Islamabad blames New Delhi. --IANS ahm/mr (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Gujarat Dalit leader Jignesh Mevani on Tuesday accused the BJP of targeting youth leaders like him and charged the party and the RSS with instigating violence against Dalits in Bhima Koregaon in Maharasthra. "The way in which Hardik (Patel), Alpesh (Thakore) and Jignesh (Mevani) with the support of the youth in Gujarat brought the BJP down from over 150 seats (target set by BJP in Gujarat) to 99 seats... That is the reason we are being targetted," Mevani told his Yuva Hunkar rally here. "And this is the reason why the people of the (Rashtriya Swayamsewak) Sangh and BJP spread violence in Bhima Koregaon," he said, referring to the violence that broke out in Bhima Koregaon near Pune last week in which a person lost his life and several vehicles were damaged. The rally for which the Delhi Police had originally denied permission was held at the Jantar Mantar, a short distance from the Parliament in central Delhi. But Mevani and his supporters shelved plans of taking out a procession to the Prime Minister's Office. The newly elected MLA also said that when he fought elections in Gujarat he always spoke about bringing people together. "Throughout the election campaign we said that for 22 years the BJP followed the of division, while we always spoke about binding people together," he said. "We don't follow love-jihad. "We only talk about love and harmony. We will celebrate April 14 and Valentine Day too," he said. Referring to the violence that marked the 200th anniversary of the Bhima Koregaon battle in Pune last week, he asked: "Why the violence took place in Bhima Koregaon? "I don't have to answer it but you have to answer me... This you have to answer why Rs 15 lakh didn't come in everyone's account, why no jobs to youth? Why farmers were shot dead in Mandsaur? Why no justice to the Una Dalit victims? Why Najeeb Ahmed went missing? Why Rohit Vemula died? We'll ask all these questions from you (Prime Minister Narendra) Modiji." Mevani, who won from Vadgam in Gujarat in Assembly elections, said elected representatives were not allowed to speak and that was Gujarat's model. Earlier, scores of people gathered around the barricaded Parliament Street for the protest march planned by Mevani. "No permission has been given to anyone (to hold a rally)," Joint Commissioner of Police Ajay Chaudhary told reporters here. The Gujarat lawmaker slammed the police and the central government for denying permission to the protest. "An elected representative is not allowed to speak... This is extremely unfortunate." Some 1,500 security personnel in riot gear, with tear gas launchers and water cannons, were deployed on Parliament Street. A total of 42 groups -- parties, associations, student groups -- took part in the rally. --IANS vn-aks-vsc/mr (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The first group of China's Yaogan-31 remote sensing satellites was launched into space on Tuesday. The launch took place at 12.25 p.m. from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre, Xinhua news agency reported. The satellites were carried by a Long March-4C rocket, the 271st mission for the Long March rocket family. The mission also sent a micro nanotechnology experiment satellite into orbit. The satellites will be used for electromagnetic environment surveys and other related technology tests. China launched the first "Yaogan" series satellite, Yaogan-1, in 2006. --IANS and/ksk/mr (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) One of Chinas top military officials, Fang Fenghui, will be prosecuted for taking and receiving bribes, the state media reported on Tuesday. Fang and his colleague General Zhang Yang, who committed suicide at his Beijing home in November, were being investigated on charges of corruption. Fang's case has been handed over to the People Liberation Army's criminal prosecution body, Xinhua news agency said without giving further details. Fang, who was a former chief at the Joint Staff Department in China's military, is the latest "tiger" to be tried under the anti-corruption drive launched by President Xi Jinping. Xi has vowed to rid the nation of "tigers" - top politicians - and "flies" - underlings" involved in corruption. "Fang has close links to Zhang's superiors and subordinates because they were both proteges of disgraced former CMC Vice Chairmen Guo Boxiong and Xu Caihou, with Fang being the most skilful opportunist, closely following Guo," a source close to the military told Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post. "The investigation of Fang was announced so late because of the sudden suicide of Zhang. In order to decrease the impact of Zhang's death to the Army's morale, Fang's case was put aside a while until now." According to the Post, the source said Zhang hanged himself one hour before investigators came to his home to formally detain him. --IANS gsh/mr (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) China warned on Tuesday that an Iranian oil tanker, which collided with a freighter in the East China Sea, could explode, while rescuers were still searching for 31 missing people after an incident which could unleash an environmental disaster. The oil tanker Sanchi -- registered in Panama -- was still on fire after a collision with the Hong Kong-registered bulk freighter CF Crystal, which took place at around 8 p.m. on Saturday in the East China Sea, 160 nautical miles east of the Yangtze River estuary. The Chinese Transport Minister said there was a danger of the Iranian tanker exploding or sinking, adding that the rescue operations were extremely tricky as the toxic smoke in the area could harm the people involved, Efe news reported. Thirteen rescue vessels were operating at the site of the accident to search for the missing people in a 900-square nautical mile area. Operations were hampered due to persistent rainfall and strong winds which were causing waves of up to four metres (13 feet) in height. A 20 nautical mile security perimeter was established where ships were not allowed to enter. Initially, there were 32 people missing -- 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis -- but the Ministry said that one corpse was recovered on Monday morning, bringing the number of missing to 31. The Chinese government said that an oil spill had taken place, but did not specify the extent of the area affected. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang had said Monday that clean-up efforts were under way and that the authorities would try to gather more information about the cause of the accident. Environmental organisations including Greenpeace are concerned that the incident could become a major maritime disaster. Greenpeace East Asia told Efe that the non-profit was trying to get more information via satellite to assess the situation. The Sanchi was transporting 136,000 tonnes of refined petroleum from Iran to South Korea. --IANS soni/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A Communist Party of India (CPI) leader on Tuesday compared Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump, saying all three treat the media with disdain. Former CPI legislator Rajaji Mathew Thomas, the Chief Editor of the CPI party organ, said he had never heard any Chief Minister of Kerala ordering the media to "get out". "He (Vijayan) is doing what Modi and of late Trump have been doing, treating the media with absolute disdain," said Thomas. "Such a thing has never happened in Kerala... Keeping the media away is an open admission that one does not want to take uncomfortable questions," he said. Last year, Vijayan angrily asked journalists taking pictures of a meeting chaired by him to get out. He came under severe criticism for this. Since Vijayan assumed office in May 2016, time and again the two Communist parties, otherwise partners in the ruling Left Democratic Front (LDF), have engaged in a war of words. Late last year, all four CPI cabinet ministers decided to boycott the weekly cabinet meeting to protest the way Vijayan they said arbitrarily handled things. While the CPI-M is keen to get the Kerala Congress (Mani) into the LDF fold, the CPI is opposing it tooth and nail. Vijayan is also bitterly opposed to the Congress but the CPI has a soft corner for that party -- in order to take on the BJP. --IANS sg/mr/nir (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi cabinet on Tuesday approved a tender for purchase of 1,000 non-AC, standard floor cluster buses to serve the city's outlying areas, Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia. Addressing media after the meet, Sisodia said that the buses would cater mainly to outer Delhi and rural areas. The buses are expected to start arriving by August and all buses will be delivered by year end, he added. Transport Minister Kailash Gahlot also tweeted: "Delhi Cabinet approves tender for purchase of 1000 cluster buses which will cater to rural villages of Delhi." --IANS nkh/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi government has decided to offer free pilgrimage trips every year to 77,000 city residents aged over 60 years, Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said here on Tuesday. Senior citizens with annual income less than Rs 3 lakh and not an employee of any government or autonomous body can avail the free trips. The decision to take up 'Mukhyamantri Tirth Yatra Yojana' under which the trips were being offered, was taken in a cabinet meeting here, Sisodia said. The five routes from which citizens can choose include Mathura-Vrindavan-Agra-Fatehpur Sikri, Haridwar-Rishikesh-Neelkanth, Pushkar-Ajmer, Amritsar-Anandpur Sahib, and Jammu-Vaishno Devi Temple. The state government will fund the travel, stay, and food expenses of eligible citizens and it will cost the government around Rs 7,000 per pilgrim. Senior citizens can also have an attendant above 18 years, whose expenses will also be borne by the government. The Deputy Chief Minister said that each trip will be of three days and two nights and 1,100 people will be selected from each Assembly constituency for the trips in a year. Application forms for the trip can be filed online, through office of Divisional Commissioner, respective MLA, or office of Tirth Yatra Committee and selection of pilgrims will be done through draw of lots. Sisodia didn't give a date from which the trips will begin, but said the scheme will be rolled out soon. --IANS nkh/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) CPI-M General Secretary Sitaram Yechury on Tuesday termed the idea of electoral bonds "regressive" and pitched for state funding of political parties and a ban on flow of corporate funds directly to them. In a letter to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Yechury demanded a rollback of policies vis-a-vis electoral bonds including retrospective amendment to the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA) to allow indirect political funding by foreign companies and lifting of maximum limit on corporate contributions to political parties. "Contesting elections is now akin to a business enterprise, possible only for the wealthy. This needs stringent reform. At the outset, a good move will be to ban availability of corporate funds to political parties," the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader said. He said big corporates saw funding of political parties as an "investment" and an easy way to be able to "push policies in directions that suit them". "These corporates constitute the supply side of corruption, which is corroding our system. Unless the corporate funding is banned, this problem cannot be solved," he said. Advocating state funding of political parties, Yechury said: "No clean-up of political funding is possible minus state funding. "If like the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), corporates could be asked to donate a part of their earnings to a pool which, in keeping with certain guidelines (like the support individual political parties may have garnered in the previous election, vote-share or the number of seats they have won) it will be a much fairer and transparent way of contributing to the healthy functioning of the Indian democracy." Yechury cited Germany's example where state funding of parties from a corpus apportioned on the basis of seats and vote-share of the parties in the central and state legislatures in the previous elections is done. He took strong exception to some recent changes introduced by the Modi government in this connection, including introduction of electoral bonds. "Electoral bonds are a deeply regressive move. They make the donor, beneficiary and the amount -- each a vital aspect -- a state secret, literally. This shields donors from the gaze of the electorate which needs to know if policies are being made precisely because it helps certain influential donors," he said. "Electoral bonds, alongwith the retrospective amendment to the FCRA (which allows indirect political funding by foreign companies) and the lifting of the maximum limit that corporates can contribute to political parties, are the most retrogressive steps taken towards political funding in India and must be rolled back," he added. Yechury said that by lifting the maximum limit on political donations by companies, the government had raised the prospect of setting up of shell companies with black money to fund political parties only. --IANS mak/tsb/mr (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Same-sex weddings took place across Australia on Tuesday, as Australia celebrated its first official day of marriage equality. In December, Australia's parliament voted overwhelmingly to legalise same-sex marriage following a postal survey of 12.7 million people which returned a 61.6 per cent "yes" result, reports Xinhua news agency. However, same-sex couples had to wait another month before they could tie the knot due to Australian law requiring 30 days of notice before getting married. The waiting period expired on Tuesday with some couples wasting no time and marrying just minutes after midnight. Australian Commonwealth Games sprinter Craig Burns and his now-husband Luke Sullivan, also an athlete, were one of those couples, marrying each other in a midnight ceremony attended by 50 family and friends in New South Wales. "People I have never met I don't know who are just sending love and congratulations, it's really touching," Sullivan told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on Tuesday. Ron van Houwelingen and Antony McManus were another couple who wed on Tuesday following 30 years together and 16 unofficial wedding ceremonies. "Our first wedding was on our sixth anniversary, that was a big deal with family and friends," Van Houwelingen said. "Most of the others have been more protests - we've renewed our vows at rallies, married on TV and on radio. They've been a statement in the fight for marriage equality." --IANS ksk (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) In the same week as a Delhi court acquitted all the accused in the 2G fiasco, the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG), which had a defining role to play in the case, tabled yet another report slamming Indias apex food regulatory body. According to the CAG's observations, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is guilty of various lapses in enforcing food safety across the country. It claimed that food articles that were declared unsafe by it remain up for sale in markets due to lack of adequate monitoring. Moreover, most of the laboratories across states do not have proper accreditation. So, the quality of their testing cannot be ensured. At the outset, it is important to point out that food safety is an important issue to sustain a nation's growth in the long run. Unsafe food imposes substantial direct and indirect costs. Apart from adding an avoidable strain on the country's healthcare systems, poor food safety standards beget diseases that adversely impact the productivity of the labour force and, thus, the overall competitiveness of a nation. Moreover, most of the burden is borne by the population at the bottom of the pyramid as they are usually more price- than quality-sensitive. Therefore, a strong food regulator becomes an absolute necessity for a nation's sustained and balanced development. Keeping these factors in mind, FSSAI was established in 2006 under the Food Safety and Standards Act. It was an important step which consolidated all the food safety legislation spread across different ministries under one head and marked a paradigm shift in food policy from a narrow focus on adulteration to a more holistic approach on the provision of safe and wholesome food. This implied a shift from the mere testing of the final food product for adulteration to implementing mechanisms that prevent the communication of pathogens across the supply chain. The latter approach ensured safety from "farm to plate". However, by picking holes in the agency's functioning, the CAG audit takes a narrow view on the matter. Even though it has been a decade since the enactment of the food law as the report points out, implementation has always been a challenge for FSSAI due to lack of resources. After the legislation was passed, resources from the earlier regime were reshaped to fit in with the new policy. Moreover, there were legacy issues. Each state has its own unique system of food regulation which failed to evolve with the new policy. Insufficient manpower and funding impeded the process further. FSSAI has taken active steps to remedy these issues. One, realising how it will be impractical for the food regulator to micromanage safety standards on a national scale, it is aiming to enforce a system of self-regulation. Towards this end, the agency finalised third-party auditors of food businesses and mandated the units to have at least one trained food safety expert. Another proposed mechanism is for food companies to voluntarily participate in the Responsible Food Company Index that will measure and monitor the workings of food businesses beyond statutory compliance. Successful implementation of these processes will ensure an efficient market-based mechanism of self-assessment in food safety. Second, to address the issue with food laboratories, FSSAI is bringing them under the Indian Food Laboratory Network (InFoLNet), a digitally centralised management system that will connect all food labs across India. All the tests and results will be available on the platform for greater transparency and reduction in information asymmetry between consumers and food businesses. It is also in the process of setting up more NABL (National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories) -- accredited food labs across states beyond the two that it owns and operates. Finally, and most importantly, the agency is about to roll out a "one-nation, one-food-safety law" regime so that every state-level authority follows a common standard of practice for implementation, compliance and enforcement of food safety regulations. It is standardising the procedures around inspections done at the state level. Food safety experts will now have to follow a set of centrally-prescribed standards. This will eliminate any discrepancies across states and streamline the process of surveillance, sampling and inspection. The states need to play their part in complementing the efforts of FSSAI to ensure food safety. A central body cannot ensure implementation across the country unless states take it upon themselves to drive the required changes at the micro level. It will also be in their best interests to follow up on FSSAI regulations. Ensuring provision of safe and wholesome food for citizens should be looked upon as an investment into increasing the productivity of the workforce that will later reap economic dividends for the state itself. (Amit Kapoor is chair, Institute for Competitiveness, India. The views expressed are personal. He can be contacted at amit.kapoor@competitiveness.in and tweets @kautiliya. Chirag Yadav, researcher at Institute for Competitiveness has contributed to the article) --IANS amitk/vm/sac (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Key Indian equity indices closed at fresh highs on Tuesday with subtle gains on the back of positive global cues and healthy buying in consumer durables, realty and FMCG stocks. According to market observers, optimism over the upcoming quarterly earnings result season, as well the Union Budget, kept investors' sentiments buoyed. On a closing basis, the wider Nifty50 of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) rose by 13.40 points or 0.13 per cent to a new high of 10,637 points. The Nifty50 recorded a fresh intra-day high of 10,659.15 points. The barometer 30-scrip Sensitive Index (Sensex) of the BSE closed at a new high of 34,443.19 points -- up 90.40 points or 0.26 per cent from its previous session's close -- after it scaled a fresh intra-day high of 34,488.03 points. However, the BSE market breadth was bearish with 1,634 declines and 1,353 advances. "Markets inched higher on Tuesday to close with small gains for the fifth consecutive day. The Nifty touched record highs in intra-day trade," Deepak Jasani, Head, Retail Research, HDFC Securities, told IANS. "Positive global cues supported the indices along with optimism over Q3FY18 earnings and upcoming budget," Jasani said. The broader market indices underperformed the headline indices as the S&P BSE mid-cap index closed lower by 0.40 per cent, while the small-cap index edged up a tad 0.08 per cent. According to Dhruv Desai, Director and Chief Operating Officer of Tradebulls, caution prevailed in the equity markets ahead of the corporate results season kicking in towards the end of the week as well as release of domestic macro-data. "Indian equities continued trading higher post hitting life-time highs but caution prevailed ahead of the corporate results season kicking in this week. Tata Consultancy Services is due to post December quarter results on Thursday, followed by Infosys on Friday," Desai told IANS. "Traders are also cautious ahead of the release of IIP (Index of industrial production) data for November and CPI (Consumer Price Index) for December on 12 January," he said. On the currency front, the Indian rupee weakened by 20 paise to close at 63.71 against the US dollar from its previous close at 63.51. Provisional data with the exchanges showed that foreign institutional investors sold scrips worth Rs 303.94 crore, while the domestic institutional investors purchased stocks worth Rs 522.90 crore. Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit Financial Services, said: "Investors are likely to remain focused on stock-specific moves eyeing the prospects of earnings season and mixing and matching various elements of the upcoming union budget." Sectorwise, the S&P BSE consumer durables index surged by 193.76 points, followed by realty index which rose by 76.01 points and FMCG index by 48.51 points. On the other hand, the S&P BSE auto index fell by 104.49 points, healthcare index by 94.94 points and capital goods index by 72.96 points. Major Sensex gainers on Tuesday were: Coal India, up 5.63 per cent at Rs 304.05; Yes Bank, up 2.31 per cent at Rs 341.10; Wipro, up 2.11 per cent at Rs 317.60; ITC, up 1.94 per cent at Rs 270.50; and Reliance Industries, up 1.34 per cent at Rs 940.90. Major Sensex losers were: Bharti Airtel, down 1.18 per cent at Rs 510; Adani Ports, down 1.13 per cent at Rs 419.35; Bajaj Auto, down 1.05 per cent at Rs 3,240.95; Hero MotoCorp, down 1.02 per cent at Rs 3,751.85; and Sun Pharma, down 0.86 per cent at Rs 586.85. --IANS ppg/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi High Court on Tuesday issued notice to meat exporter Moin Akhtar Qureshi on an Enforcement Directorate (ED) plea seeking cancellation of his bail in a money laundering case. Justice A.K. Pathak sought Qureshi's response before April 19, the next date of hearing. Arrested on August 25, 2016 by the ED, Qureshi was granted bail by a trial court on December 12. The ED had registered a case against Qureshi in 2016 under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act for alleged illegal forex dealings and tax evasion. According to the agency, Qureshi was being investigated for allegedly remitting funds through hawala channels to Dubai, London, and a few other destinations in Europe. The ED had said that during the course of investigation, certain facts had emerged that constituted omission and commission of some acts on the part of certain public servants holding high offices in collusion with Qureshi, whereby massive illegal money transactions were carried out. The agency had also said that the records collected from the Income Tax Department had revealed that Qureshi took huge money from different persons for obtaining "undue favours from public servants" after exercising his personal influence. Qureshi has denied the charges. --IANS gt/him/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Here's good news for children attending the ongoing 26th New Delhi World Book Fair. Three Swedish books translated into Hindi have been released, bringing in more variety in the of children's books genre. The books were release at an event at the Children's Pavilion which was attended by Swedish Ambassador Klas Molin, along with renowned Swedish author Jujja Wieslander. 'Mera Fart Mamma Mu' (Aur tej kajari Gaay) and 'Krakan sager INTE' (Kavva Bola Na!), both written by Jujja Wieslander and illustrated by Sven Nordqvist and 'Kalle Och Elsa' (Kittu Aur Ila) written by 'Jenny and Jesus Verona' were released at the book fair. "Children's literature is very close to our hearts, with many strong characters embodying the rights and possibilities of every child. They enable us to talk about both fun and difficult subjects in a natural and approachable way. The books have been translated into more than 30 languages and I hope they will translate it in many more Indian languages as well," Wieslander said. Wieslander is a member of the Swedish Children's Book Academy. Mamma Moo is her best known series and has travelled with different languages in Europe. The stories have been made into radio shows and a children's film. These have been incredibly popular, winning several honours and awards. "Swedish Children's books in Hindi are not new to India. This year, we are celebrating 20 years of Mamma Moo in Hindi. With the release of three more Swedish children's book, more Indian children will now be able to get closer to Sweden," Ambassador Molin stated at the event. --IANS som/vm (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Indian IT industry on Tuesday lauded the US administration for not considering any regulatory change in the H-1B visa extension policy. "It's a good decision. We are relieved that there won't be any change in the H1-B visa extension policy. It is beneficial for us as well as our clients in the US," a software export firm executive told IANS here. The clarification by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) on Monday refuted a report by a US-based news agency that the US Department of Homeland Security was considering new regulations to prevent the extension of H1-B visas, availed mostly by the Indian IT firms. "The USCIS is not considering a regulatory change that would force H-1B visa holders to leave the US by changing our interpretation of section 104(c) of AC-21, which provides for H-1B extensions beyond the 6-year limit," said USCIS' chief of media relations Jonathan Withington. Indian IT industry's apex body Nasscom President R. Chandrashekhar said the US news agency report was ill-founded, as it was trying to mislead by quoting "a government source" in support of its claim that Washington was mulling new rules to prevent H-1B visa extensions. "We can't be commenting on every news report, that too, on a non-event. We made it clear that any disruptive move on the visa policy will be detrimental to both a" India and the US. The clarification by the USCIS is self-explanatory," Chandrashekhar told IANS from New Delhi. Withington also said USCIS was never considering such a policy change and that "any suggestion that USCIS changed its position because of pressure is absolutely false". The H-1B programme offers temporary US visas that allow companies to hire highly skilled foreign professionals working in areas with shortages of qualified American workers. Indians get most of the H1-B visas, although there are no national quotas for the facility nor is it specifically designed for Indians. "Raising the visa issue has been a regular feature in the US media and rhetorical among the lobbies despite the fact that there is an acute shortage of skilled professionals in North America and enterprises there need those who have them (skills)," said another IT firm executive on the condition of anonymity. With internet and communication technologies bridging the space and distance, the need for deploying more techies on onsite has reduced drastically over the years. "We do more projects from offshore (India) and provide a range of software services remotely through seamless networks. The need for deploying more of our employees is not so much as it was in the past," added the executive. According to Nasscom estimates, the use of visas by Indian IT firms has declined 50 per cent over the last two years. --IANS fb/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) on Tuesday announced new initiatives, including holding legal service camps and opening of legal literacy clubs in all districts, to increase outreach and accessibility of legal services institutions. Justice Ranjan Gogoi of the Supreme Court, also Chairman of NALSA, after holding a meeting with chairpersons and member-secretaries of various state legal services authorities via video conferencing, announced the new initiatives. "New initiatives will not only increase NALSA's outreach but also increase the accessibility of legal services institutions so as to bring appreciable changes in the lives of poor and weaker sections of the society," Gogoi said. He informed that by the end of first quarter in March, 108 legal service camps would be organised across the country. The Supreme Court judge also announced opening of 3,200 legal literacy clubs, which will make students aware of their rights and duties and sensitise them on legal issues. Under the initiatives, NALSA will also open 700 legal service clinics in jails, which will help prisoners get real-time information with regard to status of their cases. As part of the initiatives, NALSA will install 1,250 LED monitors and LED screens in various court complexes with an objective to make public aware of their legal rights and conduct a 30-day outreach campaign in various cinema halls where digital streaming of NALSA theme songs will be played to make people aware of the free legal services programme. Besides, with the help of NGO Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA) and others, NALSA would work for protecting rights of children through a programme, called All India Legal Service Cell on Child Rights. --IANS akk/nir (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Hitting out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi's statement that fresh investments in various sectors in three years were the highest, the Congress on Tuesday said it would have been good if he had mentioned that the investments in 2017 were at a "13-year low". "Modi ji today (Tuesday) said that fresh investment in three years have been the highest. It is not true. It would have been good had he said that in 2017, the investments were at a 13-year low. "During the earlier United Progressive Alliance rule, fresh investments in 2014 totalled 16.2 trillion dollars. In 2017, it reduced to 7.9 trillion dollars. It would have been good had he given this figure as well," said Congress leader Raj Babbar. Babbar said that losses have been the most this year in the manufacturing sector. "Today, news reports said 1.5 crore labourers have become unemployed." The actor-turned-politician said Congress President Rahul Gandhi had expressed concern over jobs, quality education and healthcare in India while addressing the Indian diaspora in Bahrain. "One leader is expressing concern about all these issues and, on the other hand, they (Bharatiya Janata Party) are always in election mode. The Prime Minister and his entire Council of Ministers reach wherever there is election. But they keep themselves away from the country's problems," Babbar said. Addressing a day-long conference of PIO Parliamentarians -- Indian-origin lawmakers from across the world, Modi gave details of new investments his government was making in the country in technology, transportation and infrastructure development "keeping in mind the needs of the 21st century". "More than half the investments in the last three years till now has happened in sectors like construction, air transport, mining, computer software, hardware, electrical equipment and many others," Modi said. Asked if Gandhi was defaming the country abroad as alleged by the BJP, Babbar said: "There is a difference between criticism and expressing concern. When he says this, there is a concern...." The Congress leader said: "It is our responsibility that we talk about providing jobs, quality education and improved healthcare. If they think that it amounts to defaming the nation, then there is something wrong with them." Highlighting how job-creation in India is at an eight-year low, Congress President Rahul Gandhi on Monday said the two threats facing India under the Modi government are its inability to create jobs and the rise of the forces of hatred and division. --IANS sid/tsb/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Brussels, Jan 10 (IANS/AKI) Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif will meet the European Union's foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini here on Thursday to discuss progress in implementing landmark nuclear deal Iran signed with six world powers in July 2015. "The meeting will take place in the context of the ongoing work to ensure a full and continued implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action," said a statement from Mogherini's office. Britain's Foreign Minister Boris Johnson and his French and German counterparts Yves Le Drian and Sigmar Gabriel will also attend the meeting. Gabriel told German public broadcaster ZDF that the recent anti-government protests in Iran would be on the agenda at the meeting with Zarif. The protests killed at least 21 people and led to the arrests of over 1,000 including 90 students. Many observers believe the protests in Iran were led by the working class in protest over hardship caused by the country's economic woes. These woes persist despite the end of crippling sanctions under the 2015 deal to curb its atomic programme. --IANS/AKI vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Mafia don and sitting legislator Mukhtar Ansari, who is lodged in the Banda, suffered a heart attack on Tuesday, officials said. He was rushed to a medical facility in Kanpur but owing to his critical state, he is being sent to Lucknow, officials said. His wife Afsa Ansari, who went to see him at the prison, also suffered a heart stroke. Additional Director General, Prisons, P.K. Mishra said that Ansari's condition was serious. The five-time legislator, who faces 16 cases of murder and attempted murder along with rioting, has been in prison for the last 12 years. He is currently Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) legislator from Mau. Ansari is also a prime accused in murder of Bharatiya Janata Party legislator Krishnanand Rai. Principal Secretary, Home, Arvind Kumar said that he has sought details of the incident from the District Magistrate and Senior Superintendent of Police, Banda. --IANS md/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A court here on Tuesday sent a Jet Airways crew and her accomplice, arrested on charges of involvement in the smuggling of US dollars worth Rs 3.21 crore, to two days' judicial custody. The Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) on Monday arrested Deveshi Kulshreshtha, who was on duty on a Hong Kong-bound Jet Airways flight, and her accomplice Amit Malhotra on charges of smuggling foreign currency. Both were presented before a Duty Magistrate here on Tuesday, who remanded them to judicial custody till January 11. "US dollars worth Rs 3.21 crore were seized from a lady crew of a Hong Kong-bound Jet Airways flight on Monday night at the Indira Gandhi International Airport here," a DRI statement said. --IANS akk/tsb/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Karni Sena, a Rajput outfit, on Tuesday once again threatened the makers of the controversial film 'Padmavat' of dire consequences if it was released on January 25. The film, cleared by the CBFC after a few cuts and renamed from 'Padmavati' to 'Padmavat', is scheduled to release on January 25 across India. The film will, however, not be released in Rajasthan. Addressing reporters, National Convenor of the Karni Sena, Lokendra Singh Kalvi said they will financially harm the producer of the film Sanjay Leela Bhansali and said their demand now was a ban on the film. He also urged the Prime Minister and the Censor Board to understand the "sentiments behind" their protests and also the "seriousness of the issue". There will be curfew if this film is released, he threatened. Adding that the film was made during the demonetisation days, the Karni Sena convenor also called for a probe into the financing of the film which stars Deepika Padukone, Ranveer Singh and Shahid Kapoor in main roles. Kalvi also alleged that he had been threatened on phone from Pakistan, a location "somewhere near Lahore" for protesting against the release of the film. "Why is Pakistan so interested in the matter," he asked. Before the press conference at the Press Club here, Kalvi, along with some office bearers of his outfit, called on Uttarakhand Chief Minister Trivendra Singh Rawat and sought a ban on screening of the film in the hill state. The outfit said Kalvi was right in demanding the film-ban which was aimed at protecting the honour of the Rajputs as he was the 24th descendant of Maharana Pratap and 37th generation descendant of Rani Padmavati. --IANS md/pgh/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday blamed "foreigners", including the US and Israel, for inciting unrest in a number of Iranian cities, the semi-official ISNA news agency reported. Over the past week, protests erupted in a number of Iranian cities against the government's economic policies. At least 20 people were killed in violent clashes between the protestors and security forces. "The plot for the recent unrests in Iran had been developed by the US and Israel who had been working on their scheme for months," Khamenei said. "The money for carrying out the plot was provided by one of the rich states in the Persian Gulf region," he said, implicitly referring to Saudi Arabia which was also blamed by other Iranian officials over the past days, the agency reported. Khamenei blamed the dissident Mujahedin Khalq Organisation (MKO) as the third side to contribute to the violence in Iran. He described the recent wave of violence that hit some areas of the country as "fireworks and vicious acts", Press TV reported. Meanwhile, Iranian lawmaker Mahmoud Sadeghi claimed that the number of people arrested in the protests is far higher than given by authorities. He was quoted as saying by the local media that 3,700 people had been arrested, including 40 to 68 students, in six days of protests that broke out in late December. Iranian authorities previously said 450 people were detained whereas US officials had put the number held at 1,000. --IANS soni/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Aditya Birla Group Chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla called on Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath at his official residence on Tuesday and discussed investment opportunities in the state, an official said. The Chief Minister informed Birla about the various facilities being offered to investors by the state government for setting up business in the state. Adityanath pointed out that the present government had spruced up the law and order machinery along with strengthening the infrastructure facilities in Uttar Pradesh. He also apprised the eminent businessman of how the state had implemented sector-wise policies under the Industrial Investment and Employment Promotion Policy, also assimilating within attractive provisions for establishing industry in the state. The Chief Minister also extended an invitation to Birla to attend the investors' meet to be held in the state capital in February. An exhibition displaying the replica of India's first multi-wavelength space observatory Astrosat was opened here for public viewing on Tuesday. "The exhibition has been organised at the Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium so as to allow students aspiring to study astronomy to understand how the Astrosat works, which they can observe through a 3-D printed replica," the Director of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Satellite Centre, Bengaluru, M. Annadurai told reporters at the event. The month-long expo has been organised jointly by the ISRO and Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium, located in the city centre. Launched on September 28, 2015 through a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) from ISRO's spaceport in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh, Astrosat is a one-of-its-kind satellite that is capable of monitoring the space through a range of spectrum from visible to Infrared (IR), hard X-rays and ultraviolet (UV) rays. "This was a unique satellite that was developed by India enabling us to look into the space through a much wider spectrum so that we can see what space contains in much better resolutions," Annadurai said. Through Astrosat, one can conduct studies on astrophysical objects from nearby solar system to distant stars, timing studies of pulsations of hot white dwarfs, active galactic nuclei etc. Weighing about 1,513 kg, the Astrosat has been in its orbital space for two years and has been launched with a mission life of five years. The space observatory consists of a total of six instruments such as the ultraviolet imaging telescope, soft X-ray imaging telescope and scanning sky monitor among others. "We have been able to download data of about 12 terabytes (TB) from space through the satellite each year which allows Indian scientists to study space better," added Annadurai. The information from Astrosat is being used not only by ISRO scientists, but also by private research firms and laboratories in India. "We are also opening up the opportunity to expand the usage of information from the satellite to international scientists as well. Through this exhibition, we want students to know that India can provide tremendous opportunities for them," he said. Several astronomy research institutions in India and abroad had together built Astrosat's instruments. --IANS bha/him/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Rabat, Jan 9 (IANS/MAP) African ministers gathered in Morocco's capital on Tuesday to discuss the shared African agenda on migration. The meeting aims to harmonise the vision for an African agenda on migration ahead of the African Union (AU) summit at the end of the month. The ministerial conference would serve as an important platform and step in developing the promised draft African agenda on migration for submission to the AU summit. Late in October, the Moroccan city of Skhirat hosted a three-day preparatory meeting with the aim to elaborate an African agenda on migration. Since last March, Morocco's King Mohammed VI has been in charge of coordinating the migration issue within the African Union. --IANS/MAP soni/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will arrive in Mumbai on January 18 for a day as part of his upcoming four-day visit to India, a top official said here on Tuesday. During his visit to the country's commercial and glamour capital, he is scheduled to address a meeting of the India-Israel Business Summit in which top names from the Indian corporate world are expected to participate. Later, Netanyahu will speak at a mega-cultural gathering called 'Shalom Bollywood', or Salute Bollywood, in which top Bollywood actors, directors and producers will be present, a spokesperson for Israeli Consulate General told IANS. He will also pay homage to the victims of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack in which one of the targeted sites was the Jewish centre of Chabad House in Colaba. The Israel Prime Minister will be accompanied by the 11-year old Moshe Holtzberg, who as a toddler 10 years ago survived the dastardly terror strikes by Lashkar-e-Taiba attackers on Chabad House. Moshe's parents were felled by the terrorists' bullets but he was saved by his Indian nanny, Sandra Samuels, and taken out to safety. The Mumbai terror strikes left a total of 166 persons dead before nine terrorists were killed and one was arrested alive after the 60-hour-long anti-terrorist operation by combined security forces. In fact, Moshe had met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the latter's visit to Israel in July last year and was very excited about visiting his birthplace Mumbai and Chabad House where his parents, Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and Rivka Holtzberg, were killed along with six others. At their emotional meeting, Modi had invited Moshe to come and live in India for as long as he desired for which, he said, he would arrange long-term visas to him and his family. Next week, Moshe is likely to accompanied by his grandparents Shimon and Yehudit Rosenberg, nanny Samuels and others during their visit to Chabad House, and celebrate his Bar Mitzvah, a ceremony for Jewish boys attaining 13 years -- comparable to the Hindu thread ceremony. Netanyahu will be the first Israeli Prime Minister to visit India in 15 years after the visit of former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in 2003, and only the second to tour India since 1992 when India-Israel established diplomatic relations. Modi became the first ever Indian Prime Minister to visit Israel in July 2017 as part of the silver jubilee celebrations of India-Israel diplomatic ties. --IANS qn/him/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Nigeria on Tuesday commenced a three-day mourning ahead of the mass burial of 71 people killed in violence allegedly perpetrated by herdsmen in the north-central state of Benue. A mass burial will be held Thursday for the victims of the attack in Logo and Guma communities in Benue, said Terve Akase, a government spokesman. Killings by herdsmen had increased since the start of the new year in Benue, where relations between herdsmen and farmers remained tense, Xinhua reported. Thursday has been declared a work-free day in Benue to enable workers to attend the funeral of the victims, according to a statement by the government. Nigerian leader Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday redeployed the national police chief to the north-central state. The police confirmed the redeployment in a statement, saying its chief, Ibrahim Idris, will move to the state to restore law and order and forestall the crisis from escalating. The presidential order followed a public outcry on the security situation in the state. National police spokesman Jimoh Moshood said: "More units of the police special forces, counter-terrorism units, and conventional policemen had already been deployed to the state to comply in totality with the presidential order." "The full weight of the law will be applied to anyone arrested for being responsible for the mayhem in the affected areas in the state," Moshood said. Eight suspects have been arrested so far by the local police following the bloody attacks in the state. Moses Yamu, the spokesman for the state police, said the suspects, all herdsmen, had made confessions to the security agency. Benue had brought into effect an anti-open grazing law on November 1, 2017, which ignited protests from local herdsmen. Hundreds of people have been killed in various attacks by herdsmen in Nigeria's central states of Benue, Nasarawa, and Plateau, in the past one year. On May 24, 2017, at least 30 people were killed in an attack by suspected herdsmen who invaded a village in Benue. The village head was among those killed in the attack which had mostly women, children and the aged as victims. On November 26, 2017, over 500 people were missing following a suspected herdsmen attack on a Tiv community in the state. --IANS qd/ (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Geneva, Jan 10 (IANS/AKI) A total of 1,072 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea during the first week of this year, with around 450 each landing in Italy and Greece and the remainder in Spain, the United Nations migration agency reported on Tuesday. At least 81 are unknown to have died. The arrivals till January 8 compare with almost an identical number - 1,159 - who came ashore during a similar period of 2017, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said. However, 81 boat migrants perished as of January 8 - a more than seven-fold increase compared with the 11 people who died trying to cross the Mediterranean in 2017, IOM reported. Five of this year's deaths were in Western Mediterranean waters off Spain and Morocco, IOM said. The rest - 76 with a possibility of many more people having perished - were recorded in the waters between Italy and Libya. As many as 64 people drowned when a rubber dinghy reportedly carrying 150 men, women and children, sank off Libya on Saturday. Only eight bodies - all female - were recovered so far, IOM stated. The Italian Coast Guard Ship 'Diciotti' rescued 86 migrants who survived to the incident, IOM said. IOM said it recorded just 26 migrant deaths in the Mediterranean in December. --IANS/AKI vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) With Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje Scindia saying that Sanjay Leela Bhansali's movie 'Padmavat' will not be released in her state, the Congress on Tuesday said there was a conflict between the central and state governments on the issue. "For us, the release of any film means it has been certified by the censor board (Central Board of Film Certification). The government of India should ask Vasundhara ji if she is opposed to the Information and Broadcasting Ministry. "The censor board, which comes under the Ministry, has given a certificate to release the film," Congress leader Raj Babbar said. "Is she not opposing the central government by not allowing the film to release (in Rajasthan)," he asked. Babbar said: "This is a conflict between the central and state governments. She should reply to this." Vasundhara Raje on Monday said 'Padmavati', now rechristened 'Padmavat', will not be released in cinema halls across the desert state. Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi on Tuesday said the strong relationship and cooperation will continue with China in various fields. Abbasi was talking to Chinese Ambassador Yao Jing who called on him at the Prime Minister's Office, the office said in a statement. "Deepening the strong bonds of friendship and multi-sector cooperation between Pakistan and China would continue with great fervour as ever before," the statement quoted Abbasi as saying. He also emphasised upon expanding people-to-people contacts and collaboration in various areas, ranging from trade and commerce to education and culture. Ambassador Yao, who has served as the Chinese envoy to Afghanistan, was appointed as the new Chinese ambassador to Pakistan in November 2017. --IANS soni/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Tuesday said the conference of PIO Parliamentarians Conference will help in opening new vistas for regular dialogue and exchange of views. She was speaking at the valedictory session of the first ever PIO Parliamentarians Conference here. "I am confident that this historical conference will help open new vistas for regular dialogues and exchange of visits and views of PIO parliamentarians," she said, adding global Indians had become India's friends currently because of the several successful initiatives launched by the government to connect with Indian diaspora. "In times of crisis in abroad, the Indian government has launched several rescue missions too." She said that the current government has one mission to remake India into a great nation and the "mission in which every Indian and equally every overseas Indian arrive at equal fate". "The government of India under the dynamic leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been specially proactive in making bonds with Indian dispora." A total of 143 PIO lawmakers from 24 countries attended in the first of its kind initiative taken by the government. The PIO Parliamentarian forum was planned last year during a conversation with the Prime Minister to connect the lawmakers of Indian origin with their ancestral land, the Minister said. --IANS rak/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) President Ram Nath Kovind will take part in the Global Vipassana Foundation's 'The Gratitude Day' at the Global Vipassana Pagoda, which comprises the world's largest stone dome built without any supporting pillars at Borivali here on January 14. The Pagoda was constructed by legendary Vipassana proponent and teacher, (the now late) Guru S.N. Goenka, and inaugurated in February 2009 by then President Pratibha Patil. 'The Gratitude Day' marks the 46th death anniversary of Goenka's teacher, Sayagyi U Ba Khin, the first Accountant-General of Burma and a leading authority on Vipassana meditation, in whose memory the Pagoda was built on the banks of Arabian Sea, near the picturesque fishing village of Gorai. It is also the second death anniversary of Goenka's wife, Mata Elaichi Devi Goenka, who played a paramount role along with her husband in establishing the Vipassana meditation technique in India and teaching it. On this occasion, Kovind will lay the foundation stone for the GVF's second Vipassana Meditation Centre, Dhammalaya 2, near the Pagoda. The first Dhammalaya is functioning in Kolhapur, Maharashtra since October 1995, according to the present GVF Chairman Nayan Shah. Besides the President, Maharashtra Governor C. V. Rao, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and Union Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma and other dignitaries will also be present. Prior to the foundation stone laying ceremony, an Anapana Meditation, or the observation of the natural breath coming in and going out will be held for the gathering. The GVF Pagoda construction started in 1997 and finally completed in 2009, comprising of the main dome and three sub-domes. At the centre is the world's largest stone dome built without any supporting pillars, 29 metres tall, while the total height of the building is 96.12 metres, or twice the height of previously largest hollow stone monument in the world, the Gol Gumbaz Dome in Bijapur. This dome in the Pagoda enshrines bone relics of Lord Gautama Buddha, sourced from Guntur district of Andhra Pradesh, and donated to the GVF by the Mahabodhi Society of India and Prime Minister of Sri Lanka. The other two domes, along with an auxiliary dome adjoining the second dome, sit atop the first main dome. The main dome's external diameter is 97.46 metres and the internal diameter is 85.15 metres, and the interior serves as a massive meditation hall spread over 6,000 sq. metres, with a capacity of over 8000 people who can simultaneously meditate. Guru Goenka - who passed away in 2013 at the age of 89 - had conducted an inaugural daylong meditation course at the Pagoda on December 21, 2008, before its formal inauguration two months later. The Vipassana meditation, as taught by Goenka, is now taught and practiced in over 160 centres in 60 countries worldwide. The aim of the Pagoda complex is to express gratitude to Lord Buddha for dispensing a universal teaching for the eradication of sufferings, reveal the truth about his life and his teachings, and offer free Vipassana meditation courses to the people. --IANS qn/vd-- QN/ T: 09892700256/09594786611. /// (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Punjab Tourism and Cultural Affairs Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu had recommended a probe and action against a senior bureaucrat accused of selling antique artefacts, but Chief Minister Amarinder Singh's office has not initiated any action in the matter. An official spokesman claimed that Sidhu had taken "prompt action" by recommending a CBI probe against Cultural Affairs and Tourism Department's former Director Navjot Pal Singh Randhawa to the Chief Minister. The spokesman, quoting Sidhu, said on Tuesday that the Minister had written to the Chief Minister on September 1 last year for a CBI probe against Randhawa. "Sidhu wrote to the Chief Minister to demand a CBI probe against Randhawa. A copy of the letter was also sent to the Punjab Vigilance Bureau Director, CBI Director and the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, Mumbai Zonal Unit," the spokesman said. "In the letter dated September 1, 2017, it was written that a letter from the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, addressed to the Punjab Chief Secretary, mentioned that Randhawa in connivance with Vijay Nanda sold antique artefacts from Punjab in the international market," the spokesman said. "This officer remained in the department for a long period. So, a thorough probe is needed to know how many antique artefacts were sent out of Punjab. This is a serious matter. Since the sale of antiques comes under Central Bureau of Investigation's jurisdiction, the matter should be probed by the central agency," the spokesman added. Sidhu's reaction came following media reports that the Punjab government had failed to take action against Randhawa, a Punjab Civil Services officer, despite the DRI letter to the Chief Secretary. The DRI, in its investigation regarding smuggling and illegal sale of artefacts from India to other countries, had accused Randhawa of providing rare artefacts to Nanda, a Mumbai-based antiques dealer. These artefacts of significant historical importance were sold abroad for millions of rupees. --IANS js/tsb/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Reliance Infrastructure Ltd on Tuesday said it has moved an application before Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission (MERC) seeking approval to assign its transmission and distribution licences and transfer the integrated Mumbai power business to Adani Transmission Ltd. The clearance has been sought by RInfra to assign its license and transfer the business to the wholly owned subsidiary, Reliance Electric Generation and Supply Ltd, which will then be acquired by ATL, said a spokesperson. In a letter to the BSE, RInfra said that it had signed definitive binding agreement for 100 percent sale of its Mumbai power business with ATL, for a total deal value of Rs 13,251 crore. In addition to these, the regulatory assets under approval estimated at Rs 5,000 crore and net working capital on closing estimated at Rs 550 crore will flow directly to RInfra. Total consideration value of the deal with the Gujarat-headquartered ATL was estimated at Rs 18,800 crore, which will include RInfra's integrated assets in power generation, transmission and distribution in Mumbai. With this transaction, the Anil Ambani-led RInfra would not only become debt-free but end up with a cash surplus of Rs 3,000 crore, said the spokesperson. --IANS qn/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) More pilgrims can now proceed for Haj this year as Indias quota of pilgrims has been hiked by 5,000 by Saudi Arabia, the government announced on Tuesday. The decision by Riyadh came days after Union Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi signed a bilateral annual agreement for Haj 2018 with Saudi Minister for Haj and Umrah Mohammad Saleh bin Taher Benten. Now, a total of 1.75 lakh Indian citizens can go for Haj. Last year, Saudi Arabia increased India's Haj quota by 35,000, the Minority Affairs Ministry said. Giving credit to the hike to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "growing popularity" and India's strengthened relations with Saudi Arabia, Naqvi said three years ago this quota was 1.36 lakh. Saudi Arabia has also given a nod to India's decision to revive the option of sending Haj pilgrims by sea. Officials from both countries will soon discuss all the necessary formalities and technicalities in this regard. About 3.55 lakh applications have been received for Haj 2018. The Haj Committee of India will finalise the names of those who can go this year for Haj through a lucky draw. However, around 1,300 Muslim women who have applied to go for the pilgrimage without a 'mehram' (male guardian) will be exempt from the lucky draw and all of them will be allowed to go, the Minister said. --IANS mak/ahm/mr (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Six women and two men were arrested on Monday on charges of running a sex racket from a spa here, police said. The accused women include three from Nepal. The accused were booked under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act and sent to judicial custody for 14 days by a district court, Sector 5 police station incharge Vivek Kundu told IANS. He said a woman from Nepal was operating the sex racket for the past few months from the spa situated near Bhagat Singh Chowk. Police said similar sex rackets had been busted earlier also. On December 10 last year, six women -- including one from Thailand and another from Kenya -- and a man were arrested on charge of involvement in flesh trade. --IANS pradeep/tsb/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Debt-ridden Electrosteel Steels on Tuesday said four companies- Tata Steel, Vedanta, Renaissance Steel India and Edelweiss Alternative Asset Advisors Pte -have submitted bids to its Resolution Professional, under the corporate insolvency resolution process in terms of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC). The company, which owes lenders Rs 11,309 crore, had been referred to the bankruptcy court by the State Bank of India (SBI) under Section 7 of the IBC following a nudge from the Reserve Bank of India. The RBI had asked banks to refer a dozen troubled companies to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). The company said the corporate insolvency resolution process, in terms of IBC, was commenced against it pursuant to the order dated July 21, 2017 passed by National Company Law Tribunal's (NCLT), Kolkata bench. The Resolution Professional had issued an expression of interest requesting prospective investors i.e. potential resolution applicants to submit their bids in relation to the corporate insolvency resolution of the company. As intimated by the RP, on close of business on January 4, four resolution plans werre received, the company said in a regulatory filing. It said the plans have been received from "Renaissance Steel India Private Ltd, Tata Steel Ltd, Vedanta Ltd and Edelweiss Alternative Asset Advisor Pte Ltd acting as the investment advisor of EISAF II and EC Holdings, with support of Edelweiss Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd". --IANS bdc/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) "The Shape Of Water", an American dark fantasy drama film directed by Guillermo del Toro, leads the nominations for the British Academy Film Awards 2018, to be hosted by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) with 12 nods. The nominations were announced here on Tuesday, according to a statement on the official BAFTA website. "Darkest Hour" and "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri" have both received nine nominations while "Blade Runner 2049" and "Dunkirk" have tied at eight. "I, Tonya" has received five nominations, "Call Me by Your Name" and "Phantom Thread" have four each and "Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool", "Lady Bird" and "Paddington 2" have been nominated in three categories each. Four other feature films have received one nomination each: "Molly's Game" for Adapted Screenplay, "War for the Planet of the Apes" for Special Visual Effects and "Victoria & Abdul" and "Wonder" both for Make-up and Hair. "The Shape of Water" is nominated for Best Film, Original Music, Cinematography, Production Design, Costume Design, Sound, Editing and Special Visual Effects. Toro, who won Best Director at the 75th Golden Globe Awards on Sunday, is nominated for both Director and Original Screenplay while Sally Hawkins is running for Leading Actress and Octavia Spencer for Supporting Actress. The nominations for Film Not in the English Language are "Elle", "First They Killed My Father", "The Handmaiden", "Loveless" and "The Salesman". In the Animated Film category, competitors are "Coco", "Loving Vincent" and "My Life as a Courgette". The nominations in the Documentary category are "City of Ghosts", "I Am Not Your Negro", "Icarus", "An Inconvenient Sequel" and "Jane". Daniel Kaluuya and Timothee Chalamet, both of whom are competing in the Leading Actor category, are also nominated for the EE Rising Star Award. Their fellow nominees are Tessa Thompson, Florence Pugh, and Josh O'Connor. This audience award is voted for by the British public and presented to an actress or actor who has demonstrated exceptional talent and has begun to capture the imagination of the public. The BAFTA Awards will be held on February 18 at the Royal Albert Hall, London. The ceremony will be hosted by Joanna Lumley. --IANS rb/mr (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Two militants were killed on Tuesday in a gunfight with security forces in Jammu and Kashmir's Anantnag district, triggering street protests in Kulgam to which one of the militants belonged resulting in the death of a civilian, police said. Personnel of the Army's Rashtriya Rifles, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and the Special Operations Group of the state police surrounded Larnoo village in Anantnag following a tip about the presence of some militants. "As the security forces closed in on the hiding militants, they were fired at, triggering the gunfight," a police officer said. "The victims were identified as Muhammad Furhan and Muhammad Farham, both locals." While Internet services were suspended in south Kashmir, there were protests in Kulgam's Khudwani village from where one of the militants hailed. As the news of the gunfight spread, a mob gathered and threw stones at the Army camp in the village, police said. "Reportedly, some militants from the mob also fired some shots towards the Army camp," an officer said. As troops fired back, two civilians received bullet injuries. Of them, Khalid Ahmed Dar, 22, who was shot in the neck, succumbed to his injury at the Kulgam district hospital, the officer said. The other injured, Yasir Ahmed Dar, 30, who was hit in the shoulder, is stated to be stable. In a separate incident, a civilian was injured after being hit by a BSF vehicle in Anantnag's Vessu area. The BSF driver and vehicle have been taken into custody with the help of BSF officials, the police said, adding all the cases are being investigated. --IANS sq/him/vd (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Versace family has reportedly not authorised the forthcoming TV series about the death of late Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace. The Versace family seems to be distancing itself from the upcoming Ryan Murphy-produced "The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story". Just hours before FX held a Los Angeles premiere for the second season of the hit anthology series, the family broke their silence on the show, reports variety.com. "The Versace family has neither authorised nor had any involvement whatsoever in the forthcoming TV series about the death of Mr. Gianni Versace. Since Versace did not authorise the book on which it is partly based nor it has taken part in the writing of the screenplay, this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction," read an official statement. What the family thinks about "The Assassination of Gianni Versace" seemingly didn't affect the relationship between the current Vice President of the Versace Group, as well as its chief designer, Donatella Versace, says Penelope Cruz, who plays her on the series. On January 7 at the 75th Annual Golden Globes Awards, Cruz said: "When Ryan told me, I said to him, 'This sounds really interesting, but I have to make this call and I have to talk to Donatella'. I called her and we spoke, like, for an hour. I needed that conversation to say 'yes'. "It was a conversation where, I cannot share everything we talked about, but we have a good relationship." Based on the book "Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in US History" by Maureen Orth, the 10-episode second season will centre on the assassination of Gianni Versace in Miami in July 1997. Serial murderer Andrew, who killed five people that year, committed suicide eight days later on a house boat. The show stars Edgar Ramirez as Gianni Versace, Ricky Martin as Antonio D'Amico and Darren Criss as Andrew Cunanan. --IANS ks/rb/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) US President Donald Trump would welcome the chance to run against Oprah Winfrey in 2020 if she chooses to become a presidential candidate, the White House has said. "We welcome the challenge, whether it be Oprah Winfrey or anybody else," White House spokesman Hogan Gidley told reporters on Monday while travelling aboard Air Force One with the President to Tennessee. Gidley said Trump is "absolutely going to run for President again" and said his record would stack up against any opponent, the Hill magazine reported. "Regardless of who decides to run against this President, they are going to have to face a President who has record-setting achievements in a record-setting time," he said. Gidley said he did not know whether Trump had seen Winfrey's address on Sunday at the Golden Globes awards, which touched on sexual harassment and racial justice. Her remarks sparked talk on social media and in Hollywood that she could take on Trump in 2020 if he runs again. CNN reported that the former television host was "actively considering" a run, citing unnamed sources. Winfrey's longtime partner Steadman Graham told the Los Angeles Times "she would absolutely do it", but added that "it's up to the people". However, a source told NBC News that Oprah had no intention of running for the President. "It's not happening. She has no intention of running," the source said. Trump himself has praised Winfrey on several occasions, even once floating her as a possible vice presidential pick before his own official entry into . Winfrey is a longtime supporter of Democrats. She supported Barack Obama's presidential campaign in 2008 and endorsed Hillary Clinton in her 2016 run against Trump. --IANS soni/vm (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi High Court on Tuesday asked the city government why it has been providing free water and electricity to those who can afford it but not providing financial assistance to poor people suffering from AIDS. A division bench of acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C. Hari Shankar slammed the Delhi government on the issue and said: "Don't pretend to be doing social service when you are not doing." "People who own properties... you are giving them free water and electricity. They can afford it and don't need it (free things). Be realistic and reasonable. If you do not have money, then do not give things free to people," said the bench. The court's observation came on a PIL initiated by it after receiving a letter from an acquired immuno deficiency syndrome (AIDS) victim. The victim wrote a letter seeking enhancement of pension from Rs 1,000 to Rs 3,000. The bench questioned the basis of giving mere amount of Rs 1,000 per month to such people, saying the amount was not even Rs 100 per day. The court asked the Delhi government to consider providing them minimum wages because they were the ones who actually needed financial assistance as their families were dependent on them. After the Delhi government told the court that the issue was under consideration, it sought the outcome of the consideration and posted the matter for March 14, the next date of hearing. --IANS gt/nir/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) CPI-M General Secretary Sitaram Yechury on Tuesday said all opposition parties would be approached to fight the BJP jointly in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections. "We need a policy not a politician. We will ask all opposition parties to come together on the basis of alternative social and economic policies," he said, responding to queries about a possible coalition of non-BJP, non-NDA parties to jointly fight the BJP. Yechury was speaking to the media after he wrote a letter to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley seeking a rollback of the idea of electoral bonds, calling it a "regressive" move that would legalise money laundering. The CPI-M leader also condemned Delhi Police for not allowing Dalit leader and Gujarat MLA Jignesh Mevani to hold a march in Delhi, which he said was reflection of the BJP government's "undemocratic nature". "It is anti-Dalit posturing," Yechury said, adding there would be larger people's struggle in the coming days against high malnutrition rate, dip in the country's GDP rate and rise in unemployment. He said discontent related to governance and economy was being diverted to communal polarisation by the BJP. Yechury also targeted the government over India's foreign policy that he said had shifted in "a very big way" and the country was seen as "supplicant of US' global strategic interest". "It is distinct and vivid shift towards a pro-US foreign policy, which is very detrimental to India's interest. It is happening with climate change, WTO and other international treaties," he said. --IANS spk/sar/dg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Ten days into the New Year, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting has yet to release the Government of India wall for 2018. The gossip in the corridors of power is that the government is having second thoughts on releasing the Gregorian issued annually to officials in the ministry as it is not considered Indian. Every year the Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity releases and circulates the . The action of filing an FIR against the staff reporter of The Tribune over a story that exposed security breach in Aadhaar is arbitrary and against press freedom. The government seems to ignore that investigative journalists have to work under strenuous circumstances to bring out the truth. It is not for the first time that the Modi government has been targeting the media. The writer, publisher and editor of Lankesh Patrike, Gauri Lankesh, was shot dead at her house in Bengaluru. Media organisations that dared to speak the truth have been hounded. In this instance, the reporter needs to be appreciated for doing her duty courageously. Instead, action should have been taken against the person responsible for the data leak. Highlighting how job creation in India is at an eight-year-low, Congress President on Monday said the two threats facing India under the Narendra Modi government are inability to create jobs and the rise in the forces of hatred and division. Addressing the Indian diaspora in Bahrain here, he said: "Tragically the conversation in our country today is not about jobs, healthcare or education. The only thing India talks about is what you are allowed to eat, who is allowed to protest and what we can say or rather what we cannot say." "India today is free, but once again it is under threat. There are two clear threats facing our country today. The first is our government's inability to provide jobs for our people. Our main competitor China produces 50,000 jobs every 24 hours. India currently produces 400 jobs in the same amount of time." "It is an important figure. What China does in two days, it takes India one year to do. These are not my figures, these are figures of the government of India given in the Parliament. Job creation in India is at an eight-year-low," Gandhi said in his address at an event organised by Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin. "New investments have been lowest in 13 years. Bank credit growth has sunk to a 63-year low. To make matters worse, many in the Indian diaspora have lost hard-earned money because of arbitrary decisions like demonetisation. It landed a crippling blow to India's overall economic growth. The fact is that India can simply not afford this," he added. Underlining India was the second-most populous country with 30,000 new youngsters coming daily into India's job market, he said that not providing education and jobs to these youngsters was "a recipe for disaster". "The government's failure in creating jobs is resulting in tremendous anger and unrest in India. The youth are asking a very simple question, what are we going to do in future. This anger is visible in the streets and is rising rapidly," he said, adding the "tragedy" is that instead of focusing on what are critical issues like poverty alleviation, job creation and building a world-class education system, "we see instead rise in the forces of hatred and division". Gandhi also said that activists and journalists are threatened in India. "They are shot dead for expressing their views. People are killed because of their religious beliefs, Dalits are beaten into submission, judges investigating sensitive cases die under mysterious circumstances. And through all this, the government has nothing to say." Claiming India has been taken off its path of progress, he said: "We need to bring our conversation back from violence and hatred to one of progress, jobs, and love between our people. And we cannot do that at home without our largest skill base on the planet - all you people in this room." "Together, we must steer India back to its original strengths, we need to make India the centrepiece of ahimsa, of non-violence, of compassion." He also said that he was in Bahrain for a purpose and that is "to tell you what you mean to your country". "That you are important. To tell you that there is a serious problem at home, to tell you that you are part of the solution and that I am here to build the bridge between your world and home," he added. The Narendra Modi government poses a "threat" to the country's democracy and Constitution, Dalit leader said on Tuesday at a youth rally for which the Delhi Police had refused permission. The newly-elected MLA from Vadgam in Gujarat termed the refusal to grant permission to the 'Yuva Hunkar' rally in Parliament Street an example of the "Gujarat model" of . "The 125 crore people of this country are watching that someone is not being allowed to speak for merely demanding the release of Chandrashekhar Azad, effective implementation of the Constitution and two crore jobs to the youth. "If an elected representative does not have the right to do so, then this is Gujarat model," Mevani said to loud cheers from a crowd comprising student activists from Delhi, Lucknow and Allahabad among other places. The rally -- held in Parliament Street in the heart of the capital where prohibitory orders are in force through the year -- was demanding the release of Dalit outfit Bhim Army founder Chandrashekhar Azad. The gathering also sought to emphasise issues like educational rights, employment, livelihood and gender justice. Mevani said he will stand guard against the of hatred and stick to constitutional values and the " of love", along the lines of statements made by Congress President Rahul Gandhi after the Gujarat polls. "I believe in politics of unity. I believe in politics of love, not love jihad. Alpesh Thakore, Hardik Patel and I are being targeted because we demolished their (BJP) pride and arrogance in Gujarat..There's a looming threat to our democracy and Constitution today," he said. Although authorities had maintained till the last minute that Mevani and his supporters did not have permission to hold the event, it seems the rally organisers and Delhi Police reached a compromise later. The rally, which began around 1 pm, saw a modest turnout. Former and current JNU student leaders, including Kanhaiya Kumar, Shehla Rashid and Umar Khalid were present on the stage, metres away from the Parliament Street Police Station. Assam farmers leader Akhil Gogoi and senior Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan were also present, apart from students from JNU, Delhi University, Lucknow University and Allahabad University among others. Azad (30) was arrested in June last year from Himachal Pradesh as he is the main accused in Thakur-Dalit clashes in Uttar Pradesh's Saharanpur district. His supporters turned up with posters bearing his image. In a significant development for Odisha politics, former president Pranab Mukherjee, senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader LK Advani, Communist Party of India (Marxist) chief Sitaram Yechury and a host of Opposition leaders are set to share stage at an event to release a pictorial biography of former Odisha chief minister in Bhubaneswar on January 27. Escalating the attack on his Uttar Pradesh counterpart Yogi Adityanath, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Monday dubbed him a "Jungle Raj" Chief Minister, as both were locked in a Twitter war that went viral. A day after Adityanath mocked at Siddaramaiah's assertion about his Hindu credentials, the Karnataka chief minister said the Hindutva he follows was the legacy of Swami Vivekananda and not Nathuram Godse, the assassin of Mahatma Gandhi. "Ours is a Hindutva that follows the legacy of Vivekananda, not Godse. Let Chief Minister read what Vivekanada has said before lecturing us about ban on cow slaughter," Siddaramaiah said in a tweet in Kannada. Speaking at the 'Nava Karnataka Parivartan Yatre' rally organised by the Karnataka unit of the BJP here on Sunday, the UP Chief Minister took a jibe at Siddaramaiah, saying he was only now recalling his Hindu roots. Siddaramaiah calls himself a Hindu just as Congress President Rahul Gandhi went to temple after temple during the Gujarat Assembly elections, he had claimed, adding that "calling himself a Hindu will not suffice till he continues to endorse eating beef." Assembly elections are due in Karnataka, early this year. This was the second such visit by Adityanath to the state in a month to campaign for the party. He had last visited to addresses a similar rally in Hubballi. Calling Adityanath "a Jungle Raj Chief Minister" while speaking to reporters at Byndoor in Udupi district on Monday, Siddaramaiah said "we need not learn from him." "We need not learn from them (BJP) about Hindutva, they are followers of Nathuram Godse, we need not learn from them," he said. The fresh salvo from Siddaramaiah came after both engaged in the Twitter war. Welcoming Adityanath to Bengaluru, Siddaramaiah tweeted that there's a lot he can learn from Karnataka to address the reported starvation deaths in his state. "I welcome UP CM Shri @myogiadityanath to our state. There is a lot you can learn from us Sir. When you are here please visit an Indira Canteen & a ration shop. It will help you address the starvation deaths sometimes reported from your state. #YogiInBengaluru," Siddaramaiah tweeted. I welcome UP CM Shri @myogiadityanath to our state. There is a lot you can learn from us Sir. When you are here please visit a Indira Canteen & a ration shop. It will help you address the starvation deaths sometimes reported from your state. #YogiInBengaluru https://t.co/lj0m4fMphC Siddaramaiah (@siddaramaiah) January 7, 2018 Adityanath promptly responded. Thanking Siddaramaiah for the welcome, he cited an increase in farmers' suicides and alleged ill-treatment of honest government officials under the Congress dispensation. He also pointed out that he was trying to "undo the misery" unleashed by Congress' allies in Uttar Pradesh. "Thank you for the welcome @siddaramaiah ji. I heard number of farmers committing suicide in Karnataka was highest in your regime, not to mention the numerous deaths and transfer of honest officers." "As UP CM I am working to undo the misery and lawlessness unleashed by your allies," Adityanath tweeted. Thank you for the welcome @siddaramaiah ji. I heard number of farmers committing suicide in Karnataka was highest in your regime, not to mention the numerous deaths and transfer of honest officers. As UP CM I am working to undo the misery and lawlessness unleashed by your allies. (@myogiadityanath) January 7, 2018 The "welcome" barb between both the chief ministers has gone viral, with supporters of political parties they represent taking sides and trolling each other with hashtags "#YogiInBengaluru" and "#HogappaYogi" (go Yogi). Adityanath also attacked Siddaramaiah personally for endorsing eating beef. In another tweet late on Monday evening, Siddaramaiah asked who the BJP people were to question food habits but added that he doesn't eat beef because he doesn't like it. Siddaramaiah said, "Who are these people to question our food habits. Many among the Hindus consume beef. If I want to eat, I will eat. Who are these people to tell me not to eat. But I don't like beef, so I don't eat it." He also said he had reared cows and asked whether Adityanath who lectures about cow protection had done the same. "What moral right does he have to speak about cow protection." A Hizbul Mujahideen terrorist was killed while five other militants were believed to have escaped during an encounter in South Kashmir's Anantnag district, officials said. The body of the militant, identified as Farhan Ahmad Wani, was handed over to his parents for burial in Khudwani village on the border of Kulgam and Shopian where villagers were already agitating over the death of a person killed in a road accident involving a para-military vehicle. Wani's death agitated the crowd further and it started pelting stones at a nearby Army camp, officials said. They said the Army started firing in the air initially but had to aim at the crowd when jawans claimed to have been fired upon from the other side, the officials said. Two persons received bullet injuries with one of them succumbing to his injuries at the hospital, they said. The deceased has been identified as 22-year-old Khalid Dar. Giving details of the encounter, the officials said that there was an intelligence input that militants from Hizbul Mujahideen and Lashker-e-Taiba had gathered in Pehlipora village in Larnoo, Kokernag. One militant was killed while five others were believed to have managed to escape, the officials said. A police spokesperson also confirmed that a "Hizbul Mujahideen terrorist" had been killed in the encounter in Kokerenag. Earlier, the police and the Army had claimed to have killed two militants in the encounter. Director General of Police S P Vaid and the Srinagar- based Chinar Corps of the Army had tweeted that two militants were killed there. The police spokesperson said that the police along with the Army and the CRPF cordoned the area and launched a search operation in Pehlipora village after getting information about the presence of militants there. "During the searches, terrorist hiding in the area fired upon the joint search team. The fire was retaliated," he said. "One terrorist was killed in the encounter who was identified as Farhan Ahmad Wani, a resident of Redwani- Khudwani in Kulgam district," he said. The spokesperson said one INSAS rifle, two magazines and 42 rounds were recovered from the encounter site. Wani was a "hardcore stone pelter" and an FIR was registered against him under different sections of the Jammu and Kashmir State Ranbir Penal Code. He was also involved in many anti-national and unlawful activities, the spokesperson said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Fourteen Naxals were arrested from two districts of the insurgency-hit Bastar division of Chhattisgarh today, police said. While nine rebels were arrested in Sukma district, five were picked up in Narayanpur district. A joint team of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and the District Force of police was out on a search operation under the limits of Bhejji police station in Sukma when it rounded up eight Naxals, Sukma Additional Superintendent of Police Jitendra Shukla told PTI. Of them, Madvi Manish (27) was active as Jan-Militia deputy commander, Madvi Hunga (24) as head of the Dandakaranya Adivasi Kisan Majdoor Sangthan (DAKMS)-- a front organisation of Maoists -- and Podiyam Ganga (34) as deputy head of DAKMS, he said. Rest of the arrested cadres -- Madvi Hidma (19), Muchaki Kosa (19), Madvi Bheema (20), Madkam Aayta (26) and Madvi Baman (28) were active as members of Jan-Militia of Maoists and DAKMS groups, he added. All of them were allegedly involved in carrying out improvised explosive device (IED) blasts targeting the security forces and firing on police teams in Bhejji and Maraiguda areas of Sukma, Shukla said. Madkami Pandu (26) a Jan-Militia commander, was apprehended by another team from Kukanar police station limits of Sukma district, he added. Pandu was accused of carrying out a blast and opening fire on a police patrol team in the forests between Badegadam and Munga (Sukma) last week, the ASP said. No policeman was injured in the firing. Elsewhere, five lower-rung Naxals were arrested from Edka police station limits in Narayanpur district, said a police official. They were accused of helping the rebels arrange meetings in villages, spreading Naxal propaganda and transporting commodities for them, he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Synod of Kerala-based Syro-Malabar Church today constituted a five member committee of bishops to study the controversial land deal in Ernakulam-Angamaly archdiocese, in which the Church allegedly suffered huge financial loss. The committee, headed by Archbishop Mathew Moolakkattu, will study the issue and find a solution to the problem, a Church spokesman said here. Bishops Jacob Manathodath, Thomas Chakyat, George Madathikandathil and Antony Kariyil are the committee members. The committee has been authorised to hold necessary discussions and find a solution, the spokesman said. He said the Synod held 'serious discussions' on the issue of land deals in the Archdiocese. The Synod's move came after some priests and faithful accused Syro-Malabar Church head Cardinal George Alencherry, who is also the Archbishop of Ernakulam-Angamaly Archdiocese, of selling the prime land of the archdiocese here for "a very low price". They had alleged role of land mafia in the sale of land in a "non-transparent manner" violating even civil and canon laws. Supporters of the Cardinal had dubbed the charges against the chief priest as a 'misinformation campaign'. All India Catholic Almaya Forum had urged the priests to stop the campaign being carried out against the Cardinal. They had alleged that a handful of priests were trying to defame the Syro-Malabar Church, having over 55 lakhs followers and 35 dioceses. Presbyteral Council of the Ernakulam-Angamaly Archdiocese had shot off a letter to the Bishops to take up the issue in the Synod. The priests had alleged that a commission appointed by the Archbishop to enquire the land business had found that there have been serious violations of canon and civil laws. According to the priests,the commission found that revenue from the sale of 3.06 acres of the land in the city was expected to fetch Rs 27 crore as per the understanding, but officially only Rs nine crore had been shown as sale proceeds. They claimed thatRs 18 crore was shrouded inmystery and remained unaccounted. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Jammu and Kashmir government was providing ration at subsidised rates to more than 58 lakh individuals in the state, it informed the Legislative Assembly today. Replying to a question, Minister for Rural Development, Law and Justice Abdul Haq said the state government was providing ration to nearly 20 lakh individuals in the Kashmir region and to about 38 lakh individuals in the Jammu region. Haq responded to the question on behalf of Minister for Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs Choudhary Zulfikar Ali, who was not present in the House. He told the Assembly that more than 78,000 individuals in Noorabad constituency were receiving ration at subsidised rates under the Mufti Mohammad Sayeed Food Entitlement Scheme. Haq said the Union Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution had scrapped the subsidy on sugar in April last year, but the state government decided to provide sugar at subsidised rates to priority households. He said there was no proposal to provide sugar at subsidised rates to non-priority households. Legislators M Y Tarigami, Raja Manzoor, Mian Altaf, B A Dar, Sheikh Abdul Rashid 'Engineer' and Pawan Gupta raised supplementary questions and complained about shortage of ration, sugar and kerosene oil in their constituencies. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The 60-day long annual yatra to the holy cave shrine of Amarnath in South Kashmir Himalayas will commence on June 28, the shrine board said today. This year's yatra will be longer by 20 days against last year's 40 days. "The Board decided that a 60-day long Yatra would commence on June 28, on the auspicious day of Jyestha Purnima, as per Hindu Calendar, and, as per continuing tradition, conclude on Shravan Purnima (Raksha Bandhan) on August 26," a spokesman of Shri Amarnathji Shrine Board (SASB) said today. This was decided by Jammu and Kashmir Governor and chairman of the SASB, N N Vohra, who presided over the 34th meeting of the shrine board held in New Delhi. Governor Vohra presided over the meeting of the board to discuss implementation of the directions recently passed by National Green Tribunal (NGT) in regard to the conduct of Shri Amarnathji Yatra and to decide the further course of action. After deliberation, the board decided to file a review petition against the NGT's directions issued on December 13 and 14, 2017. The NGT on December 13, 2017, had declared the Amarnath cave shrine in south Kashmir Himalayas as a "silence zone" and prohibited religious offerings beyond the entry point. However, on December 14, the tribunal clarified that it has not imposed any restriction including on chanting of mantras and singing of bhajans inside the cave shrine, following protests over its decision. The NGT had said the only restriction imposed was that any devotee or any individual should maintain silence while standing in front of the "Amarnath Ji Maha Shivling", a natural formation in the cave. The board also decided that 7,500 Yatris per day on each of the two routes would be allowed to secure advance registration for the pilgrimage, the spokesman said, adding it excludes pligrims who would travel by helicopters. The advance registration of pilgrims will start begin on March 1, he said. The Board reviewed the action plan drawn up for the conduct of Yatra 2018, particularly the arrangements which are being made for providing medical care, sanitation facilities and installation of the railings at all vulnerable points along each of the two routes. Board members H H Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Kapila Vatsyayan, Ved Kumari Ghai, Bhajan Sopori, Vijay Dhar, Sunita Narain, Devi Prasad Shetty, D C Raina, Chander Mouli Raina, its Chief Executive Officer Umang Narula, Additional CEO Bhupinder Kumar and other senior officers took part in the meeting. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Punjab's Amarinder Singh government today extended its support to the protest by 'The Tribune' employees against filing of an FIR against the newspaper's journalist over a report on alleged breach of Aadhaar data. The Tribune employees union today staged a demonstration demanding revocation of the FIR, during which Cabinet minister Tript Rajinder Singh Bajwa, state Congress chief Sunil Jakhar and Media Advisor to the chief minister Raveen Thukral joined the protesters, said an official release here. Bajwa lashed out at the alleged "witch hunt" unleashed by the central government against 'The Tribune' reporter over her Aadhaar data breach report. Filing of FIR against 'The Tribune' reporter amounted to "sheer victimisation" and could not be condoned at any cost, he said, adding such acts were in violation of the democratic ethos and principles. Jakhar also lashed out at the Centre for the registration of the FIR against the scribe. Pointing out that the BJP had opposed Aadhaar when they were in the Opposition in the Centre, Jakhar said the Centre should plug the flaws in the Aadhaar system and ensure that privacy was safeguarded. The entire leakage episode should be investigated, he demanded. Jakhar accused the BJP-led government at the Centre of suppressing the voice of the media, and the people and said that this did not behove well of a democratically-elected government. "How can a journalist be prosecuted for doing her work, without malice," Bajwa and Jakhar asked, adding that the way the central government was stifling the voice of democratic institutions did not augur well for the country. All democratic forces should come together to fight this trend, which, if unchecked, would destroy the very fabric which holds the nation together, they said. Thukral conveyed Chief Minister Amarinder Singh's personal support to the agitating Tribune employees during a visit to their protest site here today. Though the chief minister could not meet them personally as he was indisposed, he had assured of his government's full backing to the media in the interest of "press freedom", Thukral told the protestors. "The chief minister was in favour of the central government plugging the Aadhaar leaks instead of putting the plug on the system which had exposed the loopholes," said Thukral, adding the Congress government in Punjab would do its best to fully protect the freedom of the fourth pillar of democracy. Thukral said he was personally shocked by the "act of persecution" and urged the Centre to withdraw the FIR and order a thorough investigation into the alleged leakage of Aadhar data. The Delhi Police has registered an "open-ended" First Information Report (FIR) on a complaint from Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) over the report on the alleged data breach of more than one billion Aadhaar numbers. The UIDAI's complaint sparked condemnation from the Confederation of Newspaper and Agency Employees' Organisations which demanded its withdrawal. Calling it an attack on the free press, the Confederation had said the UIDAI should highlight errors in the report, if any, instead of taking penal action. Though the complaint named four persons, including the Chandigarh-based daily The Tribune's reporter who had filed the story on alleged breach in Aadhaar database, Law and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad had said the FIR was against "unknown" entities. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A 14-year-old boy, who was abducted in December over a family feud, was rescued by a special investigation team of police from Ghocho toil, Shantinagar in adjoining Simdega district today, police said. The boy, Piyush Kumar alias Anshu who was abducted on December 22, was found in shackles when police conducted a raid and rescued him, said DIG (South Chotanagpur range), Amol Venukant Homker. A case was registered under Khunti police station in this regard. Addressing a press conference here, Homkar said two abductors, identified as Shivanand Ram and Shivam Kumar, both residents of Simdega, were arrested with a country-made pistol. Five live cartridges, a car and a motorcycle used in the kidnapping were recovered from Simdega and Khunti districts along with desktop computer, pen drive, gas cylinder and shackles, he said. Anshu was abducted from Sahu Talab area under Khunti district. Homker said the motive of the abduction was a family feud. Without elaborating further, he said he had constituted a special team headed by the Khunti Superintendent of Police, Ashwini Kumar Sinha involving police officials of adjoining Gumla, Lohardaga, Simdega and Ranchi district to rescue the boy. The team had conducted raids in Khunti, Simdega, Lohardaga,of Jharkhand and also in Rourkela (Odisha) and Delhi to trace the kidnapped boy, he said adding that in course of the raids, the team has arrested Shivanand from Khunti district. Shivanand confessed his involvement in the crime and also disclosed the names of his accomplices, Homker said. Homker appreciated the co-operation of the police officials of other districts including Superintendent of Police, Simdega, Deepak Kumar Sinha in the operation. DIG said he would recommend the names of policemen involved in the successful operation for cash award. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Maldivian Foreign Minister Mohamed Asim will be on a three-day visit to India from tomorrow during which he will hold talks with his Indian counterpart Sushma Swaraj and discuss key bilateral issues. Asim will also call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and meet Swaraj on Thursday, the external affairs ministry said today. The visit of Asim, who is also Maldivian president's special envoy to India, comes amidst reported strain in bilateral ties over a number of issues, including signing of an FTA between the Maldives and China. On reports of Maldives signing a free trade agreement with China, the Ministry of External Affairs had said last month that India expects that as a close and friendly neighbour, the island nation will be sensitive to its concerns in keeping with its 'India First' policy. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Ankara today renamed the street in the Turkish capital where the United Arab Emirates' embassy is located after an Ottoman governor, in a symbolic riposte to Abu Dhabi following weeks of tensions. UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan retweeted a post on Twitter last month which accused Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's "ancestors of kidnapping people of Medina in the early 20th century." The post by a user called "Ali al-Iraqi" also claimed that Fahreddin Pasha -- the Ottoman governor of Medina from 1916 to 1919 -- stole from the people of the sacred Islamic pilgrimage city. Medina, home to the Prophet's Mosque which as the burial place of the prophet Mohammed is the second holiest site in Islam, was then part of the Ottoman Empire and now a major city in modern Saudi Arabia. Erdogan hit back at the Emirati minister, telling him to "know your place" and that the claims were "slanderous" to the memory of Turkey's Ottoman predecessors. He later said the minister was "ill-bred" and "too spoilt by oil and money", in a reference to the UAE's rapid growth in recent decades. Ankara mayor Mustafa Tuna said late Monday that 613 Street would be renamed "Fahreddin Pasha" while the nearby avenue would be renamed "Medina Defender" instead of 609 Avenue. The decision, mooted last month, was approved by the Ankara municipality assembly on Monday. "Henceforth, the mailing address of the embassy will be Medina Defender Avenue, Fahreddin Pasha Street. Good luck with it," Tuna said in a tweet. Turkish television early Tuesday showed city workers switching the signs. Relations between the UAE and Turkey have been marked by distrust in recent months. Ankara supports Qatar in the seven-month standoff with the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt which cut all ties with the Gulf emirate on June 5. Those Gulf states claim that Qatar supports Islamist extremists and is too close to Shiite Iran, Riyadh's arch- rival. Ankara rejects the charges. Turkey summoned the Emirati charge d'affaires in Ankara last month -- as the ambassador was temporarily absent -- to complain about the social media posting. The Turkish leadership has been wary of criticising Saudi Arabia and its powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a close ally of the UAE, in the standoff. But pro-government media have been bitterly critical of Riyadh's policies, claiming they are part of a US-backed move to reshape the Middle East. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Anti-tobacco advocates of Assam today welcomed the Supreme Court's stay order on retaining the 85 per cent pictorial warning on packets of tobacco products. The Supreme Court yesterday stayed the Karnataka High Court order quashing the 2014 government regulation that packets of tobacco products must carry pictorial warning covering 85 per cent of the packaging space. "Pictorial health warnings on tobacco products are the most cost-effective tool for educating on the health risks of tobacco use," Executive Secretary of Voluntary Health Association of Assam Ruchira Neog said here today. Implementing 85 per cent pictorial warning was a landmark step taken by the Government of India and "We welcome the Supreme Court's decision to retain 85 per cent pictorial health warnings on tobacco products," she said. In a country like India, where people use several languages and dialects, pictorial warning transcends both the language and the illiteracy barrier, Neog added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Army chief General Bipin Rawat today called on President Ram Nath Kovind at the Rashtrapati Bhavan. Officials said it was a courtesy call ahead of the Army Day on January 15. The president, being the supreme commander of the armed forces, will be the guest of honour at the 'At Home' function hosted by the Army chief. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Assam Governor Prof Jagdish Mukhi today visited Hojai district and reviewed developmental works and law and order situation in the district. The governor held a meeting with Deputy Commissioner Dr S Lakshmanan and emphasised on ensuring the implementation of the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, an official release said. Mukhi said all offices and educational institutions should strictly adhere to cleanliness and devote at least one hour for cleaning their respective offices on the seventh day of each month. He also asked the Deputy Commissioner to inspect at least six institutions on that day so that citizens develop a sense of responsibility and a positive work environment is ensured. The Deputy Commissioner informed the governor that two municipal areas in the district have been declared open defecation free. Mukhi asked the Deputy Commissioner to fulfil the target of Ujjwala scheme and directed the District Agricultural Officer to encourage farmers for growing cash crops and enhance their income. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The iconinc Dakota DC-3 used by former Odisha chief minister Biju Patnaik to rescue former Indonesian Vice-President Muhammad Hatta and Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir from their enemies in 1947 would be brought to Odisha and converted into a museum. Patnaik's acumen as a pilot was recognised by the government of Indonesia, which honoured him with the title of 'Bhumi Putra. The Dakota is parked since 1947 at Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport in Kolkata, where Kalinga Airline set up by Biju Patnaik had its headquarters. We have written to the chief secretary of Odisha and they replied immediately saying they want to bring the aircraft back. Odisha government officials will visit the Kolkata airport and study its condition before shifting it, Airport Authority of India chairman Guruprasad Mohapatra, who was recently in the state, told reporters. Officials said the state government is in touch with the AAI and authorities of Netaji Subhas Bose International NSC Bose Airport in Kolkata on ways to shift the aircraft to Odisha. There are proposals to keep the 'Dakota' at the Biju Patnaik International Airport here, they said. "We are also considering to keep the Dakota aircraft on an open field near Biju Bhavan in Cuttack, the birth place of the legendary leader," Cuttack district collector Sushant Mohapatra told reporters here. Cuttack-Barabati MLA Debasis Samantray said the government would convert the aircraft into a museum so that people can enter it and see the daredevilry of the leader, who is fondly called 'Biju Babu' and even after two decades of his death occupies the imagination of the people. Biju Patnaik, who also piloted the first plane that left Palam Airport at Delhi on October 27, 1947 and landed at Srinagar Airport in the early morning and brought back 17 soldiers of 1-Sikh regiment, had formed the Kalinga Airline that year. The airline had 15 Dakota planes parked in its headquarters in Kolkata were were mainly used by the army for transportation of jawans deployed in Kashmir. Kalinga Airlines DC-3s were also used to drop supplies in the north-eastern region of the country, said Anil Dhir, a researcher. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Aditya Birla Group Chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla today discussed investment opportunities with Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath here. The Chief Minister extended invitation to Birla for the state's Investors Summit, to be held in February here, and also presented the logo of Prayag Kumbh-2019 to him, according to an official statement. It said the discussions were held on the possibilities of the investments in the state during the meeting at Adityanath's official residence. The Chief Minister apprised Birla on the facilities being extended for setting up business in the state and informed him as to how the government has strengthened the infrastructure, while improving the law and order situation. He said sector-wise policies have been implemented in the state including the ones for industrial investment and employment generation. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The opposition Congress in Chhattisgarh has swung into election mode and invited suggestions from people to prepare its manifesto for the state Assembly polls due later this year. The state Congress Legislature Party leader, T S Singhdeo, has appealed to people from all sections of the society, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and intellectuals to send their suggestions and recommendations for the party's manifesto. "The manifesto is prepared for the common people and it is necessary to know their demands andwhat they feel needs to be done for the state's development," Singhdeo told PTI. He said the public and social organisations have a better understanding of the ground situation and their suggestions and recommendations can help in making an effective policy. People can share their opinions personally or through the party platform. For the purpose, a web portal has been created where people can post their suggestions. Besides, they can also put up their ideas on WhatsApp, he said. An office has been set up to monitor the process and suggestions will be classified based on each department of the government. Later, the suggestions will be shortlisted for inclusion in the manifesto, considering all the segments, he added. Singhdeo said they have also invited suggestions from within the party. The district and block Congress committees have been asked to take the initiative in this regard. The party leadership will meet the Congress workers and people in all the districts of the state to discuss the poll agenda, he said. TheCongresswas voted out ofpower in Chhattisgarhin the 2003 Assembly polls. Since then, it is struggling to make a comeback in the state, which is presently ruled by the BJP. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The CBI has arrested an official of the Central Board of Excise and Customs posted at the finance ministry, North Block, here, and another attached with the GST office in Mumbai, for alleged bribery in the processing of a service matter, officials said here today. Ashish Thakur posted as assistant section officer in the administration section of the CBEC office in the finance ministry here and S K Swaminathan, Superintendent of Central Excise and Customs posted in GST, Mumbai office, were arrested in the case, they said. Another Mumbai-based person Ravindra Kumar Mandal has also been nabbed in the case, they said. Swaminathan had approached Thakur for favourable consideration of file pertaining to his promotion to the post of assistant commissioner that was pending because of certain ongoing disciplinary proceedings against him, the CBI FIR has alleged. Thakur allegedly assured Swaminathan he would favourably process his file in return of considerable illegal gratification, it said. He also gave contact number of Mandal for the delivery of the alleged bribe, it alleged. Swminathan approached Mandal and spoke to Thakur over phone who demanded an amount of "50" from him assuring the promotion file would be processed favourably and an order issued shortly, it alleged. The CBI alleged that Swaminathan agreed to pay half the amount initially and remaining after the order was issued. The agency got input that Mandal was going to despite the alleged bribe in the account of Thakur on Monday evening following which all the three were nabbed, the officials said. While Swaminathan and Mandal were arrested from Mumbai, Thakur was arrested from here. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The CBI has taken over the investigation into the murder of the brother of DMK leader and former Tamil Nadu minister K N Nehru in 2012, officials said today. The development comes after the Madras High Court handed over the probe to the central agency in November last year rejecting the state CB-CID's plea for more time to crack the case. Justice A M Basheer Ahamed of the Madurai bench had allowed a plea by the wife of slain leader K N Ramajeyam, Latha Ramajeyam seeking CBI probe into the killing. The judge was critical of the CB-CID, saying it had been seeking adjournments without any progress in the investigation though five years had elapsed. Ramajeyam, 50, was found murdered on the banks of Cauvery river in his home town Tiruchirappalli after he went for a morning walk on March 29, 2012. He was found gagged and his hands and legs were tied. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The West Bengal government has decided to install CCTV cameras in university campuses in the state to ensure safety and security of students as well as teaching and non-teaching staff members. "We have asked the universities to install CCTVs in the campus," state Minister Partha Chatterjee told reporters at the state secretariat today. Asked whether the department would instruct colleges also to do the same, Chatterjee said, "We are discussing with the colleges regarding installing CCTVs." Staff members of a couple of colleges in the city were recently heckled by the students. The minister said currently there is no plan to install CCTVs in schools in the state. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A Chinese court has jailed two people for life for their roles in a 15.6 billion yuan ($2.4 billion) pyramid scheme which swindled some 200,000 investors, state media said today. A court in the eastern city of Hangzhou on Monday convicted Huang Dingfang and Cai Keyi of fraud, Xinhua agency said. Hang set up Longyan E-commerce Co. Ltd. in January 2015 and worked with another company owned by Cai to cheat the investors out of 15.6 billion yuan, the court said. They promised annual returns of more than 250 percent if investors became members by paying 4,000 yuan each and then bought shares. The pair also set up a third firm to sell shares and promised that the company would go public in the United States, Xinhua said. Ding Wenping, chief financial officer of Longyan E- commerce, and Sun Shijia, its president, were jailed for 12 and 10 years respectively. Seventeen others were given sentences of up to nine years. The court also ordered the 21 defendants to return 5.7 billion yuan to more than 170,000 investors. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Central Information Commission has pulled up an RTI applicant for seeking answers to "inane" medical science queries saying it was a "misuse" of the act to harass public officials. The case pertains to Suraj Prakash who had approached AIIMS, ILBS, GB Pant Hospital, PGIMER, Chandigarh, and National Organ and Tissue transplant organisation at Safdarjung hospital here. When the appeal filed by G B Pant Hospital came before the Central Information Commission, Information Commissioner Yashovardhan Azad termed it as misuse of the RTI Act. The applicant had sought to know from the premier institutes the definitions (as per King's College, London criteria), symptoms, causes, treatment, precautions monitoring 18 complex medical conditions related to liver transplant, Pneumonitis Sepsis, Small For Size syndrome, Ischemic Necrosis of liver, bile duct dilation, portal vein thrombosis etc. He had also sought to know information on handling of liver transplant patients, technical causes of conditions developing after that, waiting period criteria for the patients among others. During the hearing before the CIC, noted RTI activist Subhash Agrawal represented the G B Pant hospital to argue against the disclosure of the information as it was available in medical journals and the application seemed like abuse of the RTI Act. "These are academic queries, to be studied from medical books and journals, not information as envisaged under Section 2(f) of the RTI Act," Azad said while agreeing with the contention of Agrawal. Azad said seeking these information through an RTI application actually is a abuse of the process of law and if such a request is allowed, the day will not be far when information from any textbook will be sought to be answered by filing an RTI application. "Clearly, that was neither the Legislative intent nor purpose behind the enactment of the RTI Act aimed at transparency and establishing a practical regime of disbursement of information," Azad said. He said simply because the RTI Act does not mandate any reason to be furnished by the information seeker to state his intent behind the RTI application, does not grant the citizen the liberty to misuse the act to "harass" the public officials with inane queries. Dismissing the application, Azad warned the applicant to be careful in future and refrain from abusing the RTI Act "as a weapon or toy at his whims and fancies. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Union minister Jayant Sinha today gave an ultimatum to Air Deccan to start operations under the 'Udaan' scheme on Jamshedpur-Kolkata route by February 15, saying a new bidder would be selected if the low-cost airline fails to meet the deadline. Air Deccan was to commence operations on Jamshedpur- Kolkata route by September 30 last year. The Union minister of state for civil aviation said the carrier did not have the 19-seater aircraft required for the flight service and had to import the aircraft, recruit pilots and other crew members, which caused the delay. "We have given them the last chance to start the service from February 15. And we will allot it to some other aviation company if they fail to meet the deadline," he told reporters. India's first low-cost carrier Air Deccan, which had ceased operations after it was acquired by the erstwhile Kingfisher Airlines in 2008, took wings again as a commuter airline on December 23 with its maiden flight taking off from Mumbai for Jalgaon. Sinha said the steel city Jamshedpur is an important industrial and business centre, and flight service is required to improve air connectivity. He was here to participate in the 'City Data for India Conclave 2018' organised jointly by Tata Steel, Tata Trust and Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). Referring to the 'Udaan' scheme, he said applications for Bokaro/Dhanbad-Kolkata and Ranchi-Dumka air services have been received during the second round of bidding. Operations on these routes are likely to be launched in five to six months, Sinha said, adding that more cities such as Daltongunj and Hazaribag would be linked to flight services. Besides, the government has plans to expand the helipad in Jharkhand to promote spiritual tourism and link religious places with air services, he said. Sinha, who was in the city to also inspect the proposed site for a new airport at Dalbhumgarh in Ghatsila sub-division of East Singhbhum district and feasibility for expansion of Tata Steel's Sonari Aerodrum, said the construction of the airport would begin by the end of next year. The land acquisition process for the greenfield airport has already begun and "we will establish a runway and a terminal at an investment of Rs 200-250 crore in the first phase," he said. About 150 acres of land has been identified for the project, Sinha said. The minister said a new airport would also be constructed at Nagwa in Hazaribag district, where 200 acres of land has been identified. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A day-long national conference was today organised to brainstorm about ethical use of animals in academics and regulatory testing in India. The Committee for the Purpose of Control And Supervision of Experiments on Animals (CPCSEA) under the ministry organised the conference with the theme - "Implementation of 3Rs (Replacement, Reduction and Refinement) while using animals in academic research and regulatory testing in India". "The conference deliberated upon elaborating the understanding of animal use in academics, as well as regulatory testing and evaluating the use of alternatives, wherever animals can be exempted from testing. "It also included brainstorming sessions in the form of panel discussions, which had eminent scientists working with animals, versus those working in the field of alternatives," an official statement said. The discussions were focused on evaluating the possibilities of exemption of animal experiments in academics and regulatory testing. Eminent speakers including National Institute of Animal Biotechnology Director Subeer Majumdar participated in it among others. The CPCSEA is mandated to alleviate pain and suffering to the laboratory animals before, during or after the performance of experiments on them. The committee is trying to find appropriate alternatives to the use of animals in experiments in India, the statement added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Congress today contested Prime Minister Narendra Modi's claim of a "record" foreign direct investment (FDI) into the country last year, saying it was far from the truth and that the FDI has been the lowest in 13 years in 2017. Congress leader Raj Babbar also said Modi should have talked about the "poor state" of the economy as well. "The prime minister today said fresh investment in the country has been the highest. This seems an incomplete truth...it would have been better had he told (the PIOs) that investment (made in the country) has been the lowest in last 13 years," Babbar told reporters. Earlier today, addressing the first PIO-Parliamentarians Conference here, Modi said, "India is changing, India is transforming. India has moved far ahead...A record USD 60 billion FDI came into the country last year." Babbar said the prime minister should have told the Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs) that fresh investment in 2014, during the UPA government of Manmohan Singh, was Rs 16.2 lakh crore and it came down to Rs 7.9 lakh crore in 2017. "It would have been better had the prime minister put forth all the statistics (relating to the economy)," he said. Babbar also said it would have been better had Modi talked about the "poor state" of the economy. This would have helped as the PIOs would have worked for taking the country forward, he added. The Congress leader claimed growth in the manufacturing sector has also come down and unemployment has increased. He claimed there was a slowdown in the country's real estate and the manufacturing sectors. On Congress president Rahul Gandhi's Bahrain visit, Babbar said he was trying to unify people. He, however, did not comment on the Supreme Court's decision on playing national anthem in cinema halls, but accused the government of adopting "diversionary tactics". (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The lawyer of Cyrus Mistry, the ousted chairperson of Tata Sons, today told the NCLT here that the Nano car project and the holding company's decision to grant concessions to business acquaintances that resulted in major losses were prime examples of "mismanagement" at the Tata group. Two firms controlled by Cyrus Mistry's family have moved the National Company Law Tribunal against the Tata group, alleging oppression of minority shareholders and mismanagement. Senior advocate C Aryam Sundaram, Mistry's lawyer, said the Tata group's practice of funding without proper risk assessment, particularly in the case of Nano, resulted in liabilities worth thousands of crores of rupees. The fact that the Nano project continued after Mistry's removal -- when the board of Tata Motors had unanimously decided to discontinue the production of the loss-making car in early 2016 -- just for "emotional reasons" highlighted the mismanagement, he said. "The continuation of the Nano project and the reversal of the Tata Motor board's decision after Mistry's removal is a clear example of interference by the majority shareholders and the nominee trustees of Tata Sons," Sundaram argued. Sundaram also alleged that Tata Sons extended undue favours and concessions to Chennai-based businessman and Aircel founder C Sivasankaran. The Sivasankaran-owned Sterling was given shares in Tata Teleservices at a discounted price and several favours were extended to him at the behest of Ratan Tata, he said. "The largesse given to Siva ranged from management contracts and shares being allotted at a huge discount," he said. When Mistry decided to introduce a proposal to litigate against the Siva group to recover the Rs 694 crore it owed to Tata Sons, the latter's board agreed unanimously. However, at the very next board meeting, he (Mistry) was removed as the chairman, the lawyer said. Mistry is locked in a legal battle with the Tatas since his unceremonious exit as chairman of Tata Sons -- the promoter company of the USD 105 billion car-to-software group -- in October 2016. Cyrus Investments and Sterling Investments Corporation moved the NCLT against Tata Sons after Mistry's ouster, alleging oppression of minority shareholders and mismanagement. Mistry has sought safeguards to protect the interests of minority shareholders. While Sundaram will continue his arguments tomorrow, the Tatas are likely to put forth their plea from January 11. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A controversial columnist whose appointment to Britain's universities regulator sparked widespread protest announced his resignation today, a day after a shambolic cabinet reshuffle. Toby Young said his position had "become a distraction" for the work of the Office for Students after his appointment to the watchdog's board sparked criticism in parliament. Critics of the appointment have highlighted multiple derogatory comments made by Young on social media in the past about women, gay people, and the disabled. Writing in The Spectator, Young said the "caricature" drawn of him over the past week was "unrecognisable", while acknowledging his earlier comments were wrong. "Some of the things I said before I got involved in education, when I was a journalistic provocateur, were either ill-judged or just plain wrong -- and I unreservedly apologise," he wrote. An online petition calling for his sacking gathered nearly 220,000 signatures before Young announced his resignation. MP Robert Halfon, chair of the parliamentary education committee, criticised Young's articles about the working class and "what he calls progressive eugenics". "Now, I find this incredibly dark and very dangerous stuff," said the lawmaker from the ruling Conservative party, during a parliamentary debate on Monday. Dawn Butler, shadow equalities minister, said she was "flabbergasted" by the appointment. "If boasting of masturbating over pictures of dying and starving children is caustic wit, then I have most definitely lost my sense of humour," the Labour MP said. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson had come to Young's defence last week, writing on Twitter: "Ridiculous outcry over Toby Young. He will bring independence, rigour and caustic wit. Ideal man for job." Prime Minister Theresa May on Sunday said although she had not known of Young's history, he could stay in the post as long as he did not repeat such comments. Shadow education minister Angela Rayner said the episode "has cast great doubt on the judgement of the PM (prime minister) who failed to sack him in the first place," tweeting on Tuesday. Young's resignation is a further blow to May's authority, coming a day after her cabinet reshuffle was marred by a ministerial resignation and last-minute changes. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A middle-aged constable in district was suspended today pending a departmental inquiry after it was revealed that he had married seven women over the last 28 years till 2014. The action was taken against the constable, currently attached to Manpada police station in Kalyan division, on a complaint lodged by a woman claiming to be one of his wives, a senior officer said today. The name of the constable is withheld since the inquiry is being conducted against him, he said. The officer said the matter came to light after the woman, who claimed to be the wife of the constable and currently working as a nurse in Ambernath, approached higher officials against her husband. During the inquiry, police found that the constable first married in 1986 and subsequently in 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998, 2007 and in 2014, the officer said. He said the woman who approached the police claimed that the policeman married her in 1992 and has cheated her by marrying other women. Police found that two out of seven 'wives' of the constable had died over a period of time. According to the officer, the women the constable married to hailed from in and around Thane. Police are now trying to find out the reason behind the constable 'marrying' multiple times and how he managed to keep the marriages secret. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A female flight attendant of Jet Airways and an agent, arrested by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) for allegedly trying to smuggle out foreign currency worth over Rs three crore, were today sent to judicial custody for two days. Metropolitan Magistrate (MM) Ritu Singh sent 25-year-old Deveshi Kulshreshtha and Amit Malhotra, 39, identified as an alleged hawala operator by the DRI, to jail after the agency requested the court that the accused be remanded to judicial custody for two weeks "for the time being". The court directed that the accused be produced on January 11 before the concerned magistrate. The agency told the court that the offence committed by them was cognisable and non-bailable and added that the investigation was pending. According to DRI, Kulshreshtha, part of a major global hawala syndicate, was intercepted by the agency officials when she was boarding a flight at Delhi's IGI Airport for Hong Kong yesterday. "During examination of her checked-in and hand baggage, USD 4,80,200 wrapped in aluminium foil, having a market value of Rs 3.25 crore, has been recovered," the agency said. "In her voluntary statement, she admitted the aforesaid recovery, seizure and other incriminating facts. She also inter-alia named No. 2 (Malhotra), hereinabove to be concerned with the smuggling of the recovered and seized foreign currency," the DRI said. It said the lady had carried foreign currency several times in the past at the behest of Malhotra, a Delhi-based hawala operator based in Vivek Vihar area here. It alleged that Malhotra was following a modus operandi of using crew members for smuggling of forex and had befriended the Jet Airways crew member six months ago during a flight to India. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A Tanzanian lawmaker of Indian- origin said today that he was deeply concerned over cow vigilantism in India, and claimed that it has become a "nasur" (canker sore) for the country. Salim Turky, a two-time lawmaker of the Tanzanian ruling party Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), said he has raised the issue with External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj. Part of the Tanzanian delegation, here to attend the First PIO-Parliamentary Conference, Turky was also one of the speakers at the day-long event. "We are proud of what Modi government is doing in the world and in the country. But one thing is not good for India and I call it as a 'nasur' and that is cow vigilantism," Turky said on the sidelines of the event. "We don't live in India, but in the news, specially the (electronic) media you find even the clips of people being killed, being provoked. This is like discrimination," he said. Turky's great-grandfather migrated to Tanzania from Gujarat's Kutch region. When asked why he did not raise the issue in the conference, he said that it would have "made the atmosphere bad". "I have raised the issue with External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj. She said these issues have been exaggerated," Turky claimed. His remarks come in the backdrop of incidents of violence allegedly committed by cow vigilantes in some states in the recent past. He drew a parallel to the albinos in his country, who are killed as their body parts are considered as lucky. Turky said the Tanzanian government came hard on those involved in killing of albinos. In 2015, Tanzania banned witch doctors in an attempt to curb a rising wave of attacks and murders of albinos whose body parts are prized for witchcraft. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A 34-year-old dalit woman was killed after she was allegedly raped at Dighi Purvi village under Sadar police station of Bihar's Vaishali district today. Sadar police station SHO Chitaranjan Thakur said that the deceased's husband Ramayan Das has lodged an FIR of rape-cum-murder with the police station. The incident occurred when the deceased had gone to attend call of nature in the morning, the SHO said adding that the family members started searching for her when she did not return home for long. After long search, the body was found from the sugarcane field, barely a few hundred meters away from her residence, the SHO said adding that it seems that the woman was stoned to death after being raped by criminals. The body has been sent to sadar hospital for post-mortem, he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Eighty people have been killed in Nigeria's central state of Benue since December 31 following clashes between cattle herders and farmers, said an emergency official today. "80 is the number we can say for now, the attacks have not stopped," Benue State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) executive secretary Emmanuel Shior told AFP. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A 17-year-old differently-abled girl was burnt to death here allegedly by the father and maternal uncle of a girl her brother had eloped with about a week ago, the police said today. Both the accused were arrested, a police official said. The girl was set on fire on Sunday night when she was alone at home. She succumbed to her burns while undergoing treatment yesterday, Nishatpura police station in-charge Chain Singh Raghuvanshi said. "In her dying statement, the girl named two persons -- Radha Mohan Agnihotri and Amit Tiwari -- who, she said, had set her afire after pouring petrol on her. Both the accused have been arrested," he said, adding that Tiwari was Agnihotri's brother-in-law. The deceased, who lived with her family, and the two accused were neighbours, Raghuvanshi said. On January 2, Agnihotri had filed a police complaint, alleging that the victim's 21-year-old brother had abducted his 17-year-old daughter the previous day. The police had lodged a case of abduction against the 21 -year-old man on the complaint of Agnihotri and launched a probe. Agnihotri and Tiwari were putting pressure on the victim to reveal her brother's whereabouts, Raghuvanshi said, adding that when the girl expressed her ignorance about it, the accused allegedly set her ablaze. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi government can provide free water and electricity to those who have roof over their heads but can't afford to pay monthly pension to the poor suffering from AIDS, the Delhi High Court said today. "Be realistic and reasonable. If you do not have money, then do not give things (like water and electricity) free to people," a bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C Hari Shankar said. It said that poor people who were suffering from acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), were the ones who actually needed financial assistance, as they had families dependent on them. The court said the amount of Rs 1,000, currently being paid per month to such people, was not even Rs 100 per day and asked the government to consider providing them minimum wages. The bench was hearing a PIL initiated by it after receiving a letter from an AIDS victim, seeking enhancement of the Rs 1,000 pension he received to Rs 3,000. Advocate Ajay Verma, appointed as amicus curiae by the court in the matter, told the bench that while states like Kerala and Gujarat had several schemes and benefits like free travel on public transport and access to subsidised food, Delhi had no such assistance to offer. The Delhi government's lawyer, Gautam Narayan, told the court that it was considering the issue. The bench then asked the government to place the outcome of its consideration before the court on the next date of hearing on March 14. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Directorate of Revenue Intelligence today claimed to have busted an international hawala racket after arresting two people, including a woman Jet Airways employee who was allegedly trying to smuggle out foreign currency worth over Rs 3 crore. The DRI officials intercepted the Jet Airways flight attendant when she had boarded a plane that was scheduled to take off for Hong Kong yesterday, the agency said in a statement. "During examination of her checked in and hand baggage, USD 4,80,200 wrapped in aluminium foil having a market value of Rs 3.25 crore, has been recovered," it said. During interrogation, it came to light that the woman was part of a major international hawala syndicate and has carried foreign currencies several times for a Delhi-based hawala operator, who was also arrested from here, it said. The employee was identified as Deveshi Kulshrestha and the alleged hawala operator as Amit Malhotra, a resident of Vivek Vihar area in Delhi, a senior DRI official said. He said Malhotra used crew members for smuggling foreign currency. The official claimed that Malhotra would collect money from some bullion dealers in Delhi and send it to select foreign destinations using a flight attendant. The money was being used for purchasing gold abroad and later sent to India illegally, the official said. Both Kulshrestha and Malhotra were produced before a designated court which remanded them to two days of judicial custody. They will be produced before a Metropolitan Magistrate on January 11. Malhotra had befriended Jet Airways crew six months ago during a flight to India, he said. The DRI has recovered Rs 3.3 lakh in cash, and foreign currencies of different countries worth USD 2,500, besides several incriminating materials from Malhtora, the official said. In a related development, Bombay Stock Exchange and National Stock Exchange have sought clarification from Jet Airways on the matter and the response from the airline is awaited. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The numbers of people listening to audio books, or those switching on a Kindle might be on the rise, but a strong tribe of readers who still like to hold a book, and sift through pages, continues to flourish. As many readers and publishers wonder about the future of books with the advent of e-books, publishers at the New Delhi World Book Fair are not just confident but are also encouraged by the number of book lovers thronging the Pragati Maidan grounds here. According to them, e-books and books cater to different markets and despite the growing number of e-book readers the older medium is still growing strong. "When e-books came into the market publishers were worried about the future of books and about finding buyers. But with time we realised it's just another medium and it has also helped us," Arun Maheshwari of Vani Prakashan told PTI. He said that e-books, audio books, hard bound or paperback all are distinct from each other and all of those have their own markets. Ashok Maheshwari of Rajkamal Prakashan said that people are still writing books because there is a continuous demand. Despite new mediums coming up, the old media retain their space, the sale does not get affected by it, he said. "The era of e-books and audio books will create its own space and market. If somebody is walking or is in a hurry, they would want to listen to an audio book or read an e-book. And when they want to read at leisure they would switch to a book. There is no competition between the two," Ashok said. According to Baldev Bhai Sharma, chairman-National Book Trust, NBT sold 12 lakh books in last one year. He said that it was more important that people read, not what medium they choose to read on. The book fair will come to an end on January 14. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Delhi High Court today reserved its decision on the bail plea of a middleman, arrested in the Election Commission bribery case allegedly involving AIADMK leader TTV Dhinakaran and others. "Judgement reserved," Justice Mukta Gupta said after concluding hearing the arguments on behalf of the alleged middleman, Sukesh Chandrashekar, and the Delhi Police which has opposed the grant of bail to him. The police argued that his conduct, even while in custody, had shown scant respect for the law and therefore, he should not be granted the relief. It told the court that three more cases have been registered against Chandrashekar while he was in custody and there are a total of 24 FIRs lodged against him. Referring to the new FIRs lodged against him while he was in custody, the prosecutor said while Chandrashekar was supposed to be taken by train, he was going by air along with nine policemen, all of whom have been dismissed from service. The lawyer also claimed that the accused had made a call to the trial court judge hearing the case, impersonating as a person from a Supreme Court judge's office and asked her to release him on bail. The call was traced to a constable's phone while Chandrashekar was in custody, the prosecutor alleged. Senior advocate Sudhir Nandrajog and advocate Anand Pandey, appearing for Chandrashekar, contended that the alleged main beneficiary, Dhinakaran, was already out on bail and the same relief was granted to the policemen. They said the other accused in the case, including Dhinakaran's close aide Mallikarjuna, as well as suspected hawala operators Nathu Singh and Lalit Kumar, were on bail. Chandrashekar, arrested on April 16 last year, has been denied bail once by the high court and thrice by the trial court. The high court had on June 15, 2017, rejected his bail plea on the ground that the police had seized a fake Rajya Sabha member ID card from his possession. A charge sheet was filed by the police before the trial court in the case on July 14, 2017, alleging that Dhinakaran and Chandrashekar had conspired to bribe Election Commission (EC) officials to get the 'two leaves' symbol for their party. The police has also included in the charge sheet allegations of forgery for purpose of cheating, using forged document as genuine, possessing a forged document, intending to use it as genuine and criminal conspiracy. Chandrashekar has also moved a separate plea in the high court alleging he was tortured despite an order not to subject him to violence inside the Tihar Jail where he is in custody. The claim was denied by the jail authorities, who said it was an "afterthought of the shrewd mind of the accused". Chandrashekar was arrested for allegedly taking money from Dhinakaran to bribe EC officials to get the AIADMK 'two leaves' symbol for the Sasikala faction in a by-election to the R K Nagar Assembly seat in Tamil Nadu. Dhinakaran, also chargesheeted by police, was arrested here on April 25 after four days of questioning for allegedly attempting to bribe EC officials for the symbol. The bypoll was necessitated by the death of Tamil Nadu CM J Jayalalithaa, who represented the assembly segment. The EC had frozen the AIADMK's symbol after the two factions -- one led by Dhinakaran's aunt Sasikala and the other by former chief minister O Panneerselvam -- staked a claim to it. Mallikarjuna was arrested for allegedly facilitating a Rs 50 crore deal between Dhinakaran and Chandrashekar. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The public health fraternity today lauded the Supreme Court's decision to retain the 85 per cent pictorial health warnings on tobacco products, saying it retained India's position as a global leader in tobacco control. The apex court had yesterday stayed the Karnataka High Court order, quashing the 2014 government regulation that packets of tobacco products must carry pictorial warning covering 85 per cent of the packaging space, saying that the "health of a citizen has primacy". "It is very reassuring that the Supreme Court has respected and upheld the health ministry's landmark decision of having 85 per cent pictorial health warnings on tobacco products. "This decision reiterates the Indian government's commitment to public health and retain India as a global leader in tobacco control," Harit Chaturvedi, chairman, surgical oncology, Max Health Care, Delhi said in a statement. India's current international ranking for package warnings is number three, as outlined in an October, 2016 Canadian Cancer Society Report -- Cigarette Package Health Warning International Status Report -- which ranked 205 countries. The entire world applauded this progressive step, the statement said. "The attorney general's statement in court that increasing the pack warnings to 85 per cent is one of the most progressive steps for public health by this government is a big support to tobacco control, which got its due credit from the court when it termed tobacco as destructive to public health," said Dr Vishal Rao, head and neck cancer surgeon and a member of the High-Powered Committee on Tobacco Control of the Karnataka government. The Karnataka High Court, on December 15 last year, had struck down the 2014 amendment rules that mandated the pictorial health warnings to cover 85 per cent of packaging space of tobacco products, holding that the rules unconstitutional as they violated the fundamental rights such as the right to equality and the right to trade. The statement said the recently released Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS) 2016-17 report by the health ministry had put to rest the apprehensions about the effectiveness of the warnings, since 62 per cent of cigarette smokers and 54 per cent of bidi smokers shared that they thought of quitting because of the 85 per cent pictorial warnings. Besides, 46 per cent of smokeless tobacco users also thought of quitting because of the warnings on smokeless tobacco products, it added. The 85 per cent pictorial warnings had resulted in 92 per cent adults (surveyed under GATS 2016-2017) believing that smoking caused serious illnesses and 96 per cent saying that the use of smokeless tobacco caused serious illnesses, the statement said. It added that according to a study supported by the health ministry and World Health Organisation (WHO) -- Economic Burden of Tobacco-Related Diseases in India -- the estimated total cost, attributable to tobacco use from all four diseases in India, amounted to a staggering Rs 1,04,500 crore in 2011. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Upset over a case of dacoity filed against his mother which he thought was false and casteist slurs, a 38-year-old man from the Pardhi tribe committed suicide at Hingoli in Marathwada region of Maharashtra, police said today. Before killing himself, Dilip Waman Pawar, the victim, shot a video on his cell phone in which he narrated his reasons for suicide. The video went viral on social media. Pawar allegedly hanged himself from a tree in front of his house in Kalgaon Shivar area of Hingoli on January 6. Pawar, a contract farmer who leased land from others for cultivating, was allegedly being harassed by some local persons, said a police officer. The Pardhi community was once branded as 'criminal' by the British. After Independence this classification was abolished, but the community leaders complain that it still carries the stigma and faces discrimination. Some local men had accosted Pawar a few days ago and accused his parents of stealing farm produce, the police officer said. They hurled casteist slurs at him and threatened to kill him and his family members besides implicating his school-going son in a false case, the officer said. An offence of 'dacoity' under section 395 of the Indian Penal Code was also registered against Pawar's parents, and his mother was arrested. According to Pawar, it was a false case, and upset over all this, he tried to end his life on January 6 first by consuming poison. He recorded his statement in a video on his cell phone. However, he survived the attempt. A few hours later, he hanged himself, the police officer said. "We have registered a case under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act and abetment of suicide against 11 persons," he said. "Police have registered a case. The investigation is on," Deputy Superintendent of Police Siddheshwar Bhore told PTI. "I have asked for case papers and also mobile (video) clipping from the victim's brother who is the complainant in the case," Bhore said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Staar Movies, owned by actor Prashanth's mother has moved the Madras High Court to restrain makers of Tamil film 'Thaanaa Serndha Kootam', starring popular film star Suriya, from releasing the movie. The firm sought to restrain makers of the film from releasing the film scheduled to hit theatres on January 12, before settling a dispute over remake rights. the petitioners submitted that Hindi film 'Special 26', starring Bollywood actor Akshay Kumar, was released in 2013.In August 2014, they signed an agreement, valid for three years with the film's makers Viacom 18,who also owned the copyright and obtained the rights to remake it in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada. In September 2016, Staar Movies assigned the right to remake the film in Tamil to RPP Film factory for Rs 1.5 crore. However, they failed to produce the remake within the stipulated one year period. The petitioner said they subsequently came to know that Studio Green was making the Tamil version, with Suriya in the lead role. They then approached Madras High Court, alleging that the remake was being made without their consent. However, a single judge, pointing out that the petitioner has approached the court at the 11th hour, seeking an injunction against the release, dismissed the petition. Aggrieved, Staar Movies filed the present appeal. The First Bench, comprising Chief Justice Indira Banerjee and Justice Abdul Quddhose, recorded the contentions of both parties and posted the appeal to January 10. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A minor fire broke out at a private hospital in the city's Ekbalpore area this evening but none was injured, Kolkata Police said. The fire broke out in the ophthalmology department of the hospital at around 6.15 p m and the handful of patients present rushed out to safety, the police said. Three fire tenders were pressed into service and the blaze was doused, the police said adding investigation into the incident is on. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Former Congress Minister Prem Sagar Aziz today joined the National Conference and was welcomed by the party working president Omar Abdullah here, a party spokesman said. Sagar had joined the Congress on May 12, 1972, and was elected as an MLA in 2002. He is a former minister and was considered a close associate of former deputy chief minister Mangat Ram Sharma. Welcoming Sagar in the party, Abdullah said the National Conference is the only and natural destination for all those who believe in single entity and a pluralistic identity of Jammu and Kashmir. "Sagar and his associates were the source of strength and they will be valued like the cadre of National Conference in steering out the state from prevailing morass," the former chief minister said. He lauded Sagar's contribution in serving the state in different capacities and expressed the hope that his joining would infuse new vigour among the cadre in Kathua district to serve the state and its people. Abdullah expressed concern over spurt in militancy and said it was worrisome that alienated young educated youths are increasingly resorting to militancy. "Instead of getting job letters, the educated youth feel lured to take guns in their hands, as they find their future bleak," he said. Referring to the recent suicide attacks on a CRPF camp in Pulwama and IED attack in Sopore, he said the rise in violence marks the failure of the PDP-BJP coalition government. "The New Year took off on a very grim note with CRPF and police personnel, besides civilians, getting killed in one after another incidents," he said. "The PDP-BJP (government) has produced more militants than ever before," he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) China's former military chief Gen Fang Fenghui, who till recently headed the world's largest army, will be prosecuted for corruption, state media reported today, becoming the latest top defence official to be netted in the anti-graft campaign launched by President Xi Jinping. Besides being head of the military till last year Gen Fang was a member of China's powerful Central Military Commission (CMC) headed by Xi. CMC is the overall high command of the 2.3 million-strong People's Liberation Army (PLA). He was under a cloud for sometime now. He was removed in August amid the 73-day Dokalam standoff with India. Fang has been transferred to the military prosecution authority on suspicion of bribery, state-run Xinhua agency reported today. The transfer was made after the approval of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC), the report said. Fang, 66, once the youngest commander of a PLA was described as an "opportunist" by military insiders, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported. Last November, his colleague Gen Zhang Yang, also a member of the CMC under Xi, committed suicide as he also faced an anti-graft probe. "Fang has close links to Zhang's superiors and subordinates because they were both proteges of disgraced former CMC vice-chairmen Guo Boxiong and Xu Caihou, with Fang being the most skillful opportunist, closely following Guo," the Post report said. "The investigation of Fang was announced so late because of the sudden suicide of Zhang. In order to decrease the impact of Zhang's death to the army's morale, Fang's case was put aside a while until now," the Post quoted officials as saying. Guo and Xu, who were Vice Chairmen of the CMC under previous president Hu Jintao, were accused of heavy corruption including selling top posts of the PLA to the highest bidder. Guo, 75, was sentenced to life imprisonment in July last year and Xu died of cancer at the age of 72 in 2015 while in custody and under investigation for graft. Zhang killed himself as CMC decided to hold "talks" with Zhang to investigate his involvement in the cases of Guo and Xu, two corrupt former CMC vice chairmen on Aug. 28, a CMC statement said after his suicide. Both Zhang and Fang were taken in for questioning and later had been kept under house arrest, the sources added. "Both Fang and Zhang were allowed to return home because they were all heavyweights in the military. But all their close attendants, including drivers and personal secretaries, were replaced," the report said. "Both Guo and Xu were proxies of former president Jiang Zemin, with Fang, Zhang and other senior military officers their accomplices," a Guangzhou-based military official told the daily. "Actually, they were brought down by an internal political struggle ahead of the five-yearly party congress (in October)," another official said. Both the generals were replaced before last October's once-in-five-years CPC Congress which endorsed a second five- year term for Xi, who also heads the military and the party. Since Xi took power in 2014, over 40 top generals have been either punished or sacked for corruption and other violations, marking one of the major shakeups in PLA history in recent years. Critics say that the anti-graft campaign also helped Xi consolidate his power in the military and the party. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Amid talk of spinning off gas marketing business of GAIL India Ltd into a separate company, Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan today said the state-run firm should focus on building natural gas pipelines as marketing can be done by "anyone". Refusing to confirm or deny reports of government mulling splitting GAIL into two, he said creating infrastructure to take environment friendly natural gas to uncovered parts, particularly eastern India, is a priority for the government. Incorporated in August 1984 by spinning off gas business of ONGC, GAIL (India) Ltd owns and operates about 11,000-km of natural gas pipelines in the country. It sells around 60 per cent of natural gas in the country. Several meetings have been held in the ministry on splitting GAIL by spinning off its marketing business into a separate company and selling it to a state-owned firm. "Nothing has been finalised yet but discussions are on," said a sources with direct knowledge of the development. Pradhan, on the other hand, said the government has been taking steps to make India a gas-based economy. As part of this plan, it has even provided budgetary support of Rs 5,176 crore, or 40 per cent of the project cost, for laying of a gas pipeline from Jagdishpur in Uttar Pradesh to West Bengal, Jharkhand and Odisha. "This is the first instance of government funding a project from its budget," he said. GAIL, he said, should focus on creating infrastructure that would help take natural gas to all parts of the country, especially eastern India which has so far been unconnected. "Marketing can be done by anyone," he said, responding to a question on whether government proposes to split the state- run company's pipeline and marketing businesses. Sources said the petroleum ministry has not been very happy with GAIL's performance in building pipeline network. Besides, there is a possible conflict of interest in its role as a infrastructure provider and carrier. GAIL did not start executing the Rs 12,940 crore JagdishpurHaldia and BokaroDhamra pipeline until the government agreed to give 40 per cent of the project cost as grant from the budget. The pipeline takes the gas to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's constituency, Varanasi. Plans to split the company had been discussed more than a decade back too but it did not materialise. Sources said refiners Indian Oil Corp (IOC) and Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL) have evinced in acquiring GAIL to expand their gas marketing business. One of the two companies could be sold the marketing business while GAIL asked to concentrate on just laying pipelines. GAIL also owns a petrochemical plant at Pata in Uttar Pradesh which too could be sold along with the marketing business to either IOC or BPCL. The company had in the past resisted the split on grounds that its gas marketing and transmission businesses operate at arms length, and hence do not need to be separated. GAIL's marketing business formed 71 per cent of its 2016 -17 total sales, and 25 per cent pre-tax profit. The government has a 54.89 per cent stake in GAIL India. Its current market cap is Rs 84,607.44 crore. "Is it not fair to expect gas pipeline to be laid to eastern India?," Pradhan asked. Steel plants in Odisha, Jharkhand and Bihar would produce good quality steel when they get gas, he said. "High quality steel production in India is very less currently. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Researchers have discovered mutations in a gene related to obesity, offering new treatment possibilities in the fight against the global epidemic. Research into the genetic causes of obesity, and related conditions, could be incredibly valuable in finding ways to treat them, researchers said. There are some drugs available or being tested, but knowing what specific mutations cause obesity allows scientists to create drugs that target them specifically. The study, led by researchers at Imperial College London in the UK, focused on children suffering from obesity in Pakistan, where genetic links to obesity had been previously identified by the team in about 30 per cent of cases. This link of genes to obesity is due to recessive mutations that are more likely to be inherited and passed on to children in a region like Pakistan because of the high level of consanguinity (inter-family relationships) in its population, researchers said. This is because parents who are closely related are more likely to be carrying the same mutation, so a child may inherit from both sides, causing the mutation to take effect. The new study, published in the journal Nature Genetics, used genome sequencing and found mutations in one specific gene related to obesity: adenylate cyclase 3 (ADCY3). When mutations occur in ADCY3, the protein it codes for forms abnormally and does not function properly. This leads to abnormalities relating to appetite control, diabetes, and even sense of smell. "Early studies into ADCY3 tested mice that were bred to lack that gene, found that these animals were obese and also lacked the ability to smell, known as anosmia," said Professor Philippe Froguel, chair of Genomic Medicine at Imperial. "When we tested our patients, we found that they also had anosmia, again showing a link to mutations in ADCY3," said Froguel. ADCY3 is thought to impact a system that links the hypothalamus (part of the brain) to the production of hormones that regulate a wide variety of biological functions, including appetite. After identifying the mutations in the Pakistani patients, the researchers entered their results into GeneMatcher, described by Froguel as a "dating agency for genetics". This led to another group of scientists in the Netherlands contacting the team with their own ADCY3 findings in one of their patients with obesity. This new European patient inherited different mutations on the same ADCY3 gene from both parents (as they were not closely related, as in Pakistan) so the ADCY3 gene of the offspring was not functioning properly, leading to obesity. Further connections were made with a group of Danish scientists, studying the Inuit population of Greenland. Whilst not traditionally consanguineous (as in close family marriages), this population is small, so inbreeding is likely to have occurred, researchers said. This research also found a link between ADCY3 mutations and obesity, and is published alongside the Imperial research in Nature Genetics. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) National Conference leader Omar Abdullah today attacked the PDP-BJP government over law and order in the state and also said it "surrendered" before the Hurriyat Conference and "anti-democratic" forces as it failed to conduct Anantnag Lok Sabha bypoll. He said it was the "first time any government has bowed before the separatist forces by not being able to hold bypolls to the Anantnag constituency". "How you claim that the situation is improving when you are unable to conduct an election," he said. "You are directly admitting that the situation has deteriorated to such a level that you are unable to fulfill your constitutional responsibility." The bypolls to the Anantnag Lok Sabha seat were scheduled in April last year but were not held in view of the large- scale violence during by-election in Srinagar that left nine people dead and witnessed a record low turnout. "Inspite of intelligence and other reports favouring the elections, you failed to conduct the polls. Thisis the first time that we have to bow before the Hurriyat Conference and other forces that have always been against thedemocratic exercise," he said. During his half-an-hour speech in the state Assembly here, Abdullah questioned the government on several fronts including militancy, poll promises and law and order. Referring to the panchayat elections scheduled to begin next month, he said it was the government's "compulsion" to hold these polls. "We know that nobody among you is willing to hold panchayat elections." He said the number of militants killed in the state has gone up because more youths are joining militancy. On an Aligarh Muslim University scholar from Kashmir joining the Hizbul ranks, he said, "Fidayeen (suicide attackers) used to come from Pakistan, Afghanistan and other places but today Kashmiri fidayeen are getting killed." "In 2016, the situation had worsened. Compare 2017 with 2012-14 when the situation was relatively peaceful and then it would come to the fore where we have reached," he said. Pointing to Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti, Omar said, "You talked about my role in creating Burhan Wani when I was the chief minister. Just think how many Wanis have you created under your rule." He said BJP members are "compelled" to keep silence because they are "equally responsible in this crime". He accused the PDP-BJP government of failing to deliveron its promises. "You are saying that situation did not allow you, but itis you who has created such an atmosphere. If the situation has deteriorated today, it is your responsibility," he said. He said the government has completed three years and it should not blame others for its failures. The former chief minister was speaking on the motion of thanks to Governor N N Vohra's joint address on the beginning of the budget session on January 2. He opined there was nothing in the governor's speech. "He talks of certain things which you got in inheritance. Just show me one new project which was started by your government," he asked. Government spokesman and PWD Minister Naeem Akhtar countered Abdullah, saying, "The present situation is a result of the derailment of the peace process initiated by the then Mufti Sayeed Government and GoI (government of India) in 2002 led by the then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayeeji." Omar is himself responsible for such a situation, he said. "We have again started a structured peace and dialogue process in the state and we hope peace and normalcy will be restored by addressing all issues and problems. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Healthcare professionals in the government sector, including the faculty and resident doctors of AIIMS, have rejected the National Medical Commission Bill in its present form, that seeks to replace the Medical Council of India with a new body. The bill has been sent to a parliamentary standing committee following protests by doctors across the country claiming that the proposed legislation would "cripple" the functioning of medical professionals by making them completely answerable to the bureaucracy and non-medical administrators. The committee has been asked to give its report before the Budget session of Parliament set to commence on January 29. According to AIIMS resident doctors, the National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill requires a complete makeover rather than amendments. "It (the Bill) promotes bureaucratisation and politicisation of medical education and doesn't provide independence to the NMC. It will be more like a puppet in the hands of government and bureaucrats. Most of the members are nominated by government and suggested by bureaucrats," they said in a statement. Discussion on the NMC Bill was organised by Resident Doctors' Association (RDA) of AIIMS and attended by the vice president of Delhi Medical Association and president Joint Action Council of Service Doctor Organisation (JACSDO) Dr Rajeev Sood, Delhi Medical Council registrar Dr Girish Tyagi. Representatives of RDA AMU, Aligarh, PGI Chandigarh, Lady Hardinge hospital, RML hospital were among those who attended the meeting. Participants of the meeting said the proposal of fees regulation of up to 40 per cent and providing free hand to private medical colleges over it will promote capitalisation and will increase the cost of medical education. They said there was no strict guideline in the Bill to regulate functioning of private medical colleges. While welcoming the National Licentiate Examination (NLE), which all medical graduates will have to clear to get practising licences, as proposed in the Bill, the participants of the meeting claimed that there is no clear description on how will this exam will be conducted. They opposed the Bill's proposal of allowing practitioners of alternative medicines, such as homoeopathy and ayurveda, practise allopathy after completing a "bridge course" "This is most unacceptable. Medical sciences and modern medicine are complicated issues to understand and the government must consult medical professional before taking such irrelevant decisions because by doing so it will play with the health of Indians," a senior doctor said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Tamil Nadu government today said it has appealed to the Centre to continue efforts to rescue fishermen who went missing due to Cyclone Ockhi. Chief Minister K Palaniswami said search and rescue efforts to locate missing fishermen was a task vested with the Centre. "We have appealed to the Centre in this regard," he informed members in the Tamil Nadu assembly. Cyclone Ockhi wrecked havoc in southern Tamil Nadu districts last month, particularly Kanyakumari. The Chief Minister was responding to a query from Leader of the Opposition M K Stalin, seeking information on search efforts as the Defence Ministry had stated that it had called off rescue operations. The DMK leader quoted Governor Banwarilal Purohit's address yesterday, which said that rescue efforts would be continued till every missing fisherman was rescued. Palaniswami said the government had borne the expenditure of Kanyakumari fishermen who volunteered and went on a rescue mission in their own boats to find their missing brethren. As many as 3,522 fishermen safely returned to their bases, he said. On January 7, Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had said in Coimbatore that the government had taken all possible steps to rescue the fishermen from November 30 last year. To a question on the cyclone and missing fishermen, she said she had posted tweets every day about updates on search operations which continued till December 27. On the still missing fishermen, the Minister said the government was aware of it and that she would hold discussions with the Home Ministry on sorting out the issue. Answering Congress member J G Prince who sought advanced communication gadgets to fishermen so that they could be intimated in advance in times of cyclone, Palaniswami said he had sought a dedicated satellite radio channel from the Centre to air weather bulletins to fishermen while they were at sea. He said when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Kanyakumari recently, the State government also sought 1,500 high frequency wireless sets. He had also requested Modi to set up a Naval station in Kanyakumari with amenities, including a helicopter landing pad and hi-tech communication facilities, he said "You failed to do it when your (Congress) party was in power at the Centre," he told Prince. Had it been done, fishermen could have been rescued immediately, he said. Such a naval station would help rescue efforts in times of natural events like a cyclone, he added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Kerala High Court today directed South Indian film actress Amala Paul to appear before the crime branch wing of state police in a case of alleged tax evasion by registering her luxury vehicle in Puducherry. Justice Raja Vijayaraghavan gave the direction while considering the anticipatory bail plea filed by the actress. The court directed Paul to appear before the probe team on January 15. According to police, Paul used fake documents to register her car in Puducherry to evade the 20 per cent tax in Kerala on luxury cars costing Rs 20 lakh and above. They said the actor, a resident of Kerala, had availed of vehicle loans from Kerala and got her vehicle registered in Puducherry. She allegedly forged documents to show she was a resident of the union territory and registered the vehicle there to evade a motor tax of her luxury vehicle. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Centre's move to allot shops meant for ex-servicemen, war widows and disabled army personnel under a rehabilitation policy to others for commercial gains would lead to dilution of the welfare scheme, Delhi High Court today said. A bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C Hari Shankar said the government should empower the former army personnel as they retired from service much earlier than their civilian counterparts. It stayed the allotment of shops till further orders. "It appears you want to dilute the issue with regard to allotment of regimental shops to these retired personnel. They have little opportunity to improve their financial condition after they retire from service at early age. Be reasonable," the bench observed. It questioned the counsel for the Ministry of Defence and the authorities concerned whether they have included any ex- servicemen in its policy with regard to rehabilitation of ex army personnel. To this, the counsel for the Centre informed the court that they were reviewing the entire policy which was issued in November last year. The court also issued notice to the Centre and sought its response by April 17 on a plea filed by ex-servicemen society, helpline organisation and a retired naik, challenging the November 11, 2017 advertisements on allotment of regimental shops to other people for commercial purposes. They claimed that the existing policy issued by the ministry as far as back in 1972 was intended to ensure that rehabilitation opportunities for ex-servicemen were kept exclusively for their benefit and not exploited for commercial opportunity to earn revenue. Licensing of these regimental shops were part of welfare activity for armed forces and their families and also for ensuring economic opportunities for ex-servicemen, war widows, disabled military personnel to improve their financial condition considering that they retired much before their civilian counterparts, the plea said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Hilleman Laboratories, a joint- venture between pharma major MSD and Wellcome Trust, today said it has partnered a new future vaccine manufacturing hub led by Imperial College, London. UK Department for Health has granted GBP 10 million funding for the hub that will be managed by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), it said in a statement. The hub has been established to increase immunisation coverage across the globe and improve the response to disease outbreaks through the rapid and cost-effective deployment of vaccines, it added. "As a partner in manufacturing research projects, we are truly hoping that the new vaccine manufacturing hub will increase immunisation coverage around the globe and respond to disease outbreaks with safe and cost-effective vaccines," Hilleman Labs CEO Davinder Gill said. It will allow Hilleman Laboratories to invest in innovation more effectively to explore high-quality vaccines and technologies, he added. "The hub will collaborate with the Developing Countries Vaccine Manufacturing Network on manufacturing projects in India, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Uganda and China," the company said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Indian Medical Association (IMA) has sent a legal notice to a "motivational speaker" for allegedly referring to doctors as "murderers in white coats" and projecting them in bad light on an online public platform. Stating that the video posted on YouTube has caused a loss of reputation to medical professionals, the doctors' body has claimed Rs 50 crore in damages for defaming them. The association has also sought an apology from the speaker and the removal of the video from the Internet, IMA's K K Aggarwal said. Its national president Ravi Wankhedkar said the video will further worsen the doctor-patient relationship. The speaker in the video - 'Indian Medical System Ki Asliyat' - purportedly describes how doctors allegedly mislead patients to make money and meet test and surgery targets. He has allegedly referred to doctors as "'safed coat ke khooni lootere' (murderers in white coats)." Following the IMA action, the Delhi Medical Association (DMA), too, has sent a notice to the speaker while the Jaipur Medical Association has approached a court. "Our client has been shocked and surprised to see the impugned video as the same contains several false, and baseless averments and is a result of incorrect and grossly irresponsible publicising/posting," the DMA notice read. "The impugned video is not only a glaring case of incorrect posting based on utter conjectures and surmises, having no rational basis whatsoever but the same has been published with malafide intent to adversely affect and besmirch the name and repute of the medical professional of our country," it read. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) India presents an image of promise and the remarkable pace of "bold and structural" reforms have boosted its macroeconomic fundamentals while enhancing long- term economic outlook, founder chairman of the World Economic Forum Klaus Schwab has said. In an article, Schwab said that India "will undoubtedly have a great role and influence in shaping our common future by enriching the global policy debate as well as assisting in designing and developing better policies for a prosperous world." The article, part of the WEF annual meeting, was retweeted by Modi from his personal handle @narendramodi. The World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2018 will take place later this month in Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, under the theme 'Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World'. Schwab expressed delight at hosting Modi at the annual summit of the WEF at Davos. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will travel to Switzerland on January 22 on a two-day visit during which he will deliver the keynote address at the plenary session of the WEF. Schwab noted that Modi is the first prime minister from India to attend the meeting in the last two decades. He wrote that, "India presents an image of optimism and promise." "Its unique demographic dividend, rising tide of entrepreneurial spirit, breakthrough innovations across sectors, and remarkable pace of bold and structural reforms have boosted the macroeconomic fundamentals and enhanced India's long-term economic outlook," Schwab wrote. He also appreciated India expanding its leadership in a wide range of global initiatives. Schwab noted that India's leading role at the Paris climate agreement and International Solar Alliance, and efforts to become a permanent member of the UN Security Council and the Nuclear Suppliers Group demonstrate a quest for a more pivotal role in global geopolitics. Praising Prime Minister Modi's credo of 'Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas', Schwab said India's extraordinary achievements "corroborate that the country possesses a robust institutional mechanism for deftly counterbalancing pervasive diversity while projecting a single identity. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) India and Indonesia today held their first security dialogue during which they agreed on operational cooperation in security and counter-terrorism. The dialogue was led by National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs H Wiranto. "India and Indonesia hold the first Security Dialogue, ... Both agreed on operational cooperation in security and counter-terrorism fields," External Affairs Ministry Spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted. Ahead of the dialogue, the Indonesian foreign ministry had said the two countries will discuss cyber security, counter-terrorism efforts and transnational organised crime. Today's dialogue comes after Indonesia and India agreed to strengthen strategic partnerships across various key areas, including defence, security, economy and maritime at the 5th Indonesia-India joint commission meeting in Jakarta during External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's visit last week. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) India has proposed to levy a 70 per cent safeguard duty on import of solar power equipment from countries like China for 200 days to protect domestic industry from "serious injury". The Directorate General of Safeguards in a January 5 recommendation to the finance ministry said solar cells are "being imported into India in such increased quantities and under such conditions so as to cause or threaten to cause serious injury to the domestic industry manufacturing like or directly competitive products." The existing "critical circumstances" justify the immediate imposition of a provisional Safeguard Duty to save local units from further serious injury, which would be difficult to repair in case the safeguard measure is delayed, it said. The safeguard duty would be levied if the finance ministry accepts the recommendations of the Directorate General of Safeguards (DGS). Acting on an application filed by an association of five domestic cell and module makers including Adani Group, DGS recommended "a provisional Safeguard Duty be imposed at the rate of 70 per cent ad valorem on the imports of solar cells whether or not assembled in modules or panels." It also recommend that the provisional Safeguard Duty be levied for a period of 200 days, "which is considered to be the minimum period of time required to protect the interests of the domestic industry." Before final duties or import taxes are levied, DGS will hold further investigation into the injury caused by cheap imports. It would also hold a public hearing on the issue. India has annual manufacturing capacity for solar cells of around 3 gigawatts as against requirement of 20 GW. DGS said import of solar equipment jumped from 1,271 MW in 2014-15 to 4,186 MW in the next year and to 6,375 MW in 2016-17. Current fiscal imports are pegged at 9,474 MW as compared to domestic production of 1,164 MW. "The growth rate of such imports as a percentage of the domestic production was a remarkable 1,371 per cent during the intervening year 2015-16. "Even the overall growth rate of the imports relative to its domestic production is very significant, rising from 519 per cent in 2014-15 to 814 per cent in 2017-18," it said. Reasoning its decision, it said while China's exports to India constituted a paltry 1.52 per cent of its total global exports during 2012, this increased to 21.58 per cent during 2016. During the first half of 2016, Chinese exports to India were 18.51 per cent of its total exports while the combined exports to EU and the US were 30.65 per cent of its total exports. The situation turned dramatically during the succeeding two half yearly periods. In the second half of 2016, China's exports to India constituted 25.09 per cent while its exports to EU and USA fell to 15.12 per cent. Again, in the first half of 2017, China's exports to India increased to a staggering 38.77 per cent of its total exports while its exports to EU and the US shrunk to just 5 per cent (of its total exports), it said. "Such a significant shift in pattern of trade in which China started targeting the Indian market more vigorously as compared to developed countries / markets like EU and USA etc could not have been foreseen," DGS said. The five domestic manufacturers who had sought imposition of safeguard duty included Adani-backed Mundra Solar PV Ltd, Indosolar Ltd, Jupiter Solar Power Ltd, Websol Energy Systems Ltd and Helios Photo Voltaic Ltd. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A delegation of Indigenous People's Front of Tripura has met Home Minister Rajnath Singh and apprised him about the socio-economic issues faced by the tribal population in the northeastern state, an official said today. During the 15-minute meeting, the delegation apprised the home minister about the issues concerning the tribals in Tripura and the socio-economic problems faced by them. Singh asked the ministry officials to engage with the delegation representatives and address their issues, the official said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Days before India hosts heads of ASEAN nations as guests at the Republic Day parade, Indonesia's security affairs minister today called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Indonesia is a member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). In his meeting with H Wiranto, the Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs of Indonesia, the Prime Minister recalled the visit of President Joko Widodo to India in December 2016. Modi said that he is looking forward to welcome President Widodo in India again later this month, when leaders of ASEAN countries will be here for the ASEAN-India Commemorative Summit and will also be the chief guests at the Republic Day celebrations. "The Prime Minister said that as maritime neighbours, there is a vast scope for cooperation between India and Indonesia on development of Blue Economy as well as in the domain of maritime security. "In this context, the Prime Minister welcomed the holding of the first meeting of the Security Dialogue between India and Indonesia," a statement from the Prime Minister's Office said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) An Israeli civilian died of wounds in a gun attack on his car near a settlement in the north of the occupied West Bank, the army said today. The man died in hospital following the shooting near Havat Gilad, east of the Palestinian city of Nablus, the army said, without specifying if he was a settler. Before being taken to hospital, the man was able to call for help on his phone, according to public radio, which aired the recording. "I was shot near Havat Gilad," the man said, before collapsing. The station said the man was in his 30s and lived in the settlement. Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said in a statement that he was confident the "security forces will track down the perpetrators and bring them to justice". About 400,000 Israelis live in settlements in the West Bank, a Palestinian territory occupied by Israel for 50 years. The settlements are deemed illegal under international law and widely seen as a main obstacle to peace. Fourteen Palestinians have been killed in unrest since President Donald Trump announced on December 6 that the United States was recognising Jerusalem as Israel's capital. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Jammu and Kashmir reported 5,900 infant deaths in last three years, state Minister for Health Bali Bhagat told the Legislative Council here today. To a question of PDP MLC Firdous Ahmed Tak during the question hour, he said the highest 2,288 infant deaths took place in 2016-17, followed by 2,034 in 2015-16 and 1,578 in 2017-18 up to November 2017. The minister said, 5,11,662 deliveries have taken place in last three years, Bhagat said, adding while 1,94,632 deliveries took place in 2016-17, 1,91,151 in 2015-16 and 1,25,879 deliveries took place in 2017-18 up to November 2017. According to simple registration survey, infant mortality rate in Jammu and Kashmir was 51 in 2007 which declined to 24 in 2016, better than the national average of 34, the minister said. He said special new born care units have been sanctioned for all district hospitals under National Health Mission (NHM), out of which 20 are functional. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A 45-year-old woman was today trampled to death by an wild elephant at Kodaikanal hills near here. Police said the woman, a farm worker, was cutting grass when the jumbo attacked her. Forest officials had a tough time driving the pachyderm away to retrieve the woman's body. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Suspected Maoists have dragged a Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Prajatantrik) leader out of his house in Hazaribag district and shot him dead, the police said today. The 65-year-old JVM leader Yugal Rana was killed as he had helped the police in arresting two Maoists, said notes left by the red rebels at the spot. Rana, a resident of Gondalpura in Barkagaon police station, was the president of JVM's Gondalpura panchayat committee. Four armed suspected Maoists forcefully took him out of his house yesterday night saying his presence was needed in a panchayat committee meeting and gunned him down near a jungle some distance away, Superintendent of Police Anoop Birtheray said. The Maoists also threatened his family members, who were following them, with dire consequences if they inform the police about the killing, he said. A massive search operation has been launched to track down the killers. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A hotelier was arrested today for allegedly sheltering at his suburban residence in Juhu three owners of 1 Above pub wanted in connection with the December 29 Kamala Mills fire that claimed 14 lives, police said. "Vishal Kariya, who owns hotels and pubs in the city, was placed under arrested after a team of N M Joshi Marg Police picked him for questioning," Deputy Commissioner of Police Akhilesh Mishra told PTI. During investigation, it came to light that 42-year-old Kariya sheltered Kripesh Sanghvi, Jigar Sanghvi and Abhijeet Mankar-- the three owners of 1 Above pub-- at his residence, he said. Police recovered a high-end car of Mankar, which was found parked at Kariya's place, he said. The Sanghvi brothers and Mankar are absconding since December 29 when the fire swept through 1 Above and adjacent Mojo's Bistro resto pub in Kamala Mills compound in central Mumbai. N M Joshi Marg police station senior inspector Ahmed Pathan said the trio were booked for culpable homicide not amounting to murder and other offences under various sections of the IPC. The Mumbai Police also announced a reward of Rs 1 lakh for whereabouts about the accused trio, he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The district police yesterday arrested 12 more people, including three minors, in connection with the January 1 caste clashes that broke out in and around Koregaon Bhima village in which one person was killed. Police had earlier arrested 17 people in connection with the incident. The violence occurred during the bicentennial event to commemorate the Koregaon-Bhima battle in which British imperial forces comprising Dalits had defeated the army of Peshwas. Dalits view the historic battle as the defeat of "casteist" Peshwas who had represented the Maratha empire. On January 1, several vehicles, shops, houses were vandalised and torched by mobs in areas near Koregaon Bhima. Lakhs of Dalits visit the Koregaon Ranstambh (victory pillar) every year to commemorate the Koregaon Bhima battle. "On Monday, we arrested 12 people, including three minors, for allegedly vandalising vehicles on road in villages adjoining Koregaon Bhima," said Pune district SP Suvez Haque. He said the arrested people belonged to both the communities (Maratha and Dalit). Haque said the police traced the vandals through CCTV footages and video recordings of the January 1 incidents. "Police are analysing CCTV footages and recordings available to identify the anti-social elements involved in the violence," he said. During the violence, one Rahul Phatangale was killed near Sanaswadi. Shikrapur police station senior inspector Ramesh Galande today said that the investigation was on the right track in Phatangale case. Police yesterday booked six members of the Kabir Kala Manch, a radical cultural group, for making "provocative" remarks during the Elgaar parishad (conference) held at Shaniwarwada in Pune on December 31, a day ahead of the Koregaon Bhima violence. The conference was attended by Dalit MLA from Gujarat Jignesh Mevani, JNU student leader Umar Khalid, (late) Rohit Vemula's mother Radhika Vemula, and Bharip Bahujan Mahasangh president Prakash Ambedkar. Shaniwarwada, a historical fortification in the city, had remained the seat of the Peshwas of the Maratha empire until 1818. The police already booked Mevani and Khalid for making "provocative" speeches and creating a rift between two communities. The Pune Rural Police had registered an FIR against right-wing leaders Milind Ekbote and Sambhaji Bhide 'Guruji' under SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act and under various sections of the IPC including attempt to murder in connection with the caste clashes. In the wake of the incident, various Dalit organisations observed a statewide bandh on January 3 which took a violent turn. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) More than 3,500 fishermen from Tamil Nadu were today chased away by the Sri Lankan Navy, which damaged some boats and snapped the fishing nets of around 50 vessels, for allegedly fishing in their territorial waters off the Katchatheevu islet. The fishermen from Mandapam and this island town had ventured into the sea in 680 boats yesterday and were fishing near Katchatheevu when the Lankan Navy personnel came to the spot and asked them to leave, Rameswaram Fishermen Association president P Sesuraja said. The naval personnel also hurled stones at the fishermen and cut the fishing nets of 50 boats, following which all the fishermen returned to the shore this morning, he said, while seeking the Centre's intervention to put an end to the recurring attacks on them. Sesuraja also demanded that a jetty be set up at Kundukal, near Pamban. The attack comes days after Tamil Nadu Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam met a team of fishermen from this town and assured them that the state government would take up their grievances, including the arrests by the Sri Lankan Navy, with the Centre. On January 7, over 4,000 fishermen from here and Mandapam were chased away by the Sri Lankan Navy which had also snapped the fishing nets of 100 boats for allegedly fishing off Katchatheevu. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Legal services are not just to provide legal aid to citizens but also to educate the weaker sections about the benefits available to them under various schemes, a Supreme Court judge said today. Announcing a new 'Legal Services Camp Module' for the entire country, Justice Ranjan Gogoi, who is also the executive chairman of National Legal Services Authority (NALSA), said legal services are not limited to legal aid to citizens and it also includes educating the weaker section of the society of the benefits available to them under various schemes. "Access to justice is our motto and people think that the services of legal service authorities are limited to providing legal aid to citizens. Legal service is not solely legal aid by providing lawyers. "To give a man his due as per law. This is how I look at legal services. Whatever a man is entitled under law and to ensure what is due to him as per law, is legal service," he said. The NALSA chief also announced the opening of around 3,200 legal literacy clubs in government schools across the country. The judge pointed to the provision under the Legal Services Authority Act, 1987, calling for taking appropriate measures for spreading legal literacy and awareness among people and educate the weaker sections about their rights and benefits under various legislations. He said the NALSA theme song will be played in cinema halls across the country for 30 days starting January 26. As per the new legal services camp module, the camps would be set up to focus on connecting people with their entitlements under various central and state sponsored welfare schemes or legislations, Justice Gogoi said. He said that his home state, Assam has already conducted one such camp and the next is scheduled at a Rewa village in Madhya Pradesh this month. The judge said at the Rewa camp, 200 beneficiaries would be provided with prosthetic limbs, sponsored by a Jaipur-based organisation free of cost. Besides this, the module includes digitisation of around 700 legal services clinics in jails and installation of nearly 1250 LED monitors in court complexes spreading awareness about the schemes provided by NALSA. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The SAD today said the Congress government should tell the people why no policy has been framed to completely waive loans of farm labourers and Dalits, and accused the Amarinder Singh dispensation of trying to befool the farming community. In a statement, Akali leader Bikram Singh Majithia claimed the government seemed to be taking farm labourers and Dalits "casually" and called on the people to gherao all Dalit MLAs of the Congress, including Scheduled Castes, Backward Classes and Minority Welfare Minister minister Sadhu Singh Dharamsot. "Even after 10 months in power it has failed to come up with a policy to waive their loans. The chief minister has given an assurance without any roadmap for waiving the loans of farm labourers and has refused to waive loans of the Dalits," he alleged. Majithia accused the Congress government of having defrauded the farmers by reneging on its loan waiver promise. "From a promised loan waiver of Rs 90,000 crore covering loans from cooperative and nationalised banks as well as private money lenders, the government has given a loan waiver of Rs 167 crore only and tried to befool the farming community that it has fulfilled its promise. Farm labourers and Dalits were kept out of even this puny waiver," he said. Demanding that the Congress government implements loan waiver for farm labourers, the SAD leader said there were more than 10 lakh farm labourers in the state with an average loan of around Rs 1 lakh. "The government must give a timeline for waiving their loans immediately. Punjab has the highest concentration of Dalit population in the country. A loan waiver should also be implemented for this oppressed section of society," Majithia said. "These legislators (Dalit MLAs of Congress) need to tell the Dalit and backward community as to why they have failed to persuade the government in implementing a loan waiver for them. "Dharamsot needs to resign immediately. Not only has he failed the Dalit community on this issue, he has failed to even ensure that they get the social welfare benefits they were getting during SAD-BJP rule", he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Lieutenant General Gopal R today took over the reins of the Spear Corps, one of the largest and operationally most active corps of the Army. He took over charge of the Spear Corps from General Officer Commanding Lt Gen Anil Chauhan who proceeded on to his new posting in the Army Headquarters, New Delhi, a defence release here tonight. Spear Corps also known as 3 Corps Rangapahar in Dimapur district of Nagaland. An Infantry Officer from the Eighth Gorkha Rifles of the Army, Lt Gen Gopal R has extensive operational experience including that in the North East, the release said. The new GOC has had an illustrious career encompassing several command, staff and instructional appointments including those of commanding an Infantry Battalion on the Siachen Glacier, A Mountain Brigade and an Assam Rifles Range in South Assam, the release said. He is also one of the founding members of the team which established the Defence Command and Staff College at Botswana. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) French President Emmanuel Macron urged Chinese leaders today to open their markets wider and warned lack of action might prompt other countries to close their own markets. Macron's comments in a speech to Chinese and French entrepreneurs were a rare sobering note during a visit in which both governments appeared eager to promote closer relations. The trip comes at a time when Britain's impending departure from the European Union and US President Donald Trump's more inward-looking policies have opened up the prospect of a realignment of global influence. Macron pointed to France's 30 billion euro ($36 billion) trade deficit with China last year and warned it was politically unsustainable. Such warnings are common among economists and political analysts, but it is unusual for a visiting leader in Beijing to address a potentially divisive issue so directly. "If we don't deal with this responsibly, the natural reaction, the one we've had for too long, will be to close up on both sides," the French president said. Macron's visit was billed by his government as aimed at expanding French and European relations with China. He said earlier he hoped to forge a wide-ranging partnership on climate and other issues. In a meeting with Premier Li Keqiang, China's top economic official, Macron said the two sides have the potential to develop cooperation in an array of areas including scientific research, health and agriculture. The two sides also need to "settle on an economic and geopolitical plan for the affairs of our world," Macron told Li. On Monday, President Xi Jinping welcomed Macron in unusually effusive language, declaring France and China "great countries with splendid histories." He said their interaction had "deep historical significance for the world." Despite their public warmth, Macron's visit is overshadowed by mounting trade tensions. Beijing had looked to Britain as an ally in the European Union. London opposed demands by other governments for tougher anti-dumping action against low-cost Chinese imports. Its departure might increase pressure on China to find new allies within the trade bloc. Britain had promoted itself as a platform for Chinese businesses in Europe but its appeal might be eroded by the reduction in access to the remaining EU members. That might lead Chinese companies to divert investment to France, Germany or other bloc members. A key issue for Macron, invoked several times during his visit, is reciprocity, or obtaining the same level of access for European and other foreign companies to China's state- dominated economy as Chinese companies enjoy abroad. Macron, traveling with a French business delegation, wanted to secure deals that might produce greater access to China's growing market. British Prime Minister Theresa May is to visit Beijing this month as part of her government's effort to nurture a new global role following its departure from the EU in 2019. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Days after the outbreak of avian influenza - commonly known as bird flu - at Bengaluru in neighbouring Karnataka, the Maharashtra government has asked officials to undertake preventive measures against spread of the infection in the state. The state has issued instructions in this regard in the last couple of days and appointed nodal officers to oversee effective implementation of these measures for the poultry industry, which generates an annual revenue of about Rs 700 crore, an official said. "Not a single case of bird-flu has been detected so far in the state. Instructions have been given to collect the blood samples of every poultry bird transported from the neighbouring state to Maharashtra," state animal husbandry commissioner Kantilal Umap told PTI today. He said the Maharashtra government has also asked poultry managers to spray medicines for protecting birds. "It (poultry) is a business with an annual turnover around Rs 700 crore. The total number of poultry birds in Maharashtra would be over seven lakh. It also helps in generating employment at rural level. We need to take extra care to avoid any infection to our birds," Umap said. Senior officials in the state animal husbandry department confirmed that around 7,000 samples have been collected in the last one week, out of which the results of 5,000 samples have been negative and the results of the remaining samples will be out in the next couple of days. Last week, outbreak of avian influenza was reported from Dasarahalli village in Bengaluru. The Union agriculture ministry earlier said on the Centre's directions, the Karnataka government had notified the outbreak and initiated the control and containment operations. Bird flu is a viral infection that primarily infects birds, including chicken, other poultry, and wild birds. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A 26-year-old man, who used to steal mobile phones of visitors of the Delhi zoo near Purana Qila, was arrested, police said today. On January 6, a man's mobile phone was allegedly stolen whil he was in front of the jaguar den at the zoo. As soon as he realised about his loss, he raised an alarm, they said. Following the incident, people could see a man escaping from there who was caught after a chase by a head constable of the Hazrat Nizamuddin police station, the police said. The man was identified as Jitan Kumar. With his arrest, the police claimed to have solved 14 cases of cell phone thefts in the Delhi zoo, they said. Kumar belongs to Ranchi but has been staying in north Delhi's Azadpur, the police said. Along with his friend Roshan, Kumar would come to the Delhi zoo from Azadpur on weekends and holidays to steal as many phones as he could, Chinmoy Biswal, deputy commissioner of police (Southeast), said. On the day Kumar was caught, his accomplice was also there, but managed to escape, he said. Kumar also revealed that the duo would also be active during the days when Pragati Maidan used to host melas or expos, the official said. During investigation, it was found that Kumar and Roshan would escape from the zoo in an autorickshaw. The auto driver used to wait for them outside the zoo, he said. The accused duo used to position themselves around the white tiger or jaguar den where a lot of people would gather to see the animals, the official said. They did not steal on roads, buses or elsewhere, but only targeted high footfall places like zoo or Pragati Maidan where people were unmindful of their personal belongings, he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A man may have accidentally set an apartment on fire in California while trying to burn a huge wolf spider with a blowtorch, US media reported. The fire occurred on Sunday in a block of flats in the city of Redding in northern California. A witness living in the flat where the fire occurred told a local newspaper that the burning spider may have spread the fire across the apartment itself. It is not clear whether the spider survived the fire. No injuries were reported but the block was evacuated. The local fire department chief, Gerry Gray, confirmed to the BBC that a fire had taken place in an apartment block, but that the cause of the fire was still "undetermined". "The information regarding the 'spider' was presented by civilian witnesses, at the scene of the fire, and is certainly part of our investigation," Gray said. The spider was a "huge wolf spider", according to a witness quoted by the local Redding Record Searchlight newspaper. The fire department told the paper that the blaze appeared to have been started by a blowtorch. Redding, where the incident occurred, is 260km north of the state capital, Sacramento. Witnesses say that the spider spread the fire when it scurried onto a nearby mattress. The fire on the mattress was reportedly extinguished by residents, but it had already spread to other parts of the flat. Officials said the fire caused about USD 11,000 in damage and some apartments in the building were "uninhabitable" now. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Global hotel chain Marriott International has apologised and retracted a questionnaire survey in China which reportedly listed Tibet as a country, official media here reported today. Chinese netizens called for a boycott of the hotel chain after it reportedly listed Tibet as a country in an email to members, a report in the state-run Global Times said. Marriott Reward released a notice on its Sina Weibo account saying "we are deeply sorry for the questionnaires," the report said. "We realised that this mistake would deeply disappoint our Chinese customers. For now, we have suspended the questionnaires and fix the options at once. We apologise for the inconvenience caused by the incident," the company which has 124 hotels in China said. A netizen named had posted that Marriott International sent a questionnaire survey via email to its elite members to receive feedback on its service and asked them to choose their country. The list included the Chinese mainland, Tibet, Macao, Hong Kong and Taiwan, the report said. The netizen told the Global Times he had complained about the company listing Macao, Hong Kong and Taiwan without adding regions, and "now they are going too far by listing Tibet as a country!" instead of as an autonomous region of China. The post was echoed by many netizens who claimed to be members of the company. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Security forces have busted a module of militants and their over ground workers, arresting 11 people including two ultras who were trying to recruit youngsters into the ranks of various outfits in Sopore area of Kashmir, police said. Police have arrested two terrorists and busted an OGW module by arresting its nine members who were trying to recruit innocent youths in the ranks of different banned terrorist outfits, a police spokesperson said. Acting on specific information regarding presence of militants in Watlab area near Sopore, a cordon and search operation was launched by police along with Navy's Marine Commandos (MARCOS) and CRPF on January 7, the spokesman said. "During search operation, two terrorists who were hiding near a school, tried to open fire on the security forces party but they were overpowered and arrested," he said. These militants were identified as Mushtaq Ahmad Chopan alias Haroon and Shuja-ud-din Sheikh, both residents of Tral area in south Kashmir Pulwama district. They were affiliated with Hizbul Mujahideen. One AK-47 rifle, one AK magazine, 15 AK rounds, one pistol, one pistol magazine, three pistol rounds and a hand grenade were recovered from them, the spokesman said. While investigating the case further, names of nine persons surfaced who were working as conduits of these militants and had been motivated to join the terrorist ranks. "These conduits were in contact with the terrorists of South Kashmir --namely Reyaz Naikoo and Hamaad of Hizb and Ali and Qasim of Jaish-e-Mohammad," he added. A joint party of police and other security forces arrested all the nine OGWs, the spokesman said. "They were identified as Tajam-ul-Islam Shah, Syed Tamiz-ud-din, Ghulam Nabi Mir, Mudasir Ahmad Mir, Saleem Ahmad Beigh, Muzamil Ahmad Ganie, Showket Ahmad Kaboo (all residents of Sopore), Irshad Ahmad Lone of Seer in Tral area and Humaiz from Kupwara," he added. Mobile phones, letter pads, posters, recruitment forms and other incriminating documents were recovered from these OGWs, the spokesman said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Actor Milo Ventimiglia fell into the swimming pool at the HBO's Golden Globes afterparty. The actor attended the glittering Hollywood awards gala with his "This Is Us" co-stars and they celebrated Sterling K Brown's win in the Best Actor in a TV Series, Drama category. Sterling became the first African-American to win Golden Globe trophy for his role of Randall Pearson on the show. Ventimiglia later confirmed that he took a plunge while attending the afterparty at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California. "Congratulations Sterling. Excited. And everyone else, great night. Good time at the Globes tonight," Ventimiglia, 40, said in the video after he returned home. "I'm back home, I'm studying for tomorrow. And yes, I fell in the pool," he said in the video. NPR's Eric Deggans tweeted that he saw the actor slip and fall into the uncovered portion of the pool. "At HBO's Golden Globes party. Believe I just saw Milo Ventimiglia from This Is Us slip and fall into the pool, which is mostly covered but open in one spot..." Deggans tweeted. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Automotive firm Motherson Sumi Systems through its arm Samvardhana Motherson Automotive Systems Group B V (SMRP BV) announces Joint Venture with Ossia Inc to provide continuous wireless power inside vehicles. The new entity aims to have in-cabin installations powered by Cota technology in the market by 2021, MSSL said in a statement, adding that apart from the JV, the MI (Motherson Innovations Company) will also invest USD 14 million for a 4.5 per cent equity stake in Ossia Inc. According to the statement, Motherson Sumi Systems (MSSL) through its subsidiary Samvardhana Motherson Automotive Systems Group B V (SMRP BV) formed a Joint Venture (JV) with Ossia, innovator of the revolutionary Cota Real Wireless Power technology. Motherson Innovations Company, an arm of SMRPBV will hold majority share in the JV and will aim at bringing Ossia's Cota power system into the interiors of some of the world's most popular vehicles. The newly formed entity will be based in the US, supported by Samvardhana Motherson Group's (SMG) global organisation. Globally, the JV will focus on the integration of Cota technology into a wide range of non-military passenger, commercial and public transportation vehicles. The JV aims to have its systems deployed in both private and public vehicles by 2021 to not only deliver continuous wireless power to occupants' personal devices, but also power various sensors in and on the vehicles themselves, including brake sensors, tire pressure gauges and key fobs. In addition, the JV will be the distributor of all Cota wireless power products across multiple verticals such as IoT and consumer devices in India. "Our customers want access to the most advanced technologies available today," said Vaaman Sehgal, Vice Chairman of SMG. "After extensive evaluation of multiple wireless power companies, we have chosen Ossia as our preferred partner and are investing to be a part of the broader Cota ecosystem. Wirelessly powering the in-cabin experience and various other sensors is a tremendous technological advancement for both vehicle manufacturers and consumers." The SMG is one of the worlds leading manufacturers of components and solutions for top vehicle OEMs. The MI is tasked with developing new technologies and creating platforms for new ideas to be launched. The MIs latest offering Empathic Cockpit demonstrator is currently being displayed at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2018 in Las Vegas. "We are thrilled to be working closely with a global leader like Samvardhana Motherson Group," said Ossia Chief Executive Officer Mario Obeidat. "This Joint Venture is a validation of Cota Real Wireless Power, which will be commercialised worldwide for the automotive industry," Obeidat added. Ossia is the developer of the patented Cota technology, which redefines wireless power by safely delivering targeted energy to devices at a distance. Cota technology uses radio frequency to power a range of devices like wearables, smartphones, automotive sensors, IoT devices and batteries. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Naga Hoho, an apex Naga tribal body, has sought Prime Minister Narendra Modi's help in postponing the forthcoming Nagaland Assembly elections, saying that the vexed insurgency problem should be resolved first. In a memorandum, the Naga Hoho said an exceptional situation has been prevailing in the north eastern state as a result of the ongoing negotiations for a peace accord with the militant group NSCN-IM. "It is the unanimous view of the Naga people that the political solution or Naga peace accord is more important than elections and therefore, it has become imperative that the elections to the legislative assembly of Nagaland be deferred for peace and tranquillity," the tribal body said. Assembly elections in Nagaland, Meghalaya and Tripura are due in March and an announcement in this regard is expected early next month. The expectations for a lasting peace have soared in Nagaland, which had been hit by insurgency for decades, after the Centre and the NSCN-IM signed a framework agreement in 2015. The National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah) (NSCN-IM) has been engaged with peace talks with the interlocutor of the central government since 1997, when it announced a ceasefire agreement after a bloody insurgency movement which started in Nagaland soon after the country's independence. Reminding the prime minister about his statement, soon after assuming office in 2014, that the Naga issue would be resolved in 18 months, the Naga Hoho said almost three years have gone "without finding any tangible solution". It also said more than 20 years have gone by since the signing of the Naga ceasefire and the beginning of the political dialogue. The Naga Hoho said it has come to know that the Naga peace accord was at its final stage and likely to culminate in a very short period of time as the Centre's interlocutor and the NSCN-IM had earlier issued a joint statement that they were closer than "ever before to the final settlement and hope to conclude it sooner than later". "We sincerely hope that your competent authority shall exhibit its political will and bring out a logical conclusion to this predicament. In the event of failure to defer the election process and ignite unwanted situation, the government of India shall be held responsible," the tribal body told Modi in its memorandum. During a visit to Nagaland in November last, President Ram Nath Kovind had said the state was at the threshold of making history as the final agreement on the Naga political issue would soon be arrived at and a lasting peace achieved. On September 19, Nagaland Governor P B Acharya had said the vexed Naga issue would be solved within a few months. Seeking to allay concerns of three north eastern states, Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh had said on November 8 that the territorial integrity of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and Manipur would not be compromised while inking the final Naga peace accord. The insurgent group NSCN-IM's key demand is to integrate Naga-inhabited areas of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and Manipur, which has been strongly opposed by the BJP-ruled states. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The opposition National Conference and Congress members today staged a walkout from the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly in protest against worsening power scenario in the state, and cornered Deputy Chief Minister Nirmal Singh for his failure to reply to their queries. The deputy chief minister was replying to a question of Hakeem Mohammad Yaseen on providing uninterrupted power supply to consumers during the Question Hour, when the members of the opposition National Conference Congress stood up and raised the issue of worsening power scenario in the state. The opposition members sought reply from the deputy chief minister and protested against the government for its failure to ensure uninterrupted power supply. Several NC and Congress members walked into the well of the House and some of them tore question papers and threw these at the well, seeking time to pose supplementary questions to the deputy chief minister, who also holds the charge of the power ministry. Around a dozen legislators asked supplementary questions to the deputy chief minister. Speaker Kavinder Gupta tried to intervene by asking members that only three supplementary questions can be asked for a single question. Minister Rehman Veeri also intervened and asked the members to allow the deputy chief minister to reply to their supplementary questions. The deputy chief minister said that the scarcity of power was a result of 70 years of bad planning. He held the previous governments responsible and added that the present dispensation was trying to fix the problem. His remarks drew angry retort from NC legislators including Devender Rana and Congress MLAs Nawang Rigzin Jora and G M saroori. "The deputy chief minister is heading the department for the past three years but has done nothing on the ground," Saroori said. "There will be better power supply in 2018," the deputy chief minister responded. Later, NC and Congress members Majid Larmi, Waqer Rasool, Ishfaq Jabbar and Altaf Kallo staged a walkout from the House after they were not allowed by the Speaker to pose supplementary questions. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The new industrial policy which seeks to promote emerging sectors will be released within a few months, Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu said today. "The new industrial policy should be releasing in next few months," he told reporters here. The proposed policy, the draft of which has been prepared by the ministry, will completely revamp the Industrial Policy of 1991. Among other things, it would endeavour to reduce regulations and bring in new industries currently in focus. The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) in August floated a draft industrial policy with the aim of creating jobs for the next two decades, promote foreign technology transfer and attract USD 100 billion FDI annually. Prabhu also said that today he chaired a meeting of the task force on artificial intelligence. The 18-member task force was constituted to explore possibilities to leverage artificial intelligence (AI) for economic transformation. The ministry said in a statement that after detailed discussions, the members drafted its preliminary recommendations which were discussed at the meeting. On WTO's mini-ministerial meet, to be organised by India, he said it will held in March. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Jammu and Kashmir Police today baton charged and tear gassed hundreds of employees of the National Health Mission (NHM), including women, protesting here in support of their demands, including regularisation of their jobs. More than 11,000 NHM employees have been on strike since December 20 in support of their various demands. Today, nearly 300 of them took out a rally in the city, but they were stopped by the police when they tried to march towards the secretariat - the seat of the Jammu and Kashmir government. The police said they had to use force to disperse the rally after the employees refused to vacate the area. However, NHM employees association spokesperson Faizan A Tramboo accused the police of using force without provocation. "Dozens of our colleagues were injured in the police action and many of them have suffered fractures. A pregnant woman suffered miscarriage," Tramboo claimed. He said the employees were peacefully marching towards the secretariat when the police suddenly started using batons and fired teargas shells to disperse them. The Jammu and Kashmir Pradesh Congress Committee strongly condemned the "brutal lathicharge" on the agitating employees. "This kind of indifferent attitude of the PDP-BJP government is highly irresponsible and strongly condemnable," it said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) China today refuted the reports of an impending catastrophe of Iranian tanker which caught fire after colliding with a Chinese cargo ship off the east China coast, saying no large-scale oil spill was found in waters. It is a race against time for authorities as 31 people of the 274-metre tanker Sanchi are still missing amid concerns that the tanker may explode. It is on fire for three days. Authorities and environment experts have been fearful of a major environmental disaster in the East China Sea, claiming that the tanker continues to leak oil after colliding with the cargo ship. China's Transport Ministry said that no largescale oil spill was found, according to the state-run Xinhua agency. A Panama-registered oil tanker, carrying 136,000 tonnes of condensate oil, caught fire on Saturday after it collided with a Hong Kong-registered bulk freighter. Zhao Ruxiang, an expert with China's Yantai Oil Spill Response Technical Centre, said a simulation test showed condensate oil in water can evaporate so quickly that it will leave little residue, less than one per cent after five hours. Yet it is toxic and volatile when exposed to air, with a possible risk of triggering explosions, Zhao said. The Iranian tanker is carrying one million barrels of condensate. Experts said that condensate is very different from the black crude that is often seen in oil spills. It exists in gas form within high-pressure oil reservoirs and liquefies once extracted. It is toxic, low in density and considerably more explosive than regular crude oil, BBC reported. As of yesterday, rescuers had found one body that was believed to be one of the 32 missing oil tanker crew members - 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis. Search for the missing was on, with 13 rescue vessels searching an area of 900 square nautical miles, while closely monitoring the condition of the burning oil tanker, the ministry said. The collision occurred around 8 PM on Saturday in waters about 160 nautical miles east of the Yangtze River estuary. All 21 crew members on the bulk freighter -- all Chinese nationals -- were rescued, according to the ministry. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A day after Jammu and Kashmir government launched a major welfare initiative for workers in the unorganised sector, CITU has termed the move as an "eyewash". Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), Jammu and Kashmir, while deliberating upon the contours of 'Muhafiz Scheme' noted that fanfare regarding launching of the scheme seems to be an eyewash, as "the major components for benefits of the registered workers are almost already in vogue under the Act". "This is not upto the mark of what the workers were expecting from the government. "But on the contrary, there is some announcement only to increase the dwindling image of the labour department. "This is simply politicking," General Secretary State CITU Om Prakash said in a statement here. The scheme, named "Muhafiz" (Guardian), was launched by Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti. Under the scheme, around three lakh workers registered with the Jammu and Kashmir Building and Other Construction Workers' Welfare Board (JKBOCWWB) would be covered under accidental, life and disability insurance. Prakash said a meeting of the advisory board should have been convened where the union representatives would have given major suggestions for the welfare of the workers. "But till date no such meeting has been held to debate the problems and issues of the workers. "The workers unions and associations are virtually ignored for the simple reason to avoid making itself accountable before the workers," he said. It said that the board has not implemented Section 22 of BOCW Act in totality, which provides for pensionary benefits for workers attaining 60 years of age and housing loan for the workers. "No mention for enhancement of the maternity benefits, provision of health insurance and enhancement in the immediate assistance in case of accidents have been made in the new scheme," he said. He said marriage assistance for the beneficiaries, mandatory under the Act has been stopped for last two years for reasons best known to the board. Registration process has been made tedious whereby the genuine workers have to visit the ALC offices frequently, thus depriving them of daily earnings, as only two days have been fixed for registration in a week which delays the process. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The White House today said there was "no way back" for Steve Bannon, a day after the former chief strategist apologised for his comments on US President Donald Trump and the First Family. "I don't believe there's any way back for Mr Bannon at this point. It is very obvious that Mr Bannon worked with Mr Wolff in this particular book," White House Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told reporters aboard Air Force One. He was responding to a question on the statement by Bannon a day earlier in which he had apologised for his critical remarks in the book 'Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House' by Michael Wolff. In a statement, Trump said Bannon has nothing to do with his presidency and has "lost his mind". "The President has been very clear on his thoughts; issued a four-paragraph statement about Mr Bannon. Zero ambiguity in those statements. It was obvious that the book was false and fake," Gidley said. "The President pointed to that and also pointed that Mr Bannon is not in it for the country but instead in it for himself. And those statements still stand," he said. In the book, Bannon described Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner's meeting with a Russian lawyer as "treasonous" and "unpatriotic". "When you go after somebody's family, in the manner in which he did -- two of the President's children who are serving this nation, sacrificing in their service -- it is repugnant, it is grotesque. "And I challenge anybody to go and talk about someone else's family and see if that person doesn't come back and come back hard," Gidley said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Elite counter-terror force NSG has bolstered its sniping capabilities so that it can effectively tackle terrorists and other emerging threats to national security, the force's chief said today. The 'black cat' commando force has procured new sniper weapons and trained more sharp-shooters in the skill in the recent past and is increasingly using them for special operations, NSG Director General S P Singh said. "The skill of sniping is a big asset for a commando force like us. We have put a greater stress on this domain," Singh told PTI. The National Security Guard (NSG), he said, has also procured advanced sniping weapons and has trained more personnel for special tasks. The NSG DG, however, did not quantify the number of NSG commandos trained in the skill. Official sources said while snipers were essentially part of NSG assault teams in operations, their numbers were now being increased and used more frequently. "So, the next time a counter-terror team is making an intervention where a terrorist is holed up, the snipers would not only give them a good cover but also help in neutralising the target in better time," a senior officer said. PTI, in February last year, had reported that the force, has upgraded its sniper rifles and inducted the German PSG1 A1, which carries an enhanced number of 20 rounds to engage and pin down targets for a longer time and is complemented with longer range and extreme accuracy. The 7.2 kg rifle with telescopic sight is an upgrade of the PSG1 sniper variant being used by the marksmen of the NSG till recently. The sniping discipline has also been included for the first time in the 8th All India Police Commando Competition, being hosted by the NSG this time. The competition, involving 25 teams from various state police and paramilitary forces, will begin this weekend at the NSG garrison in Manesar near here. The DG said the NSG desires that all the security forces of the country have "synergy and inter-operability" when it comes to tackling terror threats and attacks. Singh said the force is "all prepared" to tackle any situation in the run up to the upcoming Republic Day celebrations on January 26. The NSG was raised in 1986 as the federal contingency force of commandos to counter any variant of terror or hijack threat. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Leaders cutting across party lines have demanded a crackdown on illegal hookah parlours in the city after a deadly fire in an upscale pub claimed 14 lives last month. The demand comes after a report of the Mumbai fire department stated that flying embers from an illegal hookah being served at Mojo's Bistro was the probable cause of the deadly blaze, which claimed 14 lives on December 29 at '1 Above' pub in the Kamala Mills compound here. Notably, Mayor Vishwanath Mahadeshwar had met Police Commissioner Dattatrey Padsalgikar on December 27 and urged to crack the whip on such parlours, while terming them as "dens" of narcotics which are encouraging crime among youngsters. The mayor said yesterday he will soon convene a joint meeting with Municipal Commissioner Ajoy Mehta and the police commissioner and urge them to chalk out a plan to strictly regulate the hookah parlours, which were no less than "fire traps" and "narcotics hubs". Congress MLA Nitesh Rane has also launched a campaign from today seeking a ban on hookah parlours in Mumbai. "Starting hookah free Mumbai campaign all over Mumbai from Tom! Hopeless @MCGM_BMC wont do anything abt it.. To save our Mumbai from the smoke..let's come together! #KamalaMillsFire (sic)," Rane tweeted yesterday. Mumbai BJP youth wing leader Mohit Kamboj alleged that some hookah parlours were running in violation of norms. "I raised the issue of hookah parlours two years back and submitted our demand to the Mumbai police to crack the whip on those involved in the brazen violation of rules. Now not a single hookah parlour in the city is following the stipulated rules and time has come to ban all such outlets," he said. He suggested the Mumbai Police should form a separate cell to deal with such outlets, the way it handles the issue of narcotics. Kamboj claimed court guidelines stipulate that 30 per cent of an eatery can be earmarked as a smoking zone. But, he alleged, that the eateries were conveniently converting their entire space into hookah bars. In 2014, the Supreme Court struck down a ban imposed by the BMC on hookah parlours in places such as restaurants and hotels where smoking is otherwise legally permitted. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Among intense political and literary discussions by eminent authors and experts, the upcoming Jaipur Literature Festival will also witness award- winning journalists and media personalities sharing their experiences. The programme at the 11th edition of the literary fest will present visitors with an opportunity to get a firsthand knowledge of journalistic writing. While sessions like 'On Balance: Journalistic Objectivity', 'Rajasthan: Badalte Mahaul Mein Media' talk of issues closer to home; 'The Frontline Club', 'Spotlight: The Hunt for Truth', and 'Among the Insurgents' bring stories of media from across the world. The annual festival, beginning from January 25, will witness participation by the likes of Adrian Levy, Azeem Ibrahim, Carlo Pizzati, Falguni Bansal, Jeffrey Gettleman, Justin Rowlatt, Praveen Swami, Suki Kim, among others. In a session titled 'Spotlight: The Hunt for Truth', renowned journalist Michael Rezendes, famous for his investigative work as a member of The Boston Globe's legendary Spotlight team, will speak of the power of traditional and local reporting, the values, veracity and commitment required for investigative journalism. The extraordinary inside story of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda in the years after 9/11 will unfold in 'Manhunt: Pakistan and the Search for Bin Laden' with Adrian Levy, Cathy Scott-Clark, Peter Bergen and T C A Raghavan. In 'Undercover in North Korea: Facts and Fictions', Suki Kim, the South Korean author of the award-winning novel 'The Interpreter', will speak of her six-month undercover investigation embedded within North Korea in conversation with Michael Breen author of The New Koreans: The Story of a Nation. Moving closer to home, 'Rajasthan: Badalte Mahaul Mein Media' will see discussions on how the media in the state have always balanced a local and regional approach with a larger understanding of national and international issues. The festival will come to an end on January 29. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A PIL challenging the Calcutta University's (CU) decision to honour West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee with a D.Litt has been filed before the Calcutta High Court and is likely to be heard tomorrow. The CU has announced that it will bestow the honorary D.Litt on the Trinamool Congress (TMC) chief, an alumnus, for her contribution to social service at its convocation on January 11. "We have filed a PIL, challenging the decision of the university on several grounds of her ineligibility which we will place before the high court during the hearing," lawyer Shamim Ahmed said here today. The petition claimed that the decision of the syndicate and senate of the university to honour Banerjee with a D.Litt was arbitrary and devoid of any proper reasoning. "The members of the university senate are appointed by the state government, which is headed by Banerjee. The same people have decided to honour the chief minister with the honorary D.Litt," Ahmed claimed. The PIL will be moved before a division bench of Acting Chief Justice J Bhattacharya tomorrow, he added. The convocation will be held at the Nazrul Mancha auditorium in south Kolkata, instead of the institution's own Centenary Hall on its College Street campus. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Prime Minister Narendra Modi today urged Indian-origin people abroad to act as a catalyst in India's growth and said his government was ushering in "irreversible" and "far reaching" reforms in key sectors to boost the country's economy. In his address at the first conference of Indian-origin parliamentarians, Modi said "reform to transform" has been the guiding principle of his government and the aim was to make the system accountable and root out corruption. The day-long PIO Parliamentarian conference was attended by 134 elected representatives from 24 countries. "In the last three-four years, the world's impression about India has changed. The focus on us is increasing. The main reason for change in world's focus towards India is because India itself is changing, it is transforming," Modi said. He said the country has moved away from the attitude that things will remain as they were and nothing will change. Listing various policy initiatives of the government to boost economy and generate employment, the prime minister said the World Bank, the IMF and rating agency Moody's were looking at India in a very positive way. He said major reforms measures were initiated in all major sectors including mining, textiles, aviation, health care, defence, real estate and food processing. "Expectations of people of India at present is at highest level. You will see result of irreversible changes in every sector. And because of it, we received USD 60 billion FDI in 2016-17," he said. Modi called on Indian-origin people to be partners in India's development and act as a catalyst in the country's growth. "We consider the diaspora as our partners in India's development. The action agenda 2020 prepared by Niti Aayog has given special place to overseas Indians," he said and urged Indian-origin people abroad to play the role of a catalyst for it. Modi said when the the world is divided by ideologies, the diaspora can tell the world about India's inclusive philosophy of 'Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas'. "When concerns are rising in the world about extremism and radicalisation, you can tell the world about message of India's tradition of respect to all religions," he said. He also talked about India's ancient holistic living, saying this can address world's rising concerns about health care. Complimenting the Indian-origin people for their contribution, the prime minister said that while many people may have left India over the course of hundreds of years, India continues to have a place in their minds and hearts. Modi said it appears as if a "mini world Parliament" of Indian-origin lawmakers has gathered in Delhi today. He said the PIOs are like permanent ambassadors of India, wherever they reside. The prime minister praised External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj for continuously keeping an eye on issues being faced by Indian citizens abroad. Modi said that India has very close ties with ASEAN countries, which will be showcased on the Republic Day on January 26. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday said India does not eye anyone's territory and resources, asserting that its model of development aid was not based on "give and take", comments which come amid increasing Chinese efforts to expand its influence in the sub-continent. Addressing the first conference of persons of Indian origin (PIO) parliamentarians from across the globe, Modi also asked them to invest in India and act as a catalyst for the country's growth. The event is being held to mark the 102nd anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi's return from South Africa. The prime minister said India has always played a constructive role in the world and that Mahatma Gandhi's philosophy of non-violence can counter extremism and radicalisation. "India is that country which has always played a constructive role in the world arena. We do not measure our policy towards any nation on the basis of profit or loss but view it through the prism of human values," he said. He further said India's model of development aid is not based on 'give and take' and it depends on requirement and priority of the countries concerned. "We neither have the intention of exploiting anyone's resources nor are we eye anyone's territory. Our focus has always been on capacity building and resource development," he said. Modi's comments comes in the backdrop of China's deepening ties with some South Asian nations and providing them with huge financial aid, which, some experts feel, may draw India's neighbours including Maldives, Sri Lanka and Nepal towards Beijing. India has been traditionally providing development aid to these countries. The day-long conference is being attended by 134 elected representatives from 24 countries including France, Fiji, Switzerland and Mauritius. "At a time when the world is divided by ideologies, India believes in the mantra of 'sabka saath, sabka vikas'," Modi said and asked them to spread India's message of inclusiveness. He further said, "If there is any philosophy to counter radicalisation and extremism, it is the philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi and the philosophy of Indian values," he said. Addressing the gathering, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj credited Modi's leadership for India's growing stature globally. The prime minister said India, with its rich values and traditions, has the power to lead and guide the world dealing with instability. Modi also called on Indian origin lawmakers from across the world to be partners in India's development and act as catalysts in the country's economic growth. He said in the last three-four years, the entire world's view of India has been changing and today, the world's focus on India is increasing. "Besides economic and social change, change is taking place at thinking level (vaicharik) also...Expectations of people of India at present is at the highest level. You will see result of irreversible changes in every sector," Modi said. Talking about economic reforms undertaken by his government, he said it fetched USD 60 billion FDI in 2016-17. He also asked the diaspora community to take advantage of government's 'visiting adjunct joint research faculty' under which they can work up to three months in India. He said India's civilisation and values have the power to lead and guide the world dealing with instability. "At a time when the world is divided by ideologies, you can tell about India's inclusive philosophy of 'Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas". He also said, "When concerns are rising in the world about extremism and radicalisation, you can tell the world about the message of India's tradition of respect to all religion." He also talked about India's ancient holistic living, saying this can address world's rising concerns about health care. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to hard sell India as an investment destination at the 5- day World Economic Forum (WEF) at Davos, starting January 22. He will address the inaugural plenary session at the WEF on January 23, an official release said today. The annual meeting will be attended by 350 political leaders including over 60 heads of states. The participants will also include chief executives of the world's most important companies and over 1,000 leaders from different walks of lives. Earlier, in 1997, the then Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda had attended the WEF conference. During his stay at Davos, Modi will meet top global business leaders. Briefing reporters, Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu said the Prime Minister will interact with global leaders and "inform them as how India is progressing". He is going to Davos at a time when every country wants to invest in India, Prabhu added. When asked about the idea of the Prime Minister visiting Davos and how it will help in selling India's growth story at the global stage, Prabhu said this is a single most important gathering of all top business leaders and bankers of the world. "This (Davos) has become a centre where top decision makers converge. So when prime minister goes there, you see a buzz around that. It will definitely help India to get inbound investment and portray India's real profile," he said. Modi will also be interacting with the members of the International Business Council consisting of 120 top chief executives of major transnational corporations across sectors. The Indian delegation will include Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Rail Minister Piyush Goyal and Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan. Besides, Andra Pradesh chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu and Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis would also participate in the WEF. The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) will host a welcome reception for the participants, where it will showcase business opportunities in India in addition to country's heritage and cuisine. The ministers attending the conference will represent the country in around 25 sessions on issues like next generation industrial strategies, infrastructure acceleration and fourth industrial revolution. "India will showcase the enormous business opportunities as well as reforms that have been implemented in three-and-a- half years," the commerce ministry said in a statement. Besides, trade ministers of key WTO (World Trade Organization) countries would be meeting on the sidelines of the WEF. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A PMLA Tribunal has restrained the Enforcement Directorate (ED) from taking possession of immovable assets it has attached in connection with a money laundering case against controversial Islamic preacher Zakir Naik, a move the agency said it will appeal against. The central probe agency, in March last year, had attached a school building in Chennai and a godown as part of its provisional attachment in the case and it was carried out under the stringent criminal provision of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA). As per the legal scheme under the Act, such an order goes to the Adjudicating Authority for final approval and in case the ED's action is endorsed, the affected party can appeal it before the Appellate Authority of the law. The Appellate Authority (PMLA), now in a recent order, directed the agency to restrain from taking possession of the said attached immovable assets even as it posed several queries and questioned the agency's action in the case. Official sources in the ED said the agency will appeal the order of the Appellate Authority or the Tribunal before a High Court and that it was not a "set back" in the case. Officials said the tribunal order has not "quashed" the attachment but has directed that status quo be maintained. The tribunal, they said, has at the same time not barred the agency "from taking possession" of the movable assets attached in the same order that includes mutualfunds worth about Rs 9.41 crore and five bank accounts containing deposits worth Rs 1.23 crore in the name of Naik's NGO Islamic Research Foundation (IRF). Agency sources said the investigation conducted by the ED officials is independent of the NIA and that it has found that these assets were created by Naik and his associates using alleged "tainted funds". The Adjudicating Authority had approved the ED order after being satisfied by the investigation, they said, adding this will be a point made in the appeal to the HC. The ED is looking into the charges of alleged laundering of illegal funds in the case and the subsequent proceeds of crime thus generated. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) had first registered a case against the 51-year-old Naik under anti- terror laws in 2016 for allegedly promoting enmity between different religious groups. The NIA and Mumbai Police, subsequently, had also carried out searches at 10 places in Mumbai including residential premises of some of the office bearers of the foundation run by Naik. The foundation was earlier put on restricted list by the Home Ministry for receiving funds from abroad. Naik, who is said to be staying in Saudi Arabia to evade arrest after some perpetrators of the Dhaka terror strike last year claimed they were inspired by him, has been booked along with unnamed officials of the IRF for promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony besides various sections of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A Delhi court today granted bail to Sanjay Kulkarni, the managing director of Capacite Structures, in a case of alleged corruption in the Rs 2,150- crore revamp project of ITPO Complex at Pragati Maidan here. NBCC chairman-cum-managing director Anoop Mittal has also been made an accused in the case. Special judge Arvind Kumar granted relief to Kulkarni on a personal bond of Rs 1 lakh and a surety of the same amount. The court yesterday granted bail to a suspected middleman, Rishabh Agrawal, in the case. It had on January 5 reserved its order on the bail applications of Kulkarni and Agrawal after hearing arguments from defence advocates and the CBI. The agency had booked Mittal, Kulkarni, Agrawal, and two others -- public servants Pradeep Mishra and Akashdeep Chouhan who allegedly delivered the bribe -- in the case on December 22. It alleged in the FIR that the contract to redevelop the prime land at Pragati Maidan was awarded to Shapoorji Pallonji and Company Pvt. Ltd. and Shapoorji Pallonji Qatar WLL for Rs 2,149.93 crore by NBCC. Mumbai-based Capacite Structures was trying to get that work from Shapoorji Pallonji on sub-contract. Kulkarni had approached Agrawal, the suspected middleman having good contacts with public servants, for getting the sub-contract in favour of the company, it alleged. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Dissident AIADMK leader T T V Dhinakaran today voiced support in the Tamil Nadu Assembly for the transport workers on strike, saying the K Palaniswami-led state government should prove that it was "Amma's regime" by fulfilling the demands of the employees. Subsequently, he also staged a walkout, after being denied permission by Speaker P Dhanapal to raise an issue. In his maiden speech in the Assembly, Dhinakaran sought Chief Minister Palaniswami's intervention in putting an end to the strike, which entered the sixth day today. "By acting in the right way, finding the right solution and fulfilling the demands of the transport workers, it should be proved that this is Amma's (former chief minister late J Jayalalithaa) regime," he said during a debate on the transport workers' issue. "This regime claims to be Amma's regime...they should prove it," Dhinakaran said. Members of both the ruling and opposition benches listened to his brief speech during the Zero Hour with rapt attention. Stating that the people of the state were suffering due to the strike, Dhinakaran urged the government to put an end to it by acting in the right manner. Palaniswami, Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, state ministers and Leader of Opposition M K Stalin were present during Dhinakaran's speech. Dhinakaran, who fought an unsuccessful battle in the Election Commission (EC) to get the AIADMK's "two leaves" symbol, contested as an Independent in the December 21 R K Nagar Assembly bypoll and emerged victorious, defeating the AIADMK and DMK candidates. As many as 17 trade unions, including those affiliated to the DMK and Left parties, are on an indefinite strike after rejecting the government's proposal to hike the wages of the transport workers by 2.44 times. Dhinakaran staged a walkout when he was denied permission by the Chair to raise an issue. The Independent member was seen repeatedly insisting that Dhanapal allow him to make some remarks, even as the DMK's J Anbazhagan was speaking on the motion to thank the governor for his address to the House yesterday. Dhanapal, however, did not allow Dhinakaran to speak as Anbazhagan sat down for a moment -- an apparent indication that the main opposition party was keen to see what the sidelined AIADMK leader had to say. However, the speaker was firm and did not allow Dhinakaran to raise any issue, following which the latter walked out of the House. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Punjab government today promised an assistance amounting to Rs 90 lakh to the family of Sepoy Jagsir Singh, killed in exchange of fire with Pakistani forces along the LoC in Jammu and Kashmir last year. The state government also assured to meet the educational expenses of the three children and medical treatment costs of the entire family of Sepoy Jagsir Singh (32) of the 19 Punjab Regiment. The announcements were made by Lieutenant General T S Shergill (Retd), chief advisor to the chief minister, on post-death ritual of the Sepoy at his native village Lohgarh Thakkran Wala in Zira sub-division here. Addressing the gathering, Shergill said that the state government, under the stewardship of Chief Minister Amarinder Singh, was committed to the welfare of the families of the martyrs who have made "sacrifices for the cause of the motherland". "Being an ex-Army man, Capt Amarinder Singh can understand the pain and agony under which the whole family of Jagsir is going through," he said, adding that whatever will be the demands of the village panchayat and the families will be favourably considered. Shergill further said that all the formalities regarding extending the financial support to the family will be processed by the officials themselves and the family will not be required to go themselves to any department or office for the same. The chief advisor presented a cheque of Rs 5 lakh as ex- gratia grant to the family and government job to the widow of Singh. Singh is survived by his parents, wife annd two daughters. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The BJP today dubbed Rahul Gandhi's speech in Bahrain as "irresponsible", alleging that the Congress president was spreading "hatred" among Indians with his speeches abroad like he did in the country. Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad attacked the Congress chief over his last night's address and contrasted it with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's address to 270 Indian origin (PIO) parliamentarians, focusing on boosting ties between India and other countries. Addressing a press conference, Prasad questioned Gandhi's remarks in which he accused Modi government of pursuing a divisive agenda to hide its failures, and said they had expected that he would not harp on political differences and "spread hatred in a foreign country as he did in India". "The BJP strongly condemns Rahul Gandhi's irresponsible utterances.... He is spreading hatred among people," he said. Hitting back at the Congress leader, the law minister wondered if the Congress' stand on the triple talaq bill worked to spread love or hate in the society. He accused the Congress of failing to take a stand on an issue of woman's respect and justice. Gandhi's father and the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi had committed a "sin" by passing a law under pressure from Muslim bodies to negate a Supreme Court order to provide alimony to Shah Bano after her husband divorced her, he said. The same Muslim body is now opposing the triple talaq bill, Prasad said, claiming that the Congress' decision to stall it in Rajya Sabha was a case of double standards influenced by vote bank . Citing Mudra loans given to tens of millions of people, rise in road construction works and opening of call centres in tier two cities, Prasad said this has led to creation of employment as he refuted Gandhi's charge that the government had not created enough jobs. Gandhi had yesterday accused the government of dividing people on the basis of caste and religion, alleging it was converting the anger of jobless youth into hatred among communities. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Anil Ambani-led Reliance Infrastructure (RInfra) today said it has filed an application before state electricity regulator MERC for approval to sell its Mumbai power business to Adani Transmission (ATL). "RInfra has moved an application before Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission (MERC) for its approval to assign its transmission and distribution licenses and transfer the integrated Mumbai power business to ATL," the company said in a statement issued here. The company has sought approvals from MERC for assigning its licenses and transfer the businesses to RInfra's wholly owned subsidiary Reliance Electric Generation and Supply (REGSL), which will then be acquired by Adani Transmission. In December last year, RInfra signed a definitive binding agreement for 100 per cent sale of its Mumbai power business with Adani Transmission for a total deal value of Rs 13,251 crore. In addition, regulatory assets under approval, which is estimated at Rs 5,000 crore and net working capital on closing, estimated at Rs 550 crore, will flow directly to RInfra. This will take the total consideration value to Rs 18,800 crore. With this deal, RInfra, which is sitting on a debt of nearly Rs 20,000 crore, would become debt-free, with up to Rs 3,000 crore cash surplus, the company said. RInfra currently caters to nearly 30 lakh residential, industrial and commercial consumers in the city's suburbs, covering an area of 400 sq km. In November, last year, RInfra completed the sale of its Western Region System Strengthening Scheme transmission undertakings to Adani Transmission for Rs 1,000 crore. The assets under the transaction include Western Region Transmission Maharashtra Project comprising 2,089-circuit km (Ckm) of transmission lines, and Western Region Transmission Gujarat project comprising 974 Ckm of transmission lines. With this acquisition, ATL's total network will be around 11,350 Ckm, of which approximately 9,000 Ckm are under operation. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) India's C S Santosh closed the Stage 3 at 101st position and overall at 57th position after running out of fuel at the challenging Dakar Rally 2018. Santosh was 30 km short of finish due to a loose fuel cap and as a result, he slipped down in the rankings. With nine more stages pending, he will aim to make up for as much lost time as possible. "I started with a good rhythm today, then went on with the flow in the 2nd part of the stage. I had no issues with the navigation as well. Unlucky for me, the rear tank cap was not closed properly after re-fuelling and I lost my rear tank fuel before I realized it," Santosh said. "Finally, I ran out of fuel 30 km short of the finish and had to wait and ask for fuel from some of the slower riders coming at the back. In the process I lost over an hour's time today. It was not the best day, but I take the positive that I am still in the race and that's what counts." With the third stage of the Dakar Rally moving from Pisco to a very windy and dusty San Juan De Marcona, Spanish debutant rider Oriol Mena of Hero MotoSports Team Rally today overcame tough navigation to clock-in a fast time and finish the stage at the 13th place. During the stage, he also stopped for a few minutes to help a fellow competitor who crashed in front of him. This may result in a time refund, which will further improve his rankings. By finishing the stage at 13th place, Mena also broke into the top 20 in overall rankings at the 20th position, pending the time refund decision. The stage, which was described as "for the hardened off- roadies", was fought mainly off-piste with the terrain offering 63 per cent sand and more dunes. A total of 504 km was on offer with a Special Stage of 296 km followed by a 208 km Liaison bringing the competitors to the San Juan De Marcona bivouac to rest for the night. The Rally will camp in San Juan De Marcona for the 4th Stage as well, where a change in the landscape at the start is expected to provide a new challenge to the riders but not before hitting dunes again for total run of 444 kms including the liaison. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Country's largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) today said it proposes to raise Rs 5,000 crore through long term bonds to fund affordable housing. The proposed bond raising programme aims at funding infrastructure and affordable housing, SBI said in a filing to stock exchanges. The bank will seek approval of the board for issuance of long term bonds of Rs 5,000 crore for financing of infrastructure and affordable housing in domestic and overseas market, it said. The bank, however, did not specify whether the borrowing would be in rupee denomination or dollar. The executive committee of the central board is scheduled to have a meeting on January 17, it added. Yesterday, the bank announced plans to raise up to USD 2 billion (over Rs 12,600 crore) by issuing bonds in US dollar or other convertible currency over two fiscals to fund overseas expansion. It said the fund-raising will take place through a public offer and/or private placement of senior unsecured notes in US Dollar or any other convertible currency during 2017-18 and 2018-19. Last month, the bank's board had approved raising Rs 8,000 crore through various sources, including masala bonds, to meet Basel III capital norms. Masala bonds are rupee denominated specialised debt instruments that can be floated in overseas markets only to raise capital. The bank said it has time till March 2018 to raise the funds. Banks in India have to comply with the global capital norms under Basel III by March 2019. Internationally agreed time frame for the same is January 2019. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The on Tuesday asked the Centre to apprise it about the various modes of executing death row prisoners prevalent in other countries. However, a bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra made it clear that the apex court would not decide as to what should be the mode of executing a condemned prisoner in India. "We cannot say what should be the mode. Tell us what is happening in other countries," the bench, which also comprised Justices A M Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachud, said. Additional Solicitor General Pinky Anand, representing the Centre, sought time to file a response to a petition which has sought setting aside of the legal provision that a death row convict would only be hanged to death. During the brief hearing, Anand told the bench that executing a condemned prisoner by hanging was a viable method as lethal injection was not workable. The bench granted four weeks time to the Centre to file its response on the PIL, which also refers to the 187th Report of the Law Commission advocating removal of the present mode of execution from the statute. On October 6 last year, the court had sought the Centre's reply on the plea, filed in personal capacity by lawyer Rishi Malhotra, which referred to Article 21 (Right to Life) of the Constitution and said it also included the right of condemned prisoner to have a dignified mode of execution so that death becomes less painful. The plea has said the Law Commission report had noted a significant increase in the number of countries where hanging has been abolished and substituted by electrocution, shooting or lethal injection as methods of execution. It said "dying with dignity is part of right to life" and the present practice of executing a death row convict by hanging involves "prolonged pain and suffering". The present procedure can be replaced with intravenous lethal injection, shooting, electrocution or gas chamber in which death is just a matter of minutes, it said. The PIL has sought quashing of section 354(5) of the Criminal Procedure Code, which states that when a person is sentenced to death, the sentence shall direct that the condemned prisoner be hanged by the neck till death. It has sought to declare "right to die by a dignified procedure of death as a fundamental right as defined under Article 21 of the Constitution". Drawing a comparison, the petition has said that while in hanging, the entire execution process takes over 40 minutes to declare prisoner dead, the shooting process involved not more than a few minutes. In case of intravenous lethal injection, it is all over in 5 minutes. Reversing its order, the Supreme Court today held that playing of national anthem in cinema halls before screening of films is no longer mandatory and left it to a government panel to frame guidelines on this sensitive matter. The apex court said that playing of national anthem in cinema halls before screening of movies would now be optional and in that case the audience will have to stand as a show of respect. The direction came a day after the Centre made a plea to the apex court to modify its November 30, 2016 order that made it mandatory for cinema halls to play the national anthem before screening of a film during which the audience was also required to stand. The order had sparked a nationwide debate. The court, while emphasising that citizens were bound to show respect to the national anthem, said that a 12-member inter-ministerial committee, set up by the Centre, would take a final call on various aspects including playing of national anthem in cinema halls. A bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra said that the committee should "comprehensively" look into all the aspects related to playing of national anthem in its entirety. "The interim order passed on November 30, 2016 is modified that playing of national anthem prior to screening of film in a cinema hall is not mandatory as directed," the bench also comprising Justices A M Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachud said. The top court, while disposing of the petitions pending before it, made it clear that the exemption granted earlier to disabled persons from standing in cinema halls when national anthem was being played, shall remain in force till the committee takes a decision. The bench accepted the Centre's affidavit which said the 12-member panel has been set up to suggest changes in the 1971 Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act. Attorney General K K Venugopal told the court that the committee, which was set up through a notification on December 5 last year, will submit its report within six months. The Centre in its affidavit yesterday said that an inter-ministerial committee has been set up as extensive consultations were needed for framing of guidelines describing the circumstances and occasions on which the national anthem is to be played or sung and observance of proper decorum on such occassions. The government had said that the top court may "consider the restoration of status quo ante until then, that is restoration of the position as it stood before the order passed by this court on November 30, 2016" as it mandated the playing of the anthem in cinemas before a feature film starts. During the hearing, the bench accepted the submissions of the Attorney General that petitioners before the court could make representations before the committee. "When we say suggestion, the suggestion should only relate to national anthem," the bench said. Regarding the playing of national anthem in cinema halls before screening of movies, Venugopal said that it should not be made mandatory untill a final decision was taken by the committee and thereafter by the Central government. The counsel appearing for petitioner Shyam Narayan Chouksey, referred to various instances when due respect was allegedly not shown to national anthem and said that scope of provision related to it should be expanded. "National anthem cannot be equated with any caste or religion. It is a tool for integration of the entire country. Guidelines are existing but they cannot resolve the issue," the lawyer said and referred to an instance where some persons were manhandled inside a cinema hall in Mumbai after they had not stood up during playing of national anthem. Meanwhile, the Attorney General told the bench that the committee was required to suggest changes in the 1971 Act and the panel comprises of representatives of various ministries. Regarding disrespect shown to national anthem, Venugopal said such matters could be decided on a case to case basis. Meanwhile, some petitioners raised the issue of Article 51 A (a) of the Constitution which say that it shall be the duty of every citizen of India to abide by the Constitution and respect its ideals and institutions, the national flag and the national anthem. Senior counsel Sajan Poovayya, representing another petitioner advocate Ashwini Kumar Upadhaya, said that national anthem, national flag and national song were secular symbol representing nationhood and were required to be respected. The bench, while referring to the provisions of the 1971 Act, said it was clear that no one can intentionally prevent playing of national anthem. The court said that national anthem has to be accorded respect as a respect to salutation of motherland and a proper decorum has to be maintained when it is played. It, however, said that list of occassions where national anthem should or should not be played cannot be stated. The top court had in October last year observed that the people "cannot be forced to carry patriotism on their sleeves" and it cannot be assumed that if a person does not stand up for the national anthem, he or she is "less patriotic". The apex court had on October 23 last year observed that people do not need to stand up in cinema halls to prove their patriotism and had asked the Centre to consider amending the rules for regulating playing of national anthem in theatres. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A senior figure in Palestinian Islamist group Hamas was hospitalised in critical condition today with a gunshot wound to the head, after what officials said was an accident. Hamas spokesman Fawzy Barhoum said in a statement Imad al-Alami, a former member of Hamas's highest political body, was wounded while "inspecting his personal weapon in his home and is in critical condition". A medical source said he had been rushed to a hospital in Gaza City. There was no independent confirmation of details of the incident. Alami has for decades been a senior member of Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip. Israel has accused him of planning multiple attacks. He lived in exile for more than 20 years but returned to Gaza in 2012. His home in Gaza was bombed by Israel during the most recent war between the two sides in 2014. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Mothers who sing in groups with their babies may overcome the symptoms of post-natal depression more quickly, a study suggests. Researchers worked with 134 mothers to see if singing could help them reduce the symptoms of post-natal depression for 40 weeks after they gave birth. Singing workshops saw the mothers learning lullabies and songs from around the world with their babies and creating new songs together about motherhood. Those with moderate to severe symptoms of post-natal depression reported a much faster improvement than mothers in the usual care and play groups. In the first six weeks, the singing group had already reported an average 35 per cent decrease in depressive symptoms, 'BBC News' reported. "These results are really exciting as they suggest that something as simple as referring mothers to community activities could support their recovery," said Daisy Fancourt, from University College London in the UK. "Post-natal depression is debilitating for mothers and their families, yet our research indicates that for some women something as accessible as singing with their baby could help to speed up recovery at one of the most vulnerable times of their lives," said Rosie Perkins, principal investigator of the study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) In an unusual move, Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has sought the Supreme Court's opinion if he could be the president for six years, a request which contradicts the amendment he introduced to reduce the presidential term to five years. Sirisena, 66, spearheaded the 19th amendment (19A) to the Constitution in 2015 to prune the presidential term from six to five years. The president's term should end in 2020, but has sought the Supreme Court's opinion if he could continue until 2021. The Registrar of the Supreme Court yesterday informed the members of legal fraternity that the consideration by the apex Court has been listed for January 11, officials said. It said the President had requested an opinion which read, "whether in terms of provisions of the Constitution, I as the person elected and succeeding to the office of President and having assumed such office in terms of Article 32 (1) of the Constitution on January 9, 2015, have any impediment to continue in the office of President for a period of 6 years from January 9, 2015". The request stands in direct contrast to Sirisena's action of backing the civil society's demand to abolish the presidency when he offered to be the Opposition's common candidate in 2015. Instead of abolishing it, Sirisena introduced the 19A amendment which reduced the presidential term to five years while taking away the absolute control over the dissolution of parliament. Sirisena's announcement has come amidst the ongoing differences with his coalition partner, the United National Party (UNP) which is headed by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Sirisena's main backer in the 2015 election against former President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Sirisena defeated Rajapaksa with a clear reform agenda in 2015. The President of late has criticised the UNP publicly and some some party members have also been critical of him. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Some of the Indian-origin lawmakers, who participated in the PIO-Parliamentary Conference today, visited their places of origin. Ramesh Sangha, a Canadian MP from Brampton Centre, visited his hometown in Jalandhar in Punjab during his trip to India. Sangha, a Congress worker while he was in India, migrated to Canada in 1994. He got elected to the House of Commons on the Liberal Party of Canada's ticket in 2015. Priyanca Radhakrishnan, a lawmaker from Maungakiekie in New Zealand, also took the opportunity to visit her parents in Chennai. Born in India and raised in Singapore, Radhakrishnan moved to New Zeland to purse her studies and later joined the New Zealand Labour Party. However, there were also some who could not visit their place of origin. Gopaul Boodhan, the mayor of Chaguanas Borough Corporation, Trindad and Tobago, who is also attending the conference, wanted to visit Bihar but could not. "Coming to India is always an emotional moment," Boodhan said. The first PIO-Parliamentary Conference is being attended by 134 elected representatives from 24 countries including France, Fiji, Switzerland and Mauritius. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) An official delegation from South Korea and the Gujarat Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI) today signed a memorandum of understanding for co-operation between industries in Gujarat and the East Asian country, with a focus on automobile, defence and textiles sectors. The South Korean delegation was led by the country's Consul General in Mumbai, Kim Soungeun. The main objective of the MoU is to help Gujarat-based small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to explore opportunities through joint ventures with South Korean firms, especially in areas of automobile, defence and textiles, said GCCI president Shailesh Patwari. "We import lubricants and auto parts for industry. Now that Gujarat is becoming an auto hub, JVs with Korean companies will help our SMEs. Our intention is also to support our SMEs in manufacture of defence equipment with the help of Korean companies," Patwari said. Korean companies can offer technological help to the textile industry in Gujarat to reduce costs and compete with Bangladesh and China and improve ready-made apparel trade, he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) An appellate body hearing the Max hospital twin death case today extended by a month the stay on a Delhi government order cancelling its licence last month, authorities said. The stay will be in effect till February 8, the next date of hearing, they said. The licence cancellation case pertains to the birth of a premature twin at the hospital in Shalimar Bagh on November 30 last year. Both the babies were declared stillborn by the hospital, one of them wrongly, and handed over to the family allegedly in a polythene bag. While the family was on its way to perform the final rites, they found that one of them (a baby boy) was still alive. The case triggered an outrage, prompting the AAP government's Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) to cancel the hospital's licence on December 8 for alleged medical negligence. The upscale hospital group on December 13 had filed an appeal in the Financial Commissioner's court against the cancellation of the licence, which stayed the order and set January 9 as the date of next hearing. "The appellate body has set February 8 as the next date of hearing. So, the stay order stands extended by a month for the hospital," Director General in the DGHS, Kirti Bhushan, told PTI. The hearing began this morning and went on for around 30 minutes, he said. The Max Healthcare group also said in a statement today, "The relief granted to Max Hospital, Shalimar Bagh earlier, will continue till the next date of hearing, which is February 8." Following the stay order, the Max hospital had resumed its operation on December 20. "Max Hospital, Shalimar Bagh continues to serve over 15,000 patients in its OPD, 3,000 patients in IPD per month including those from the economically weaker sections of the society," the group today claimed. Meanwhile, the Delhi Police yesterday filed a status report on its probe into the death of twin babies at Max hospital before a court here, which has directed that the investigation be conducted expeditiously. During investigation, police claimed to have found that in the death register of the hospital, only the time of birth of the two infants was mentioned but not the time of their death, despite both being handed over in two separate tightly wrapped packages. Max Healthcare in a statement yesterday had, however, claimed that "both the birth and death time entries were made in the specific registers which have already been provided as part of the investigation." Also, the Delhi Medical Council on December 20 had issued a notice to nine doctors and two nurses of the hospital in connection with the case, and sought a response in 15 days. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The benchmark BSE Sensex built on gains to close at record high for a third straight session today riding on smart jump in Coal India, Reliance Industries and ITC amid positive leads from global markets. Extending the record run for third day, the 30-share Sensex closed at fresh life high of 34,443.19, eking out gains of 90.40 points, or 0.26 per cent, after a choppy trade. The wide-based Nifty of NSE also settled at record high of 10,637, 13.40 points, or 0.13 per cent, even as 19 of its constituents advanced and 31 dropped. Caution prevailed as crude prices surged to the highest level since 2015. "With indices hitting record peaks on successive days, caution dominated the day's proceedings, especially with midcaps pulling back from days peaks. Investors are likely to remain focused on stock specific moves eyeing the prospects of earnings season and mixing and matching various elements of the upcoming union budget," Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit Financial Services, said. Opening higher, the 30-share Sensex quickly rallied to an all-time intra-day high of 34,488.03 as Coal India, ITC and Tata Motors posted smart gains. Profit booking in some pharma, capital goods and telecom stocks at record levels, however, pulled the index to a low of 34,343.41 before close. The index has risen by 559.41 points in the previous three straight sessions. Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have been supporting the ongoing rally by pumping in sizeable capital, brokers said. "Sustained foreign inflows and optimism ahead of October-December 2017 earnings and the Union Budget 2018 aided gains," Karthikraj Lakshmanan, Senior Fund Manager Equities, BNP Paribas Mutual Fund, said. Signs of easing geo-political tensions buoyed investor sentiment globally, he added. Asian markets, which have seen their best start since 2006, gained with Hong Kong recording 11 straight wins and Tokyo at a 26-year high, as investors press on with a global rally. Back home, Coal India was the biggest gainer on both Sensex and Nifty components after its board approved a hike in prices of non-coking coal for power and non-power sectors with immediate effect. Coal India rose 5.76 per cent on NSE and 5.63 per cent on BSE, followed by Yes Bank 2.31 per cent. Other prominent gainers were Wipro, ITC Ltd, Reliance Industries, Asian Paint, Tata Motors, Infosys, Tata Steel, IndusInd Bank, HDFC Bank and M&M, surging by up to 2.11 per cent. In contrast, Bharti Airtel, Adani Ports, Hero MotoCorp, Sun Pharma, NTPC, Bajaj Auto, Maruti Suzuki, ICICI Bank, SBI, Hind Unilever, L&T, Dr Reddy's, Power Grid, HDFC Ltd, TCS, ONGC and Axis Bank fell by up to 1.18 per cent largely on profit-booking and squeezed the rise in the key indices. On the sectoral index chart, realty jumped the most by surging 2.17 per cent, followed by consumer durables 0.82 per cent and FMCG 0.29 per cent. Bankex rose 0.12 per cent and oil & gas 0.06 per cent. While telecom, power, healthcare, teck, auto and capital goods ended in the negative zone. The broader markets turned somewhat mixed with small-cap index rising 0.08 per cent while mid-cap index shed 0.40 per cent as investors were busy taking money off the table at record levels. The market breadth turned negative as 1,623 stocks ended lower, 1,369 closed higher while 102 ruled steady. The total turnover on BSE amounted to Rs 5,442.86 crore, lower than turnover of Rs 6,007.76 crore registered during the previous trading session. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav on Tuesday said his priority was strengthening the party organisation and he was not thinking of an alliance ahead of the "crucial" 2019 general elections. Terming the process of talks and seat negotiations a waste of time, the former Uttar Pradesh chief minister, who had tied up with the Congress for the assembly elections in 2017, ruled out alliances "as of now". "The 2019 election is certainly crucial as the message from Uttar Pradesh will go out to the entire country. As of now, I am not thinking of an alliance with any party. It (alliance talks and seat negotiations) wastes a lot of time and I don't want to be in confusion (over seats)," Yadav told PTI in an exclusive interview. Yadav said he was working on strengthening the party's vote bank. Suggesting that the party could bargain at a later stage if an alliance materialises, he said his style of is different and he is open to "friendships" with like minded parties. However, his priority at present was to strengthen the organisation of the party. The SP-Congress combine was trounced in the 2017 state elections, with the BJP and its allies winning 325 seats in the 403-member House. While SP got 47 seats, the Congress won seven. "There is time before the elections. The Lok Sabha polls are in 2019. We are presently working on each seat, going through local equations for selection of candidates," he said. Yadav also announced that the SP would contest the Lok Sabha polls where its organisation was strong. "We have a strong organisational base in Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. We are also working in Uttarakhand and Rajasthan," he said. Discussing the defeat of his party in the 2017 assembly polls despite claims of good development, Yadav said the BJP had succeeded in fooling the people. "It was not our vote bank but that of the Bahujan Samaj Party that shifted... The people still remember my regime and are now realising their mistake." He added that the people gave BJP a chance but the party had fulfilled none of its tall promises. "The Yogi Adityanath government has failed... They are just carrying forward our work by putting their plaques," he alleged. In his view, the Adityanath government should demand a big package from the Centre in the budget instead of fooling the people. "Out of 80 seats, the state has given them 73 MPs (including that of Apna Dal). It's high time the Yogi governent demands a big package from the Centre as Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be presenting his last budget next month. "After the budget, nothing can be done. If you don't have funds, you can't work," he said. The former chief minister said he would be taking out a "rath yatra" across the state to mobilise party workers. "The route and plan is being chalked out. I will be hitting the road again. People have expectations from us as SP is the only party which can stop the BJP." Yadav also spoke on the issue of electronic voting machines (EVMs). "We demand that before the Lok Sabha polls, the two by- elections of Gorakhpur and Phulpur be held using ballot papers. Doubts about the machine should be cleared." On the much touted UP investor summit, preparation for which is underway, Yadav taunted the government and said it should first purchase chairs for the venue, the JP international centre, which was constructed during his regime. "Will they ask delegate to sit on chairs borrowed from a tent house?" he asked. A suicide bomber today blew himself up near Pakistan's Balochistan Assembly, killing six persons including four policemen and injuring 18 others, hours after provincial Chief Minister resigned from his post due to political instability. According to initial inputs, the suicide bomber on a bike hit a Frontier Constabulary truck in Quetta's Zarghoon road in the high-security Red Zone, around 300 metres from the provincial Assembly building and chief minister secretariat. The banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the attack. Inspector General of Police (IGP) Balochistan Moazzam Ansari said that the attack killed four policemen and two civilians. About 18 people including seven policemen were also injured who were shifted to various hospitals of the city, police said. "It is a clear act of terrorism but we are still trying to determine whether it was a suicide bomb attack," a senior police official said. A special session of the Assembly had been called to take up a no-confidence vote against Balochistan Chief Minister Sanaullah Zehri but was postponed after he resigned from his post, amid speculation of 'horse trading' as the government and the Opposition had claimed to have enjoyed the support of majority of leaders. Senior police officials said that the suicide bomber, who had targeted the FC truck, was well aware of the activities going on in the vicinity. Since the rescue operation was still on, the number of casualties may go up, officials said. Hospital sources also confirmed the death toll, saying at least six persons, including four policemen, were killed and at least 18 others injured in the explosion. According to sources, initial investigation suggested that the suicide attacker was attempting to target the Balochistan Assembly building but detonated his explosives near the high-security Red Zone area. A large number of security personnel had been deployed in view of the Assembly session. Police and rescue teams have cordoned off the area. In December, nine Christians were killed and over 50 others injured in an ISIS-claimed terror attack on the Bethel Memorial Methodist Church also located on Zarghoon road. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Beverage company Parle Agro has appointed Telugu filmstar Allu Arjun as brand ambassador for its flagship brand, Frooti, for the southern market. The Rs 2,000-crore brand is one of the leading mango beverages in the country, the company said. The announcement is a part of the food and beverage company's expansion strategy to become a Rs 10,000 crore entity by 2022. Nadia Chauhan, Joint MD and CMO of Parle Agro, said, "With a strong focus on south India, it has been necessary for us to drive aggressive inputs for both marketing and sales & distribution efforts in the region." The new campaign featuring Allu Arjun will be rolled out this summer led by a region-specific film in south India and will be conceptualised along with Parle Agros creative partner, Sagmesiter & Walsh (S&W), the company said in a statement. S&W has previously been associated with Parle Agro for its brand campaigns on Frooti, Appy Fizz, Appy and most recently Frooti Fizz, it added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu said today that terrorism has no basis in any religion of the world and called for concerted action by all countries to deal with the menace. He said the biggest challenge to the world order is terrorism. "Unfortunately, some people are clothing terror in the garb of religion but, in fact, terrorism has no basis in any religion of the world and is being misused by people," Naidu said while delivering a valedictory address at the first PIO Parliamentary Conference here. He said it was imperative to combat the "disruptive" forces of terrorism that were impeding development and all countries must recognise it as a threat to humanity and take concerted action to curb it. Without taking Pakistan's name, Naidu said some countries believe in aiding, abetting and funding terrorism. Referring to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's unscheduled visit to Pakistan in 2015, Naidu said New Delhi had taken steps to normalise ties with Islamabad but that did not yielded any results. Referring to controversial comments made by some political leaders, Naidu said the country disapproves of it. "Some people may talk out of turn but that should not be seen as a collective will of the people. That is not the line of India. This country and land do not tolerate such statements," he said. Addressing the PIO lawmakers from 24 countries, Naidu said India recognises the strategic partnership with the diaspora. He said India has the second largest diaspora in the world estimated at over 31 million spread across the globe whose ancestral roots can be traced to traders, indentured labourers, political deportees, business entrepreneurs among others. "Far away from their homes, our brothers and sisters underwent a prolonged period of trial and tribulations, indignities and physical and mental sufferings. Long journeys in ships were extremely difficult and painful. Despite all these suffering and challenges, the evolution of the diaspora is remarkable," he said. External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said the PIO- Parliamentary Conference has broken ground in further diversifying the engagement with the Indian diaspora and this will help open new vistas of establishing regular dialogues and exchanges of visits and views with PIO lawmakers. "Though we profess different religions, colour of our passports are also different, our ancestors came from different regions and our mother tongue and practises are also different. Yet, we are Indians are heart (Phir bhi Dil hain Hindustani). (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Thirty Chinese companies would participate in the upcoming Bengal Global Business Summmit (BGBS) to be held in the metropolis later this month. Consul general of China in Kolkata Ma Zhanwu said that out of the 30, ten of them would be participating for the first time in the business summit to be held here on January 16 and 17. The remaining 20 already have ongoing projects in India, he said briefing reporters here today. He said that China was looking to build strong trade and business ties with the eastern region, particularly West Benga. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Bangladesh, China, India and Myanmar (BCIM) corridor would help in supporting this effort. Zhanwu said that Chinese companies looked for certain comforting factors like continuance of a stable bilateral relationship between the two countries. "Whatever happened in 2017 in the bilateral ties of the two countries was a little scary," he said, adding a stable relationship would contribute to the increased confidence among Chinese business houses. Zhanwu said that the governments of China and India should sign a treaty in this regard as well as one on the boundary issue. China had been importing Darjeeling tea, jute, seafood, handicraft and garments from West Bengal. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Three persons, including two children, died after the auto rickshaw they were travelling in caught fire, Ahmednagar district police said today. The incident took place yesterday at Prevarasangam village on Ahmednagar-Aurangabad road, 55 km from here, police said. The victims, members of a family, were returning from Chanda in Ahmednagar district to Aurangabad. The deceased where identified as Namira Shafik Kureshi (8), Mahewish Atik Kureshi (7) and Juned Shafik Kureshi (55). The injured were taken to Ghati hospital in Aurangabad. Further probe is on. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The recent tariff reduction by Reliance Jio, which has already left the once-sunshine industry bleeding, will further delay a recovery in rivals' average revenue per user (Arpu) level, which is a key profitability gauge for the industry, warns a report. Reliance-run Jio had last week announced another Rs 50 reduction in its existing plans and/or 50 per cent more data per day on plans ranging from Rs 199-498. "The latest price cut indicates pricing discipline may still be uncertain and highly dependent on consumer behaviour despite industry consolidation paving the way for long-term structural improvements. This move will further delay Arpu recovery," India Ratings warned in a note today. "Although current competitive tariffs do not seem sustainable, the short-term Arpu outlook remains subdued, indicating another tough year for the telecom sector," it said. Two large telecoms registered an Arpu decline of 25 per cent year-on-year in the second quarter, while Jio reported an Arpu of Rs 156 in the same quarter, which was higher than Rs 84 recorded by the industry. While for Jio the entire customers are in broadband data subscribers, for the industry this constitutes only 20 per cent. Non-broadband subscribers are typically low Arpu-generating customers. According to the agency, top telecoms would focus more on increasing their subscriber market share than revenue market share in 2018 and the dual-SIM phenomenon will continue for longer-than-expected, given the low customer loyalty and high price sensitivity. "Thus, the industry pricing trend is moving towards competitive on long validity plans (70-90 days) to increase customer stickiness," it says. Mounting pricing pressure, debt burden and capital outlay needs have led to the exit of small telecoms, while the larger ones have prepared themselves for the continued challenging environment through asset sales, besides industry consolidation. The agency had previously predicted a recovery in Arpu in mid-to-late fiscal 2019 as it had expected a stabilisation of industry tariffs at higher levels that would have led to user consolidation. Jio had increased pricing by 40 per cent last October but after that it had reduced the validity on the Rs 309 plan to 49 days from 84 days. However, it then offered cash-back to ensure customer stickiness. Eight public sector banks, five PSUs and 34 private firms have come on board the TReDS platform, a mechanism that was formed to promote labour- intensive MSME sector, a top official said today. Announced along with the unprecedented Rs 2.11 lakh crore capital support for banks two months ago, TReDS is an online mechanism for facilitating the financing of trade receivables of MSMEs through multiple financiers. It aims at improving the finances of MSMEs by shortening the cash cycle through a structured bill discounting framework with participation of all the stakeholders, Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Kumar told PTI. The Trade Receivables electronic Discount System (TReDS) also enables discounting of invoices of exchange of MSME sellers against large corporate. It also takes care of the cash crunch for the very important segment of the economy that is the focus of the government, Kumar said. The MSME sector contributes 40 per cent to the manufacturing sector and 45 per cent of the exports. Kumar said public sector companies like Shipping Corporation of India, Kudremukh Iron Ore Company Ltd and Bharat Electronics Ltd have onboarded the platform while companies like Bhel, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd, NALCO, IRCON, Goa Shipyard among others are in the process of joining. So far Rs 80 crore discounting of bills have taken place and 8 banks which are part of TReDS include State Bank of India, Bank of India, Bank of Baroda and IDBI Bank. Other public sector lenders are Indian Overseas Bank, Dena Bank, Union Bank of India and Oriental Bank of Commerce. As soon as goods are delivered by a vendor, ususally an MSME to a large firm, the system generates a bill. Based on the bill, the vendor can get working capital from banks at a discounted rate instantly. Currently, bill payment takes 90 days to a year, choking the fund flow of the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs). Besides, Kumar said, the udyamimitra portal will help bring in a culture of competitiveness among banks to finance MSME projects. "If you have a good project, you don't have to keep running after banks, they can compete and a good rating project would attract a better, competitive rate," he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury today claimed that Tripura assembly elections will be the BJP's Waterloo, though it is pumping a "huge amount of money and resources". Yechury, the general secretary of CPI(M), accused the BJP of trying to create a divide between tribals and non-tribal in Tripura and said it will not succeed in its designs. "Tripura will be the BJP's Waterloo. It is pumping in an unprecedented amount of money in the state of Tripura. Huge amount of money, huge amount of resources, huge amount of material resources are coming in from Assam where it has a government," the Left leader alleged. The hill state is scheduled to go to polls in February. Yechury claimed that there is no anti-incumbency in the state against the Left Front government. "I don't think there is anti-incumbency. On the contrary there is pro-incumbency. But this is sought to be undone by making fantastic promises. "The BJP, which has not implemented the pay commission in states won by it, now says that they will implement it in Tripura," the CPI(M) leader told reporters. "They are promising the moon to the IPFT (Indigenous Peoples Front of Tripura) by saying they will allow separation. Things which just cannot happen. These are the false propaganda by which they want to enter. The worst is that they are trying to generate a divide," Yechury said. He warned that any effort to create a divide in Tripura is going to be dangerous not only for the state but for the whole Northeast and eventually for the country. On the political scenario in the country, Yechury said that all secular democratic parties should come together based on alternative policies. Yechury also denied any "tussle" within his party on the issue of whether to have a tactical alliance with the Congress to fight the BJP. "There is nothing called pro-Congress or pro-BJP. We are pro-people. Anyone who is trying to label us is being deliberately mischievous," Yechury said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Police have arrested two persons in connection with the rape and murder of a teenager in village Chandpur on January 2. Zulfiqar and Dilshad, both from Sikandrabad town, were arrested while their accomplice, Israel, was absconding, the police said. The girl was abducted by the accused who raped and strangulated her. They later dumped her body in village Beel Akbarpur of neighbouring GB Nagar district. According to SSP Muniraj G, the police have seized the Maruti Alto car used by the accused in the case. Police claimed that the accused told them that they had raped other girls too. They used to visit roadside eateries to target girls who were alone. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Two men have been apprehended by the CISF for entering the sensitive Delhi airport by allegedly impersonating and using Aadhaar cards of others for travel, officials said today. The incident took place yesterday after the Central Industrial Security Force officials, who were on a high alert in the wake of the Republic Day security arrangements, found two people inside the terminal building of the Indira Gandhi International Airport (IGIA) behaving in a suspicious manner. The two were intercepted near an airline desk and it was found that they were "impersonating" and carrying the Aadhaar cards of others, the officials said. The duo had taken the Aadhaar cards of two people who did not show up at the airport and were supposed to travel in a group of 20 people travelling to Goa. "The two men, Mohammed Mustaqueem and Adil, have been handed over to Delhi Police which has registered a case against them," a senior official said. The police was probing if the two men were part of some human trafficking or travel racket, he said. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Britain's Brexit Minister David Davis has criticised the EU for preparing for a no-deal scenario once the UK leaves the bloc, according to a letter published today by the Financial Times. Writing to British Prime Minister Theresa May last month, Davis criticised the European Union for adopting measures in the event a deal is not reached before the UK's exit in March 2019. He also took aim at EU agencies for issuing guidance to businesses on the post-Brexit landscape, covering everything from company law to transport, without mentioning the possibility of a transition period. The EU's approach "is frequently damaging to UK interests", the Brexit minister wrote, according to extracts published by the Financial Times. May's spokesman declined to comment on the report. Davis told the prime minister he would appeal to the European Commission to change its guidance and warned the EU's current stance amounted to "potential breaches of the UK's rights as a member state". A legal challenge would however be high-risk and lengthy, Davis said he had been told by advisers. Brussels rejected Davis's complaint that Britain was being treated differently to other EU members. "In the European Commission we are somehow surprised that the UK is surprised that we're preparing for a scenario announced by the UK government itself," Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas told journalists today. While Britain is pinning its hopes on a two-year transition deal after it leaves the bloc in 2019, leading to a trade deal with the EU, May last year said no deal "is better than a bad deal". Referring to May's speech, Schinas said: "We take these words by the prime minister very seriously so it is only natural that in this house we also prepare for every eventuality." The letter was described as "extraordinary" by Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. "A government intent on leaving EU and continually talking about prospect of 'no deal' moaning about EU preparing to treat UK as a non member and for the possibility of 'no deal'. "Unbelievable - or rather, increasingly believable from this inept UK government," she wrote on Twitter. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A Dalit family, that was allegedly beaten up by cow vigilantes for skinning the carcass of the animal in Una tehsil in Gujarat, have decided to embrace Buddhism. In July last year, seven Dalits of Mota Samadhiyala village were allegedly paraded and flogged for skinning a dead cow, an incident that caused nation-wide outrage after its video went viral. Later, four of these Dalit youths were taken to Una town, where they were tied up with a vehicle and allegedly thrashed by the cow vigilantes. A member of the Dalit family has alleged that the state government did not fulfil its promise to give jobs and a piece of land to the victims. "We have decided to convert to Buddhism as we have faced a lot of discrimination due to our traditional profession for skinning dead animals," Vashram Sarvaiya said, the eldest of three brothers who were beaten up by a group of cow vigilantes on July 11, 2016, near their village along with their father when they were skinning dead cows. "We are yet to finalise the date, but we have asked the community members to come together and convert to Buddhism in large numbers," he told PTI. Sarvaiya alleged that the government did not constitute a special court to try the case of assault -- as was promised by then Chief Minister Anandiben Patel. "The accused are roaming free after they were released on bail, and the case drags on. We haven't been given anything as promised by the state government. "All we have got was Rs 3 lakh that is given to Dalit victims in atrocity cases, but most of the money was spent on litigation and medicines as our father Ashok Sarvaiya continues to suffer due to the thrashing and needs to be taken to a Ahmedabad hospital for treatment," he said. With most of the accused out on bail, the family members are scared of stepping out of their home, Sarvaiya said. The matter came to light after a video of flogging, allegedly made by the cow vigilantes, went viral on social media platforms. The police had arrested 20 people in the matter. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Union minister and BJP leader Giriraj Singh today likened Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan to North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un saying they 'looked, acted and behaved' similarly. His statement comes days after Vijayan had lavished praise on Kim Jong-Un for putting up a 'tough' resistance against the 'imperialist' America better than the Communist-ruled China. "The Kerala government chief looks like, acts like and behaves like Kim Jong", Singh told reporters here. He also alleged that the CPI(M) led LDF government physically annihilated those who raise voices against it. Vijayan, while addressing a CPI(M) district committee meet at Kozhikode last week had said that North Korea was showcasing a better example in defending 'imperialist' forces. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Taking a serious note of problems faced by potato growers, the Uttar Pradesh government has decided to set up a committee to suggest relief measures for them. The state cabinet presided over by the Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath today gave its nod for setting up the committee headed by deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya, which will submit its report in 15 days time, spokesperson Srikant Sharam told reporters after the meeting. The committee will suggest measures for extending relief to potato growers, Sharma said, adding that continued efforts are being made to provide all possible help to farmers. Reacting to opposition charges in this regard, Sharma said: "Those who are actually responsible for the plight of potato growers in the country and state are raising fingers at us... the reality is that it is for the first time that minimum support price for potato has been announced which is Rs 4.87 per kg". In what was taken as a unique protest by the farmers last week, potatoes were thrown at various prominent places here, allegedly against the low purchase price of the produce. However, the government had dismissed the incident as the work of "miscreants" and had also suspended one police sub- inspector and four constables over it. Potatoes were thrown at the Vidhan Sabha Marg, near VVIP guest house and near the 1090 Crossing, all important areas of the state capital on Saturday. Srikant Sharma, who is also the power minister, reiterated government's resolve and said that continued efforts are on to ensure how farmers become self reliant and their income is doubled and cited the decisions like loan waiver for their benefit. Minister for Sugarcane Development Suresh Rana who was also present in the briefing said that it is for the first time since Independence that so much work has been done in the department. Punishment for under weighing has been made more stringent and instead of six months imprisonment, it has been extended to three years, Rana said. The cabinet also decided to re-start two sugar mills in Pipraich (Gorakhpur) and Munderwa (Basti) which have been closed since 2008 and 1999 ,respectively, he added. So far, the cane dues worth Rs 8,250 crore have been cleared to farmers, whereas the previous government had made a payment of Rs 5,456 crore during this period, Sharma added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Allahabad High Court today asked the CBI and Uttar Pradesh government to file counter affidavit on a petition challenging notification of the Centre directing CBI inquiry with respect to selections made by the UPPSC between 2012 and 2017. The bench comprising Chief Justice D B Bhosale and Justice Suneet Kumar fixedJanuary 18for hearing of the case. The court said that till next date the CBI will not interrogate any member or the chairman of the commission. The petition has been filed by the Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission (UPPSC) through its chairman and members. In the petition it is alleged that the UPPSC is a constitutional body and therefore notification directing the CBI inquiry was illegal and without jurisdiction. As per the petition, no inquiry against the commission can be directed under existing laws. The central government on the recommendation of the state government had passed an order for CBI inquiry for the selections made by the UPPSC between April 2012 and March 2017. Earlier on January 2, the court has asked counsel for the state government to apprise it on what basis state government has recommended central government for CBI inquiry. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Trump administration's decision to end special protections for about 200,0000 Salvadoran immigrants filled many Salvadoran families with dread Monday, raising the possibility that they will be forced to abandon their roots in the US and return to a violent homeland they have not known for years, even decades. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen gave Salvadorans with temporary protected status until Sept. 9, 2019, to leave the United States or face deportation. El Salvador becomes the fourth country since President Donald Trump took office to lose protection under the program, which provides humanitarian relief for people whose countries are hit with natural disasters or other strife. The decision, while not surprising, was a severe blow to Salvadorans in New York, Houston, San Francisco and other major cities that have welcomed them since at least the 1980s. Guillermo Mendoza, who came to the United States in 2000 when he was 19 years old, was anguished about what to do with his wife and two children who are US citizens. "What do I do? Do I leave the country and leave them here? That is a tough decision," said Mendoza, a safety manager at Shapiro & Duncan, a mechanical contractor company in Rockville, Maryland, near Washington. Orlando Zepeda, who came to the US in 1984 fleeing civil war in El Salvador, said the lack of surprise does not ease the sting for the 51-year-old Los Angeles-area man who works in building maintenance and has two American-born children. "It's sad, because it's the same story of family separation from that time, and now history repeats itself with my children," Zepeda said in Spanish. Many immigrants hope Congress can deliver a long-term reprieve by September 2019. If that fails, they face a grim choice: return to El Salvador voluntarily or live in the US illegally under an administration that has dramatically increased deportation arrests. Cristian Chavez Guevara, a 37-year-old Salvadoran immigrant in Houston who is raising two American stepchildren and a young cousin, said the decision would tear apart his family. He was unsure what to do. "I have been building dreams for the future and raising hope for a better future not just for me but for my family," he said. "All of that came to a halt." The action presents a serious challenge for El Salvador, a country of 6.2 million people whose economy counts on money sent by wage earners in the US Over the past decade, growing numbers of Salvadorans many coming as families or unaccompanied children have entered the United States illegally through Mexico, fleeing violence and poverty. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) US Special counsel Robert Mueller's team wants to question President Donald Trump as part of the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, media reports said today. Mueller is trying to determine if Trump's campaign advisers colluded with the Russian government to influence the election. The investigation also reportedly involves a probe into whether the President obstructed justice when he allegedly asked ex-FBI director James Comey to drop an inquiry into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. Flynn pleaded guilty in December to lying to the FBI about his conversations with the Russian ambassador, becoming the first senior White House official to cut a cooperation deal in Muellers inquiry. Now Trump's legal team is pushing for a written question and answer, multiple media reports said. There was no comment from Muller's office. The White House and Trump has been saying that he is ready to cooperate as he has nothing to hide. "Mr Trump's lawyers are expected to try to set ground rules for any interview or provide answers to written questions. If Mr Trump were to refuse outright to cooperate, Mr Mueller could respond with a grand jury subpoena," The New York Times said. The Wall Street Journal said some members of Trump's legal team believe a meeting between the president and Mueller would be 'gratuitous'. "The White House does not comment on communications with the Office of the Special Counsel out of respect for the Office of the Special Counsel and its process. The White House is continuing its full cooperation with the Office of the Special Counsel in order to facilitate the earliest possible resolution," an attorney, who heads Trumps private legal team, said. The possibility of Muller seeking to interview Trump, another media outlet said is an indication that the investigation is entering its final phase. "This is moving faster than anyone really realises," a source told The Washington Post. Trump is comfortable participating in an interview and believes it would put to rest the questions about whether his campaign coordinated with Russia in the 2016 election, the person added. So far, Mueller has interviewed several top present and former White House officials. Prominent among them include Trump's son-in-law Jarred Kushner. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Thirty players from ten countries, including India, are to take part in the inaugural edition of the USD 35,000 Vedanta Indian Squash Open 2018, a Professional Squash Association event to be held here from February 6-11. The event, to be held at the NSCI courts in Worli, has attracted participants from ten countries. Besides the hosts India, other participating countries include Egypt, France, Switzerland, Australia, the UK, Malaysia and Kuwait, said a media release here today. The tournament, promoted by 5 Sports, is supported by the PSA, the governing body for professional squash in the world, and the Squash Rackets Federation of India (SRFI). India no. 1 Sourav Ghosal and other top Indian players including Harinder Pal Sandhu and Mahesh Mangaonkar are set to take part in the PSA event, the release added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A special CBI court here is expected to pronounce judgement later this month in the third case of multi-crore fodder scam against RJD Chief Lalu Prasad related to fraudulent withdrawal of money from Chaibasa treasury in 1990s. Prasad is lodged in Birsa Munda jail after being convicted last month in the second case of over Rs 900 crore fodder scam linked to illegal withdrawal of money from Deogarh treasury. Special CBI Court judge Shiv Pal Singh had last Saturday sentenced him to three-and-a-half years in jail in the case. In all, the 69-year-old RJD president faced five cases in the multi-crore fodder scam in Ranchi and has been convicted in two of them. Special CBI court judge S S Prasad in Ranchi is expected to pronounce judgement later this month in connection with RC 68A/96 case, pertaining to alleged "fraudulent" withdrawal of Rs 35.62 crore from Chaibasa Treasury in 1990s. "Trial of 56 accused in the case is over and if the order is reserved tomorrow, judgement may be pronounced this month," a senior CBI official said here today. The official said that the matter is listed in the Special CBI court for tomorrow. Prasad is one of the accused in this case. Lalu was on December 23 last year held guilty in the RC 64A/96 pertaining to fraudulent withdrawal of Rs 89.27 lakh from Deoghar Treasury and was handed 3.5 years imprisonment on January 6 this year after the special CBI court judge Shiv Pal Singh held him guilty in the case. On September 30, 2013, Prasad was also held guilty in the RC 20A/96 pertaining to illegal withdrawal of Rs 37.7 crore and given five years prison term. Apart from the above cases, Prasad is also facing charges in the RC 38 A/96 pertaining to alleged illegal withdrawal of Rs 3.97 crore from Dumka Treasury and Rs 184 crore from Doranda Treasury in the early 1990s. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu will offer prayers at the hill temple of Lord Venkateswara near here, on Thursday, a temple official said today. Arriving in the evening on Wednesday, he would pray at the shrine the next morning, temple Public Relations Officer T Ravi told PTI. This would be Naidu's first visit to the temple after being sworn in on August 11 last year. An ardent devotee, Naidu had earlier visited the shrine in his capacity as Vice President-elect on August 7 last year, the officer added. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A special court today sought the Enforcement Directorate's reply by tomorrow on a plea of a woman director of two Dubai-based firms, accused in a money laundering case connected with the Rs 3,600 crore VVIP chopper deal, seeking permission to go abroad. In her application before Special Judge Arvind Kumar, Shivani Saxena, an active director of Dubai-based M/s UHY Saxena and M/s Matrix Holdings, submitted she needed to go to Dubai on January 15 for business purposes. Saxena was arrested by the ED on July 17 from Chennai in Tamil Nadu last year and later she was granted bail by Delhi high court on December 15, 2017 with various conditions, including that she will not leave the country without the court's prior permission. The ED had on September 13 last year filed a charge sheet against her and others. The final report had also named her husband, against whom a non-bailable warrant was issued for non-cooperation in the probe, but he has not been arrayed as an accused so far. Shivani Saxena and her husband Rajiv are residents of Palm Jumeirah in Dubai, an archipelago which is home to most expensive properties in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), ED's special public prosecutor N K Matta had told the court. He alleged that the two Dubai firms were the entities "through which the proceeds of crime have been routed and further layered and integrated in buying the immovable properties/shares, among others" in this case. The agency claimed that its probe had found that AgustaWestland, United Kingdom, had "paid an amount of Euro 58 million as kickbacks" through two Tunisia-based firms. "These companies further siphoned off the said money in the name of consultancy contracts to M/s Interstellar Technologies Limited, Mauritius and others which were further transferred to M/s UHY Saxena and M/s Matrix Holdings Ltd, Dubai and others," the ED had alleged. The agency had also arrested Delhi-based businessman Gautam Khaitan who is currently out on bail. It had registered a PMLA case in 2014 and named 21 people in its money laundering FIR. On January 1, 2014, India had scrapped the contract with Finmeccanica's British subsidiary AgustaWestland for supplying 12 AW-101 VVIP choppers to the IAF over alleged breach of contractual obligations and charges of kickbacks of Rs 423 crore paid by it to secure the deal. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Government agencies of West Bengal have joined hands with a reputed public society of the country, to develop a website to help trace people separated from their dear ones in milling crowd during the upcoming Ganga Sagar fair. The website is being developed by the West Bengal Disaster Management Department, the state police, the state's Inter Agency Group (IAG) and the National Institute of Amateur Radio (NIAR), a non-government organisation founded in Hyderabad and registered as a public society in 1983. According to a senior official at the West Bengal Disaster Management Department, work for the website is in full swing, as there were only a few days left for the Gangasagar Mela to begin. The fair is organised from January 11 to January 16 at the Sagar Island. "Basic details of the missing person along with his/her description, including contact number will be needed to be immediately uploaded on the portal. Once the detail is provided, a docket number will be generated by the website," the official said. Once the docket number is issued, even the missing person's relatives would have the option of tracking him/her, he said. The website would also feature the option to upload the voice recording of the missing person and help investigators understand the dialect. "There are thousands of people from different corners of the country speaking varied languages who come to the Ganga Sagar Mela every year. And at times it becomes a tough job to understand their language. So we have kept an option on the website of uploading voice recording of the missing person, which will be automatically translated through a tool," the official said. Claiming that the website is perhaps first of its kind in the country for any fair, the disaster management official said it was being developed by a member of the West Bengal Radio Club (amateur club), Nilkantha Chatterjee. A team of around 45 hams (amateur radio stations) from the West Bengal Radio Club would be working at this year's Gangasagar Mela in the South 24 Parganas district. "We have planned to set up ham radio stations at two water ambulances which have been provided by the state government. These stations will ensure unhindered communication between the ambulances and nearby hospitals in case of emergencies," another senior official of the state administration said. The radio stations would also help doctors coordinate with city hospitals in case the patient's condition is critical and required attention at a bigger hospital with superior infrastructure. The radio club, in the recent past, has reunited a number of patients at different hospitals with their families. These persons, who were under medical care, had gone "missing" while visiting the state on pilgrimage. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Reform of Zero Hour, concept of committee hour for discussion on parliamentary panel reports and reforms in structure of private members business were among the recommendations made during the 18th All India Whips' Conference which ended here today. The two-day meet hosted around 90 delegates representing the Centre and 19 states. Union Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Vijay Goel said during different sessions in the conference, consensus were reached on several issues, including disruption of House proceedings by lawmakers who storm to the well. He said 'whips' of various parties were of the opinion that disruption of house proceedings should be curbed. Goel told reporters that the 'whips' were of the view that issue-based quality debate and discussions should be promoted and skills of legislators should be upgraded. Reform of Zero Hour for more prompt reply and action taken report from the ministry concerned was one of the recommendations, he said. Zero Hour is the designated time in legislatures and Parliament to raise urgent matters of public importance. Participants at the conference noted that of late, important item of business was not being taken seriously by the ministries and departments concerned by not replying or giving summery reply thereon. One of the recommendations made at the conference was introducing a concept of Committee Hour, whose frequency can be suitably worked out later. The existing committee system of Parliament is an effective oversight for examining bills and other documents of the government. At the conference, it was discussed that reports submitted by panels were not discussed in the legislatures and the governments sometimes only accept selective recommendations. "In order to mitigate the situation, a system may be evolved wherein these reports may be discussed and replied to in the House. Keeping that in view, the conference suggested that the concept of Committee Hour could be developed," the recommendation document of the conference stated. The 'whips' also recommended that reforms in the structure of Private Members' Business need to be carried out. At present, Private Members' Business is discussed on the evening of every Friday in the House. To enhance sittings of Houses, the conference also opined establishment of a legislative framework for more working days in both legislatures and Parliament. For upgrading skills of lawmakers, the conference mooted developing Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training (BPST) as a national academy for their training. The conference also expressed desire to embrace e-Vidhan to enable state legislators to become paperless, more transparent, productive and accountable to the citizens and economise the entire legislative process. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Home appliance maker Whirlpool of India plans to invest Rs 182 crore to enhance production capacity of single door refrigerators. "The company is proposing to enhance its single door refrigerators' existing capacity of 21 lakh by 6 lakh per annum from internal sources at an estimated cost of Rs 182 crore to be spent over the next two years," the company said in a BSE filing. It said "setting up of additional capacity is being undertaken in line with the company's focus strategy and to meet increasing demand of its products". The current capacity utilisation of single door refrigerators is around 94 per cent, it added. The company has two refrigerator plants in Faridabad and Pune and a washing machine plant in Puducherry. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Talk show host and actor Oprah Winfrey's rousing Golden Globe speech has set social media abuzz with speculation that she might enter politics with many celebrities already looking at her as a possible presidential candidate in 2020. The 63-year-old, who yesterday became the first African- American woman to win the Cecil B DeMille Award at Golden Globe Awards 2018, used the platform to say that discrimination based on race and gender was no longer acceptable. Two of her close friends told CNN on condition of anonymity that some of her trusted people had been urging her to run for the post and she was "actively thinking" about it. CNN quoted a source as saying that Winfrey was yet to make up her mind about running for president. Her representative is yet to respond to the claim. At the Golden Globes ceremony yesterday, host Seth Meyers rooted for Winfrey's electoral debut in his opening monologue itself. "In 2011, I told some jokes about our current president at the White House Correspondents Dinner, jokes about how he was unqualified to be president. And some have said that night convinced him to run. And if that's true, I would just like to say, 'Oprah, you will never be president'. "And Hanks! Where is Hanks? You will never be vice president! You are too mean and unrelatable. Now we just wait and see," he joked. Actor Rose McGowan, one of the first women in Hollywood to accuse Hollywood magnate Harvey Weinstein of rape wrote on Twitter, "Alright Oprah." Fellow actor Alyssa Milano tweeted her response to a link hinting at Winfrey's possible political plunge, "Yes, please @Oprah. Yes." Declaring his support, British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver started a mini presidential campaign on Instagram and said it would be "the biggest landslide victory in the history of America" if Winfrey runs for the office. "I've got a strong feeling this woman should be the next President of the United States of America. She'd get my vote. It would be the biggest land slide victory in the history of America," Oliver wrote alongside a photograph of Winfrey with 'OPRAH 2020' written at the bottom. Jimmy Kimmel, who will return to host the Oscars this year, also chimed in. "Given the choice between Oprah and our current president, I'm on the bus with Oprah traveling the country encouraging people to sign up and vote. We'd have to call her President Winfrey, you realize that? I don't know if we're prepared for that as a country," Kimmel told reporters at the Television Critics Associations press tour in Pasadena, California. In her widely-praised speech Globes speech, Winfrey said Sidney Poitier, the first African-American man to win the Best Actor Oscar for "Lilies of the Field" and the Cecil B DeMille honour, inspired her as a little girl. Laced with sociopolitical undertones, she batted for gender equality and inclusion at the award event, echoing the general sentiment in Hollywood in the post Weinstein-era. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) A 23-year-old woman in Nepal was today found dead at an isolated hut where she was left alone as part of a long-banned ancient Hindu practice that banishes women from the home during menstruation, a media report said. Many communities in Nepal view menstruating women as impure and in some remote areas they are forced to sleep in a hut away from home during their periods, a custom known as "Chhaupadi". Police said that Gauri Bayak (Budha) was found dead by her neighbours inside the Chhaupadi hut (menstruation hut) yesterday at Turmakhad Rural Municipality-3 in Achham district, The Kathmandu Post reported. "The cause of her death will be known after post-mortem," Deputy Superintendent of Police Dadhiram Neupane said. Villagers suspect that Gauri might have died of smoke suffocation from the fire she had lit to keep herself warm inside the hut. "Gauri had lit a fire inside the hut. She might have died in her sleep due to smoke inhalation," said Ujir Bayak, a villager. The government in August last year declared the practice as a criminal offence and introduced a law that stipulated a three-month jail sentence and/or Rs 3,000 fine against those convicted of "Chhaupadi" crime. Despite the law and campaigns, the tradition is still rampant in some remote parts of the country. Last year, a 21-year-old woman and a 15-year-old girl had died in similar circumstances. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) For the first time in many years, the World Bank's outlook for the global economy is better than expected rather than worse, with all regions seeing improved growth, according to the forecast released today. However, the bank warns that countries must make investments to improve their growth prospects, and the time to do that is before the next crisis hits, as it inevitably will. "The big story is a good story. Global growth stronger than what we expected," World Bank economist Ayhan Kose told AFP, noting that all the forecasts in the Global Economic Prospects report are better than the June edition. Kose, who heads the World Bank's Development Prospects Group -- which twice a year prepares the global economic forecasts -- notes that the world is seeing "highly synchronised" economic expansion. That includes solid growth in the "big three" advanced economies -- the United States, the eurozone and Japan -- and improvements in the important emerging market economies. In addition, large commodity exporting economies like Russia and Brazil -- that were struggling and saw their economies contract in 2016 -- recovered last year. Since June, the World Bank has upgraded nearly all of its forecasts, with global economic growth now expected to rise to 3.0 per cent for 2017, three-tenths of a point higher than the prior estimate. Growth is expected to hit 3.1 percent this year, and 3.0 per cent in 2019. The biggest gains are in advanced economies, which were revised up four-tenths for 2017 and 2018, to 2.3 per cent and 2.2 per cent, respectively. But for 2019 and 2020, those economies are seen slowing to 1.9 per cent and 1.7 per cent, the report said. Euro area growth was revised up 0.7 points to 2.4 per cent in 2017, and another 0.6 points to 2.1 per cent for 2018. The United States saw a smaller upgrade to 2.3 per cent last year and 2.2 per cent this year, while Japan rebounded to 1.7 per cent in 2017 and an expected 1.3 per cent this year. But the World Bank said its report was "a clarion call for public action" to keep growth from reversing, warning that "the forces depressing potential output growth will continue unless countered by structural policies." It calls for investments in infrastructure, education and health, and measures to encourage more people, especially women to join the workforce. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) By Jonathan Stempel NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire Ira Rennert has filed a $214 million malpractice lawsuit against his former law firm, after a jury found him liable for looting his magnesium company to build a huge mansion in New York's Hamptons. Renco Group Inc, Rennert's holding company, said neither it nor the mining mogul would have been liable had Kaye Scholer and partner Peter Haveles objected to faulty jury instructions that Rennert has said led to an "irrational" February 2015 verdict. The lawsuit, filed late Monday in the state supreme court in Manhattan, may be the last chance for Rennert, 83, to avoid a big payout, after the U.S. Supreme Court in October rejected his appeal of the verdict and resulting $213.2 million judgment. Both had been upheld by the federal appeals court in Manhattan last March. Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer, the successor firm to Kaye Scholer, did not immediately respond on Tuesday to requests for comment. Haveles, now a partner at Pepper Hamilton, referred a reporter to his former firm. Rennert is worth $3.8 billion according to Forbes magazine, and has denied the looting allegations. His current lawyer, Steven Kaufman, was unavailable for comment on the lawsuit, which also seeks interest. The case arose from the 2001 bankruptcy of Magnesium Corp of America. Lee Buchwald, MagCorp's bankruptcy trustee, accused Rennert of diverting money from the now-defunct company to help build his 21-bedroom, 43,000-square-foot mansion known as Fair Field on 65 oceanfront acres in Sagaponack, on Long Island. The property was valued last March at $248.5 million, real estate records show. Jurors in Manhattan federal court found Rennert and Renco liable for $118 million to the MagCorp estate. The trial judge, Alison Nathan, later added interest. Rennert has long said the verdict made no sense because jurors thought MagCorp was solvent at the time of the alleged transfers. In Monday's complaint, Renco said its former lawyers wrongly failed to object both to jury instructions that led to the "inexplicably inconsistent" verdict, and to the jury's dismissal after the verdict was read. Had the lawyers spoken up, the jury would have announced a verdict "consistent with the 27 interrogatories it answered finding 27 separate times that the (Renco) subsidiaries were not insolvent or inadequately capitalized," Renco said. The case is Renco Group Inc v Kaye Scholer LLP et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 150184/2018. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) By Leigh Thomas and Anjali Athavaley PARIS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Telecoms and cable group Altice NV is separating its U.S. and European operations to try to reassure investors alarmed by its high debt and low revenue generation, especially in its core French telecoms business. Altice said it would spin off its U.S. arm to existing investors and prioritise a turnaround of its European operations. Both companies will have new management. Altice's battered shares -- down about 50 percent over the past year -- rose 6.6 percent in Europe on Tuesday, boosted by hopes the breakup could open the door to a wider reorganisation and possibly allow it to offload problematic assets. The U.S. business, no longer owned by Altice NV, would be shielded from concerns about the European operation, while a parting $1.5 billion dividend payment will improve the balance sheet of the European arm. "Altice USA's shares have suffered from guilt by association with the weaker results at the European parent," said Craig Moffett, an analyst at MoffettNathansonMoffett. "The biggest overhang on Altice USA shares," he added in an email, "has been the nagging concern that U.S. shareholders might somehow be called upon to backstop weakness in Europe. That risk will now be gone." Altice's performance in Europe last year led investors to question its strategy, and in November founder Patrick Drahi returned as president while Chief Executive Michel Combes resigned. Altice NV, which is based in the Netherlands and will be renamed Altice Europe, aims to complete the spinoff of its 67.2 percent interest in Altice USA by the end of the second quarter, following regulatory and shareholder approvals. Turning around operations in France and Portugal are the top goals for the European business. Altice NV's stock is down by about half over the last 12 months, while shares in the U.S. unit are down about 35 percent from their market debut last June. ACQUISITION SPREE Altice has grown in the United States and Europe through debt-fuelled acquisitions, raising its net debt to more than five times its annual core operating profit. Drahi in a statement also said that there was a path to further strengthen the European balance sheet over the long term through non-core asset disposals. Analysts at brokerage Raymond James said Altice's European arm could become an acquisition target for rival French telecoms companies. "A separate listing of Altice Europe makes a sale of this asset easier, to Bouygues or Iliad for instance, which could both consider market consolidation synergies in France, in our view," Raymond James wrote in a research note. "However, we doubt that the intention to sell is unlikely to be reached in the medium-term, as this would require a material discount to the price paid for these assets," it added. The two companies will be led by separate management teams with Drahi retaining control of both companies. Dennis Okhuijsen will become CEO of Altice Europe and Dexter Goei will continue to serve as chief executive of Altice USA. Franco-Israeli tycoon Drahi will own 52 percent of the European business and 43 percent of the U.S. business. The dividend to be paid to Altice Europe will add to Altice USA's net debt, which was approximately $21.2 billion at the end of the third quarter of last year. Altice USA also approved a $2 billion repurchase program of U.S. shares, once the separation is complete. The U.S. dividend will provide an approximately 900 million euro cash injection to the European operation. (Additional reporting by Sonam Rai and Supantha Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta in Paris; Editing by Clive McKeef and Keith Weir) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The move is intended to simplify a sprawling communications empire that executives said encompassed two distinct markets, the United States and Europe. Altice's performance in Europe last year led investors to question its strategy, and in November founder Patrick Drahi returned as president while Chief Executive Michel Combes resigned.[nL8N1NFB1B] "Altice USA's shares have suffered from guilt by association with the weaker results at the European parent," Craig Moffett, an analyst at MoffettNathanson, said in an email. "The biggest overhang on Altice USA shares," he added, "has been the nagging concern that U.S. shareholders might somehow be called upon to backstop weakness in Europe. That risk will now be gone." Netherlands-based Altice NV, which will be renamed Altice Europe, said it aims to complete the spinoff of its 67.2 percent interest in Altice USA by the end of the second quarter of 2018, following regulatory and shareholder approvals. Altice has grown in the United States and Europe through debt-fueled acquisitions, raising its net debt to more than five times its annual core operating profit. The two companies will be led by separate management teams with Drahi retaining control of both companies. Dennis Okhuijsen will become CEO of Altice Europe and Dexter Goei will serve as CEO of Altice USA. Franco-Israeli tycoon Drahi is the group's controlling shareholder with a 31.1 percent stake, according to Thomson data. Altice USA on Monday also approved in principle a cash dividend of $1.5 billion to all shareholders immediately prior to completion of the separation, funded by debt. It also approved a $2 billion repurchase program of U.S. shares, once the separation is complete. (Reporting by Sonam Rai and Supantha Mukherjee in Bengaluru; editing by Peter Henderson; Editing by Maju Samuel) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India wants state-run utility GAIL (India) Ltd to focus on laying gas pipelines, the oil minister said on Tuesday after reports about government plans to spin off its marketing operations. Splitting GAIL has been considered before, following the government's move to allow private players to enter the gas industry in the past decade. "We want GAIL to focus on laying gas pipelines," Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan told reporters when asked about plans to split the gas utility. "Our priority, and expectation from GAIL is to focus on building pipelines mainly in eastern India. GAIL is doing that job well. Anybody can do marketing," he added. Many private players see GAIL's dominance in owning and operating most of the country's gas pipeline network as conflicting with its other role as a gas marketing and trading firm. Gas marketing accounted for 28 percent of GAIL's profit in the financial year 2016/17, while the transmission business contributed 46 percent. GAIL, formed in 1984 to build gas pipelines, has diversified into petrochemicals, exploration and gas trading. It has signed long-term gas purchase deals, which include 5.8 million tonnes liquefied natural gas (LNG) booked out of the U.S. India, which now relies heavily on coal for power generation, is seeking to increase the use of gas. It wants to raise the share of gas as an energy source to 15 percent from 6.5 percent. The state-run company operates about 11,000 km (6,900 miles) of gas pipelines in the country that can distribute 210 million cubic metres of gas a day. It is investing 202 billion rupees ($3.2 billion) to add a further 4,200 km (2,600 miles), the company's website says. Indian Oil Corp and Bharat Petroleum have expressed interest in acquiring GAIL. ($1 = 63.7125 Indian rupees) (Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan; Writing by Nidhi Verma; Editing by Edmund Blair) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Hedge fund JANA Partners LLC and the California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS) pension fund said on Saturday that iPhone overuse could be hurting children's developing brains, an issue that may harm the company's long-term market value. But some investors said the habit-forming nature of gadgets and social media are one reason why companies like Apple, Google parent Alphabet Inc and Facebook Inc added $630 billion to their market value in 2017. "We invest in things that are addictive," said Apple shareholder Ross Gerber, chief executive of Gerber Kawasaki Wealth and Investment Management. He also owns stock in coffee retailer Starbucks Corp , casino-runner MGM Resorts International and alcohol-maker Constellation Brands Inc . "Addictive things are very profitable," Gerber added. Still, the investment community is increasingly holding companies to higher social standards, and there is some concern that market-leading tech companies could draw attention from regulators much like alcohol, tobacco and gambling companies have in the past. Apple, Alphabet and Facebook could not immediately be reached for comment on Monday, but Facebook has said social media can be beneficial if used appropriately. Apple shares traded marginally lower on Monday. CalSTRS holds $1.9 billion in Apple stock, a sliver of the company's nearly $900 billion market value, while JANA declined to disclose the size of its smaller stake. "Before Apple speaks, I think it's too early to change the narrative" for investors, said Peter Jones, vice president of research for Ferguson Wellman Capital Management, which has about 350,000 Apple shares. Social media companies, not hardware makers, are more deserving of any addiction-related scrutiny, some said. Jordan Waldrep, who invests in alcohol, tobacco and gambling stocks as manager of the USA Mutuals Vice Fund , said blaming Apple for their customer's addiction was analogous to blaming makers of cigarette packs instead of tobacco companies. "The social media, the cigarettes, are the addictive product," he said. Waldrep's Vice fund does not own Apple but he said he would consider including social-media companies. Kim Forrest, senior portfolio manager and vice president at Fort Pitt Capital Group, agreed that companies like Facebook, Twitter Inc and Snap Inc might be more at risk than Apple if investors and regulators push back on how much time people spend on mobile devices. "Apple is just the delivery device," said Forrest, who said Fort Pitt has limited Apple holdings. "It's only compelling with software. Software is the dopamine releaser that keeps you coming back." Twitter declined to comment and Snap could not immediately be reached. The letter from JANA and CalSTRS recommends Apple set up a committee of child-development experts and make more new tools available to parents. The addiction issue gained notoriety when former Disney child star Selena Gomez said she canceled a 2016 world tour to go to therapy for depression and low self-esteem, feelings she linked to a social media addiction. Fears about smartphone addiction have already kicked off regulatory backlash. In December, the French education minister said mobile phones would be banned in schools, and draft legislation in France would require children under 16 to seek parental approval to open a Facebook account. Even tech insiders are among the vocal critics of social media and its addictive potential. "Apple Watches, Google Phones, Facebook, Twitter - they've gotten so good at getting us to go for another click, another dopamine hit," said Tony Fadell, a former Apple executive, on Twitter. John Streur, chief executive of Calvert Research and Management, an Apple shareholder that focuses on social responsibility, said it is plausible that tech devices may some day be understood to hold risks we do not currently understand well. That would hurt investors if evidence later emerged that companies intentionally built features that create dependency and had evidence that doing so was unsafe. For the time being, John Carey, a portfolio manager at Amundi Pioneer Asset Management in Boston, said concerns over the human impacts from being glued to screens are not likely to cut into profits. The company holds Apple stock, but the funds Carey manages do not. "I doubt there will be any impact on the use of smartphones. We're already addicted to them," he said. (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Ross Kerber, April Joyner, Sinead Carew, David Ingram and Elizabeth Dilts; Editing by Megan Davies and Meredith Mazzilli) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Late last month, the government had ordered a safeguard duty probe on surging solar cell imports with a view to protect domestic manufacturers. But today, the All India Solar Industries Association (AISIA), the industry body of domestic solar manufacturers, has come out strongly against the imposition of any such blanket import duty, claiming that it will hurt manufacturers operating from special economic zones (SEZs). "SEZ units are treated on par with foreign manufacturers and hence any safeguard duty will be detrimental to the domestic solar industry as a whole," said AISIA general secretary Gyanesh Chaudhary in a statement. Ironically, the probe was ordered after the domestic industry approached the Directorate General of Safeguards last month. A complaint had been filed by the Indian Solar Manufacturer's Association (ISMA) on behalf of five Indian producers-Mundra Solar PV, Indosolar, Jupiter Solar Power, Websol Energy Systems and Helios Photo Voltaic-alleging that their market share has remained stagnant despite rapid expansion in demand for solar cells in the country. Under the World Trade Organization framework, a member country can impose a Safeguard Duty for a certain time-frame if the quantity of imports surpasses domestic production thus damaging the domestic industry. Imports of solar cells-primarily from China, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan-increased from 1,275 mw in 2014-15 to 9,331 mw in the last fiscal. On the other hand, domestic production stood at 246 mw in FY15 and is likely to increase to 1,164 mw in the current financial year. The market share of domestic players has steadily diminished in the same period-from 13% to an estimated 7%. In light of the above, ISMA had asked for safeguard duty on "solar cells whether or not assembled in modules or panels" immediately for four years. AISIA has countered that 60% of the country's currently-installed solar capacity are in SEZs. Furthermore, SEZs account for about 45% of the 8,300 mw of solar module manufacturing facilities. "Hence, the indigenous manufactures situated in SEZ will come under the ambit of any blanket duty that will be imposed on solar cells and modules, which will make them uncompetitive," said Chaudhary. The association further said the specific anti-dumping duty on imports from China, which is flooding the domestic market with its cheap solar modules, is making domestic industry unviable. In FY17, estimated demand of solar modules was around 6000 mw, which is expected to go up to 10,000 mw this fiscal. "The purpose of duty should be to protect the domestic industry from dumping. Levying duty on domestic manufacturers can also lead to an increase in the cost of power that will discourage the domestic industry," he added. This, incidentally, is just the sort of protectionism that the US has long been accusing India of. In 2013, Washington complained to the WTO that India's solar program was discriminatory and that US solar exports to India had fallen by 90% since 2011. In 2016, the WTO had found India guilty of violating trade rules by requiring solar power developers to use Indian-made cells and modules. The panel also struck down incentive policies such as subsidies provided for domestic solar companies. But, last month, the US triggered a new round of litigation at the WTO, arguing that India had failed to abide by the above ruling. In a statement published by the WTO yesterday, India has countered it has changed its rules to conform with the ruling and that the US claim for punitive trade sanctions are groundless. The Indian statement added that Washington had skipped legal steps, failed to follow the correct WTO procedure, and omitted to mention any specific level of trade sanctions that it proposed to level on India, leaving India "severely prejudiced". In any case, such allegations do not bode well for the solar power sector. According to Quartz India, against the National Solar Mission's yearly target of 15,000 MW for 2017-2018, India commissioned just over 3,000 MW of solar power as of December 2017. That makes the government's target of 100 gw solar capacity by 2022 a bit of a joke, unless things change significantly on the ground. With agency inputs Amid reports of the United States planning to toughen up H-1B visa extension rules, the Trump administration - in a huge relief to over 7,50,000 Indians working in the US - has said it is not considering any proposal that would force H-1B visa holders to leave the country. The current announcement provides an extension beyond the stipulated period of six years to all foreign workers, most of them Indians in the IT sector, working in several US companies under the H-1B visa norm. Washington has clarified the allegations related to the US government taking strict measures to "deport" H1-B visa holder Indians - whose Green Card requests were pending - were false, and that there were provisions to retain employees even if the allegations were true. The US government has said that reports on the Trump administration reversing its decision under pressure were "absolutely false", and that the government had never considered such a policy change. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) in a statement said: "The USCIS is not considering a regulatory change that would force H-1B visa holders to leave the United States by changing interpretation of section certain language in Section 104 C of the American Competitiveness in the 21st Century Act (AC21) statute that states that USCIS may grant the extensions." "Even if it were, such a change would not likely result in these H-1B visa holders having to leave the United States because employers could request extensions in one-year increments under section 106(a)-(b) of AC21 instead," Jonathan Withington, Chief of Media Relations at the USCIS, said in a statement. "The agency is considering a number of policy and regulatory changes to carry out the US President's Buy American, Hire American Executive Order, including a thorough review of employment based visa programmes," Withington said. The H1-B visa issue caught fire after a US- based news agency, McClatchy DC Bureau, last week reported that the US was mulling new H-1B regulations to prevent the visa extension. The agency on Monday added the US government had taken the decision under "intense pressure" from the business and technology communities. Several Indians and industry leaders had also raised a strong objection to the proposal last week, saying the move could equally harm the US, which benefitted from the Indian workforce immensely. Many in India were also of the view that if it the US went ahead with the visa restriction, it would help boost India's economic growth at a time when it's racing against Asian superpowers like China and Japan. Reps. Kavin Yoder, a Kansas Republican, and Tulsi Gabbard, a Democrat from Huwaii, had also sent a letter to the US Present Donald Trump saying the move could prove to be harmful in terms of India's relation with the US and the Indian workers contribution to the overall US economy. In India, Nasscom had said the decision could also create a shortage of skilled workers in America in core fields like science and technology. "It is not only about the Indian IT industry but about all Indians who use H-1B visas... Given that there is a real problem of shortage of skilled professionals in the US, any disruptive move will be detrimental for both India and the US," Nasscom President R Chandrashekhar had said. Considering the US government's tough stance on foreign policy, many still believe the overall fear of losing their H-1B visa status in future could also lead to "self-deportation" of thousands of Indian workers. In the past two years, there has been a major shift in the foreign policies of most western powers, including the US, the UK, and other EU countries, which are putting up protectionist barriers to scale up domestic job opportunities and fulfill their political agenda. Compounding the troubles for the Indian tech sector is another US Bill -- Protect and Grow American Jobs (HR170) -- that proposes new restrictions to prevent misuse and abuse of H-1B visas. It tightens the definition of visa-dependent companies, and imposes fresh curbs in terms of minimum salary and movement of talent. Visa dependent companies will have to raise the minimum salary for H-1B visa holders from USD 60,000 to USD 90,000 under the proposed Bill. Also, it places the onus on clients to certify that the visa holder is not displacing an existing employee for a tenure of 5-6 years. With PTI inputs The Sensex and Nifty ended at record closing highs for the third consecutive session as optimism rose ahead of Narendra Modi government's last full year Budget on February 1. The indexes also gained ground amid optimism over Q3 earnings due to favourable effect of a low base an year ago. Tata Consultancy Services is due to post December-quarter results on Thursday, followed by Infosys on Friday. While the Sensex closed 90.40 points or 0.26% higher to 34,443 level, breaching its previous closing level of 34,352.79, Nifty settled at 10,637, a rise of 13 points from its previous record close of 10,623 level. Earlier, the Sensex hit an all-time high of 34,488 level intra day. Nifty too touched lifetime high of 10,659 in trade today. BSE realty index rose 2.9 percent, consumer durables index added 0.8 percent, IPO and energy indexes gain 0.15-0.2 percent; IT index was up 0.3 percent. Coal India (5.63%), YES Bank (2.31%) and Wipro (2.11%) are the top Sensex gainers. Bharti Airtel (1.18%), Adani Ports (1.13%) and Hero MotoCorp (0.91%) are top losers on Sensex. Coal India rose up to 7.69% after the state run miner said its board has approved a hike in non-coking coal prices for both power and non-power consumers with immediate effect. "Markets are flattish as there is some volatility due to expectations around budget, corporate results which are starting soon and the global markets," said Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services. Coffee Day Enterprises, the Cafe Coffee Day chain owner was locked in the upper circuit of 20% or 54.10 points to 324.65 level. Market breadth is negative with 1369 stocks closing higher against 1623 enidng lower on BSE. 102 stocks were unchanged. S&P BSE consumer durables index was the top gainer among the 19 sectoral indexes rising 193 points to 24,053 level. PC jeweller (6%) and VIP Industries (4.17%) were the top gainers on the index. The BSE auto index was the top loser with Cummins India (2.14%) and Eicher Motors (1.84%) falling most on the index. Meanwhile, iron ore miner NMDC closed 4.48 percent lower to Rs 154.60 after the government unveiled a plan to sell up to 47.5 million shares in the company. Global markets MSCI's all-country world stocks index posted another record high as Europe's main markets shrugged off a tech wobble in Asia and instead cheered Christmas trading updates and more forecast-beating data from Germany. Asian trading saw Japan's Nikkei close at its highest since November 1991, catching up to the previous session's gains as markets reopened after a holiday on Monday. South Korea's share market erased its gains and slipped 0.1 percent, dragged lower by a 3.1 percent drop in shares of Samsung Electronics Co. Move your car under cover or away from trees. Secure or put away loose items around your house, yard and balcony. Keep at least 8 metres away from fallen power lines or objects that may be energised, such as fences. Report fallen power lines to either Ausgrid on 131 388, or Endeavour Energy on 131 003 or Essential Energy on 132 080, as shown on your power bill. Unplug computers and appliances. Avoid using the phone during the storm. Stay indoors away from windows, and keep children and pets indoors as well. "Even when she saw Santa and he asked her want she wanted for Christmas, Madelyn said, 'Oh, I just want to find Adam'," Veronika said. But the University of Canberra has indicated it will no longer hire Noah's Ark after PETA complained via email that petting zoos "[escalate] the stress level of the animals, who, unlike the human visitors, cannot leave the zoo when they've had enough". Anyhow, that's Trump for you. A person with zero self-control (and we all know this, which is why so many of us believed he would be thrilled to watch gorilla movies all day). This might be fine if he was a toddler, but he's a grown man. And that's been apparent from the very beginning. From the lies about the size of his inauguration crowd to the lies about the size of his intellect, he does what every small child does at the beginning of her understanding of how the world works: test the boundaries. That's how we grow to understand what is socially acceptable and what is not. Such fears were later exploited by Pauline Hanson mark I, to Howard's disadvantage, and at further cost to his reputation. With extra panic about the threat of terrorism and Islam, they are running again with arrivals from around the Hindu Kush and refugees from Africa. The problems such people have in fitting in are aggravated by the decreased investment in government integration programs, as well as the effects of exaggerating and manipulating concerns about national security. The creation of a sense of siege, requiring an ever more intrusive and coercive state, led by bureaucrats who use the language of fear to build up their empires and their budgets, is supervised by Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton. That ASIO and the federal police each of which, in its own way, has tried to separate itself from the blame and fearmongering now answer to him and, in the name of better coordination and effectiveness, will now be under pressure to sing from his hymn sheet is perhaps the greatest bulwark of national insecurity. After Mr Lloyd agreed in an October Senate estimates hearing to take on notice requests for phone records of his contacts with the IPA, the Australian Public Service Commission said it wouldn't release them to senators because it would involve an "unreasonable diversion" of its resources. In 2016, Seat launched their first SUV, the compact Ateca, and one year later, it was followed by the smaller Arona. It represents the Spanish brands foray into the very crowded subcompact SUV segment, and takes on the Hyundai Kona, Citroen C3 Aircross, Ford EcoSport, and the old Nissan Juke. The Arona posses a clean styling both inside and out, combined with plenty of standard features, even on the entry-level model, which gets 17-inch alloy wheels, metallic paint, and DRLs, among others. Sharing its underpinnings with the latest Seat Ibiza, the new Arona offers plenty of storage spaces, and it can take four passengers on long journeys, but add a fifth one, and they might not be your friend for long, as the middle rear seat is very cramped. The Seat SUV also offers one of the largest boots in the class, which can become even more generous with the omnipresent 60/40 split rear seat. On the go, the petrol powered versions are smooth and quite, although you may want to ditch the entry-level 95PS (94hp) 1.0-liter TSI and go for either the 115PS (113hp) version, or the FR, with a punchier 150PS (148hp) unit, as the former can be a tad slow. Those who still want to have a diesel, can get the 1.6-liter TDI, with either 95PS (94hp) or 115PS (113hp). Still, regardless of the model, all versions come exclusively with FWD. Now, is the Seat Arona really worth buying? Well, lets see what CarBuyer had to say about it. VIDEO Former Toyota President Tatsuro Toyoda has passed away at the age of 88, the automaker said in a statement this past Saturday. The late executive was paramount in overseeing Toyotas global expansion, and more specifically, in the United States. Toyoda was president from 1992 to 1995 after health issues pushed him out of the top role. However, before he took control of the entire company, he was president of the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc, or NUMMI, in California. The plant, a joint-venture with General Motors, helped usher in Toyotas efficient manufacturing processes and showed the system worked outside of Japan. Toyodas leadership and the NUMMI plant opened up opportunities for future U.S. investments. Today, the Japanese automaker operates 10 manufacturing facilities in the U.S. Arguably, its this role that cemented Toyodas legacy. His departure in 1995 ushered in Hiroshi Okuda to take control of the automaker. Okuda was the first president outside of the Toyoda family since 1967. In 2009, Akio Toyoda, Tatsuros nephew, became president, which brought the family back in control of the automaker. Toyoda held various positions after his tenure as president, including an advisory role and vice chairman. Toyotas statement said the former executive passed away on December 30, 2017, after a battle with pneumonia. A private funeral was held for family, but Toyota plans for a farewell gathering at a future date. Workers at Porsches Zuffenhausen plant are preparing to briefly walk off the job this week on the back of pay rise demands from major German labor union, IG Metall. Stuttgarter Nachrichten reports that IG Metall is encouraging its members to down tools for one hour this week. This move has been spurred on by requests for a six per cent wage increase for its 3.9 million members in the metal and engineering sectors. Additionally, the union is seeking a shorter working week. In a statement, Porsche works council chief Uwe Hueck said employees deserve a share in the profits made in the metal and engineering industries. The current stance of the employers lobby is a provocation to workers. The metal and engineering industry has never before made so much profit. Thats why there is only one appropriate response: Warning strikes. Certain employers believe that the pay rise demands are excessive and in response, have offered a 2 per cent rise and a one-off payment of roughly 200 euros ($271). Pay negotiation talks are penciled in for this Thursday. PHOTO GALLERY USA and South Korea talks about a new trade deal come at a time of great pressure due to North Koreas nuclear arms. President Trump wants to sign a trade deal with South Korea that strikes a balance between his domestic agenda and the need to contain North Koreas nuclear ambitions, Reuters reports. Since signing the previous U.S-Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS) in 2012, the U.S. goods trade deficit with South Korea has doubled. Almost 90 percent of the 2016 shortfall ($27.6 billion) came from the automotive sector, which is an issue expected to be pressed hard during the negotiation. The talks are led by Assistant U.S. Trade Representative Michael Beeman and the Director General for FTA negotiations at South Koreas trade ministry Yoo Myung-hee. Yoo confirmed that the U.S. has primarily raised the issue of the automobile sector. According to sources on both sides, a top priority for the U.S. is to maintain a tariff of 25 percent on imports of Korean pickup trucks and vans, which the existing deal would phase out from 2019. South Korea has also been criticized as discriminating against imports with a range of non-tariff barriers. The report goes on saying that the two South Korean car makers, Hyundai and Kia, also believe that Washington will push for increasing the current 25,000-vehicle per U.S. car maker shipment to South Korea limit that can enter the country without meeting their domestic industry regulations. Another source said that the U.S. is interested in South Korea easing its vehicle emissions targets which are viewed as discriminating against vehicles made in the United States. Photo: BC Care Providers Association BC Care Providers Association has launched a new campaign aimed at educating the public on what it calls "the enormous opportunity for careers in seniors care." Daniel Fontaine CEO of the British Columbia Care Providers Association said that statistically, in B.C., seniors care offers the highest job growth of any field in the coming decade. "Across the province, we could be doing a much better job of being able to implement strategies that will encourage people to come into seniors care." Dubbed #BecauseBCCares, the campaign will focus on three key areas: Job growth in seniors care, Job security, The diversity of job types available in the sector. "Part of this campaign is telling people that we are an ageing society and that there will be a huge amount of growth in seniors care in the next five to 10 years and beyond." BCCPA represents the majority of non-government seniors care providers in B.C. We want to kick off that conversation among friends at dinner tables, and within the seniors care sector itself that we have great career opportunities available in high demand fields that will be here for decades to come." The #BecauseBCCares campaign page at bccare.ca has a list of resources available. We also want to convey there are many job openings in rural and remote areas across British Columbia, not just in the major urban centres. These smaller communities also offer more affordable housing options coupled with a very high quality of life. A day-long conference is being held in Surrey, on Jan. 26. The 2nd Annual BC Continuing Care Collaborative is a partnership between BCCPA and the Ministry of Health. The Hon. Adrian Dix will deliver a keynote address to 140 representatives from government, organized labour, health authorities, career colleges, and care providers who will be in attendance. Fontaine said, for anyone interested in attending the conference, he will "move heaven and earth" to open a spot for them. Interested participants are encouraged to contact his staff. Alanna Kelly Two young Kelowna men are lucky to be alive after fighting for their lives when they got lost and had to spend the night on Boulder Mountain in Revelstoke. It was the perfect day for snowmobiling, but one wrong turn quickly changed everything. Andrew Macleod and TJ Dumonceaux, both 23, rented the snowmobiles on Saturday as they were hoping to buy sleds themselves. We were running out of gas and we were making our way down when we took a trail into some really gnarly stuff, said Macleod. We turned the sleds around and we tried to get out of that area and we ended up in this gully with a river in it. The two tried to get the sleds out over and over, but kept getting stuck. It started getting dark, and we realized to ourselves that we werent going to make it out at all that night, he said. An alarm was set to go off every 15 minutes so the two wouldnt fall asleep and get hypothermia. When they would wake up, they would wiggle their toes, which would crack the ice off the inside of their boots. We were soaking wet. We were freezing cold. We just huddled for warmth in this shelter all night, said Macleod. On Sunday morning, the two ate the rest of their food and tried to dig the sleds out again, but their hands were frozen. They decided to walk and try to find a trail. We just walked and walked and walked until about 2 p.m. in waist-deep powder trying to find a trail or any snowmobiles, he said. We couldnt walk anymore, so we found this tree and it really wasnt looking good. We really thought we were going to die." Dumonceaux said they tried to stay positive throughout most of the day, but they started to lose hope. You lose a lot of hope when you are out there and you dont know where you are, you are cold, tired, hungry, he said. A helicopter flew over the boys for a few minutes, but disappeared. It was a short while after when they heard the noise of the helicopter again. "We just started yelling and screaming and setting off two flares when the helicopter came close. Finally, we heard snowmobiles come close and heard someone yell hey and it was the best moment of my life, said Macleod. It went from hell to heaven within two seconds. The men said they were so dehydrated they couldnt even cry when the crews scooped them up. Everything they did was just spectacular, they are very professional and finally got us home, said Macleod. The two are putting together a gift to give to the Revelstoke Search and Rescue crews to thank them. Alanna Kelly Would you know what to do if you were stranded on a mountain? We talked with team leader for the Vernon Search and Rescue helicopter winch rescue program to get the information that could just save your life. Always have a partner, never go alone, said Jeremy Vandekerkhove. Let someone know where you are going for the day. He suggests even leaving a note in your vehicle stating which area you will be. The number one object to bring with you is actually a cell phone. If you are going into an area where the cell phones wont work, and you will be remote, having a SAT phone or spot device, some way to contact help, he said. Vandekerkhove said gear that is needed to stay overnight includes emergency blankets, small first aid kits and some way to make a fire. The best chance to survive overnight is making a snow cave. Most people have avalanche gear with them, with a shovel you can make a really nice snow cave, he said. Even a small candle will keep the cave warm and he added it is important to make a ventilation hole. Let people know where you are going, never go alone, stay warm and dry, and be visible to rescuers, Vandekerkhove said. Chantelle Deacon A Grade 12, Vernon Secondary School student definitely knows how to sweep his girlfriend off her feet. Tyler de Boer has been planning to ask his girlfriend Sydney to Grad for months, he just wanted to make it perfect. "Our first date we were supposed to go skating but we didn't do that because of the weather," de Boer said. "I thought it would be a cool way to ask her because originally we were supposed to go skating but now at the end, we are going skating together." "They [Silver Star] wanted to make a promo video out of it and I thought that would be something different, no one has really done that before." The high school couple has been dating for about 10 months and were celebrating their anniversary when he popped the question. "She loved watching the video and I think it was a cool touch, the way they made it is really nice." Photo: City of Enderby The City of Enderby is onboard with the idea of ride-sharing in its community. We think that it is critical that the forthcoming provincial legislation provides flexibility so that ride-sharing has the best shot at being viable in small communities," said Mayor Greg McCune. The municipality recently participated in a provincial Select Standing Committee on the benefits of ride-sharing in small, rural, and remote communities. Councillor Brian Schreiner was the lead presenter. "I was really impressed by the questions that the committee asked of us, said Schreiner. It was obvious that they were very up on the issues and wanted to learn more about our perspective." Schreiner believes that the conversation on ride-sharing should not be dominated by large urban markets. "There are unique challenges and opportunities in small communities that need to be considered. The Enderby delegation discussed the struggles of limited public transportation options. "This makes it difficult for seniors to get to medical appointments, for instance. Small communities have different needs and ridership demands, in part because of the lack of other transportation options." Our argument was pretty simple, said McCune. In small communities where there is less access to services, there is the greatest need for transportation options. However, these same small markets are less likely to attract alternative transportation options under an onerous regulatory regime." The mayor continued, "So lets ensure that the conversation, and the eventual regulation, provides a way for communities both large and small to benefit from ride-sharing in a way that is equitable. In 2017, the City of Enderby put forth a resolution urging the provincial government to adopt a flexible ride-sharing regulation with attention given to solving passenger transportation challenges unique to small, rural, and remote communities. Photo: City of Kelowna Current outdated washroom at Boyce-Gyro It's not the Taj Mahal of bathrooms, but it's money well spent. That according to city staff and many on Kelowna council. Council agreed, in a 5-1 vote, to spend $674,000 on a new 11-stall washroom facility at Boyce-Gyro Beach Park. "When you are looking at a facility that has a 50-year life span that is of industrial-commercial standard for high volume use with crime prevention designs, it's worthwhile moving forward," said acting mayor Tracy Gray. The new building, at the centre of the park, will replace an outdated washroom built in 1969. "When I look at this, and see that a renovation is going to be $350,000, and we still have the same old ugly building, and it only has a 20-year life span, I can easily support the $674,000 to construct a new building that gives us a best class washroom facility in our premier beach park in the city," said Coun . Gail Given. "I have no problem supporting that." Coun. Mohini Singh questioned staff on the cost, saying she had a number of calls from citizens concerned about spending so much on a bathroom. Parks and buildings planning manager Robert Parlane agreed a lot of comparisons have been drawn with the washroom at City Park which was panned by local residents when it was constructed. Parlane said the actual cost of the City Park facility was $575,000, not the $800,000 often cited. "If we are looking to emulate that in today's dollars, that would be $783,000. That building is 886 square feet, which is smaller than we are proposing, and has seven washroom stalls. The cost of that was $884 a square foot," said Parlane. "Boyce-Gyro, we are building something that is 20 per cent larger, and we're putting in 11 washrooms, approximately two-thirds more. Our construction cost is $575 per square foot. That's 35 per cent less than City Park." He added the washroom at City Park, and others like it offer a design and layout that have cut down on a lot of vandalism and other common problems associated with park washrooms. The washroom facility, which will include men's, women's and universal washrooms, will also be built to stay open 12 months a year, something he says is important to many year-round park users. Coun. Charlie Hodge was the lone dissenting voice on council. "I have a very hard time swallowing the pill that says $674,000 for a washroom, 11 stalls or not. I know times have changed, but I'm looking at toilets not the Taj Mahal," said Hodge. Photo: BC Hydro Several dozen people in the Peachland area are without power this morning. BC Hydro says about 86 customers north of Garnet Valley Road are affected by the outage. The area is between Peachland and Summerland. Power went out about 9 a.m. The cause of the outage is still being investigated. No word when power will be restored again. Ultimate Okanagan Makeover winner Yvette Moore is over the moon with her new look. Moore won a package worth more than $5,000 in the contest which included a laser facelift by Healthpoint Laser Clinic, makeup, hair, brows, lashes and nails by Xccessorize.Me, photography by Sarah Beebe Photography, teeth whitening and dental exam by Landmark Dental, wardrobe by Mavazi Apparel, organic spray tanning by Boho Glow, food and drinks at a live reveal party provided by Basil & Mint Restaurant, as well as video and interviews by Culture Vulture TV's Leanne Allen. I was over the moon to have won," said Moore. "What a dream come true! My month was filled with pampering and primping. I felt like a princess! Thank you to all the sponsors for making me feel and look like a million! Healthpoint Laser Clinic's Tara Graves said her mission was to give one lucky winner the chance to look, and more importantly, feel, her best. Graves has worked with women for years and has always strived to empower them through the beauty treatments she offers. As a former makeup artist, model and dancer, she understands first hand the direct connection between looking ones best and the confidence it builds from within. Known as Kelownas skin magician, Graves treats conditions such as rosacea, fine lines, and acne while also fixing problems with skin pigmentation, visible veins, and scars. The results from treatments, such as the clinics exclusive 5D Facelift, have been amazing, taking years off clients' appearance. Last August, Graves decided to take the mini-makeovers she accomplishes every day to a whole new level. The Ultimate Okanagan Makeover was born. Comments on the makeovers Facebook page range from brave women telling stories of challenges theyve overcome and struggles theyre facing, to others cheering them on. Graves plans on making the successful event an annual occurrence. There are also plans for a male-focused makeover. Photo: CTV A toddler was taken to hospital after being pricked by a needle in downtown Victoria, Monday. The parents noticed their child crying and then found an uncapped syringe digging into the toddler's skin. No further details have been released, but police are asking anyone with information on the incident to call them at 25-0995-7654 or CrimeStoppers at 1-800-222-8477. with files from CTV Vancouver Island Photo: Colton Davies Staff with the Town of Oliver will be creating a bylaw to restrict smoking in many public spaces and facilities, as directed by council on Monday. Oliver's Parks and Recreation Society asked the town to come up with a bylaw that restricts smoking in spaces the society operates including playgrounds, parks, the Oliver pool and other facilities. The smoking ban will include cigarettes, cannabis and for vaping. "I really think it's a coming-of-age thing... People see somebody flicking a cigarette butt out a car window these days, during the summer months, and they get angry," Mayor Ron Hovanes said. "There's the second-hand smoke, there's the littering aspect of it, then there's also the fire-prevention aspect of it." Hovanes pointed out that smoking bans are already in places for some events, including the annual Festival of Grape that attracts thousands of people each year. He added the town may look at allowing smoking in designated areas for some events to include in the bylaw. The town expects to model their smoking bylaw after rules that many other municipalities in B.C. already have in place, Hovanes said. "We'll probably be using much of that material. Why re-invent the wheel." Oliver corporate officer Diane Vaykovich said there is no timeline yet for when that bylaw would be put in place. This service applies to you if your subscription has not yet expired on our old site. You will have continued access until your subscription expires; then you will need to purchase an ongoing subscription through our new system. Please contact The Chanute Tribune office at 620-431-4100 if you have any questions Real Madrid midfielder Luka Modric, accused of tax fraud, has paid Spanish fiscal authorities close to one million euros, a judicial source said Tuesday. (Fernando Villar / EFE) MADRID Real Madrid midfielder Luka Modric, accused of tax fraud, has paid Spanish fiscal authorities close to one million euros, a judicial source said Tuesday. Prosecutors believe the Croatian evaded 870,728 euros ($1.04 million) on revenue from his image rights in 2013 and 2014 via a shell company set up in Luxembourg. Advertisement On Tuesday, he gave a court in Alcobendas near Madrid, which is in charge of his case, evidence that he paid tax authorities close to one million euros on January 4 -- the sum he allegedly evaded plus interest. The 32-year-old Croat, who joined Madrid from Tottenham Hotspur for a reported fee of 30 million ($40.5 million) in 2012, paid the money "voluntarily," the judicial source, who refused to be named, told AFP. Advertisement Judicial authorities are still investing financial holdings belonging to the player in the Isle of Man, on which Modric refused to comment in court. Modric is just the latest in a series of star players based in Spain to be accused of tax fraud on income related to image rights in the past few years. In November, Madrid left-back Marcelo admitted to a 490,917 euro tax fraud via his image rights in 2013. Real Madrid's all-time leading scorer Cristiano Ronaldo appeared in court in July over accusations he evaded 14.7 million euros worth of tax between 2011 and 2014. Barcelona duo Lionel Messi and Javier Mascherano received 21-month and one-year suspended sentences respectively after being found guilty of tax fraud over their image rights in 2016. However, five-time World Player of the Year Messi's sentence was later replaced by a 252,000 euro fine. 404 Try searching for the content you're looking for, or take a look at our recently published stories Two major Apple investors have urged the iPhone-maker to take action to curb growing smartphone use among children, highlighting growing concern about the effects of gadgets and social media on youngsters. (Mark Lennihan/AP) While two major Apple investors have taken the the tech giant to task about its role in curbing smartphone addiction among children, Ashlee Hanlon says her childs screen time habits are her own responsibility. New York-based Jana Partners and the California State Teachers' Retirement System, or CalSTRS, said Monday in an open letter to Apple that the company must offer more choices and tools to help children fight addiction to its devices, highlighting growing concern about the effects of gadgets and social media on youngsters. Advertisement "There is a developing consensus around the world including Silicon Valley that the potential long-term consequences of new technologies need to be factored in at the outset, and no company can outsource that responsibility," the letter said, adding later: "Apple can play a defining role in signaling to the industry that paying special attention to the health and development of the next generation is both good business and the right thing to do." But Hanlon, a mother of two in Chicagos Lincoln Square neighborhood, said Apple shouldnt be held accountable for her parenting mistakes. Advertisement The arrival of her second child last year meant her 3-year-olds occasional use of the iPad became unlimited. At one point, when she took it away from him, he cursed at her and told her to give the (expletive) iPad back, Hanlon said. Now, Hanlons cracking down on her sons screen time. None of this is Apples fault or Apples responsibility. Its mine, she said. Im going to work on these behavior/addiction issues with my child and we will overcome them. Im not going to sit here and point the finger at Apple when the issue resulted from my mistake of not limiting screen use sooner, and my inability to filter my mouth in front of my child. Mobile devices, Hanlon added, are wonderful learning tools when monitored and limited. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that parents prioritize nonscreen activities with their children and try to limit screen time for 2- to 5-year-olds to one hour of quality programming per day. For children age 6 and older, the AAP says screen time limits should be consistent, according to the organizations website, and not take the place of other important activities such as sleep and physical activity. Parents should designate media-free times and should limit media to certain areas of a home. Among the investors proposals to Apple: establish an expert committee including child development specialists; offer Apple's vast information to researchers; and enhance mobile device software so that parents have more options to protect their children's health. The letter cited various studies and surveys on how the heavy usage of smartphones and social media negatively affects children's mental and physical health. Examples include distractions by digital technologies in the classroom, a decreased ability of students to focus on educational tasks, and higher risks of suicide and depression. The investors' letter reflects growing concerns around the world about what the long-term impact will be of using mobile devices and social media, especially for those who start to use smartphones at an early age. The two investors collectively control $2 billion worth of Apple shares. Advertisement While tech companies have not acknowledged openly that their gadgets may be addictive, some Silicon Valley insiders have begun to speak to the news media about how gadgets, mobile applications and social media sites are designed to be addictive and to keep users' attention as long as possible. Chicago Tribunes Corilyn Shropshire contributed. Laila Ummelaila, a personal grocery shopper at a Wal-Mart store in New Jersey, picks items off shelves for people who ordered online. (Julio Cortez / Associated Press) With new options and conveniences, there's never been a better time for shoppers. As for workers well, not always. The retail industry is being radically reshaped by technology, and nobody feels that disruption more starkly than 16 million American shelf stockers, salespeople, cashiers and other workers. The shifts are driven, like much in retail, by the Amazon effect the explosion of online shopping and the related changes in consumer behavior and preferences. Advertisement As mundane tasks such as checkout and inventory are automated, employees are trying to deliver the kind of customer service the internet can't match. So a Best Buy employee who used to sell electronics in the store is dispatched to customers' homes to help them choose just the right products. A Wal-Mart worker dashes in and out of the grocery aisles, hand-picks products for online shoppers and brings them to people's cars. Advertisement Yet even as responsibilities change and in many cases, expand the average growth in pay for retail workers isn't keeping pace with the rest of the economy. Some companies say that in the long run the transformation could mean fewer retail workers, though they may be better paid. But while some workers feel more satisfied, others find their jobs a lot less fun. Bloomingdale's saleswoman Brenda Moses remembers the pre-internet era, when the upscale store was regularly filled with customers ready to buy. These days, department stores are less crowded and the customers who do come in can make price comparisons on their phones at the same time as they pepper staff with questions. You tell them everything, and then they look at you and say, You know what? I think I will get it online, Moses said. Moses has seen her commission rate rise to 6%, from 0.5%, but her hourly wage dropped from $19 to as low as $10 before it came back up to $14. Depending more on commissions means her income fluctuates and that she's competing with her colleagues for each sale. Now, Moses said, you have to fight to make your money. The same could be said for the retailing industry overall. In 2017, 66,500 U.S. retail jobs disappeared (not taking into account jobs added in areas such as distribution and call centers). In the last decade, about 1 in 7 jobs have vanished in the hardest-hit sectors such as clothing and consumer electronics, said Frank Badillo, director of research at MacroSavvy LLC. Though department stores have suffered the most, smaller businesses also have struggled to compete with online sellers. Many of the survivors are rushing to adapt. Of the retail jobs that remain, over the next decade as many as 60% either will be new kinds of roles or will involve revised duties, said Craig Rowley, senior client partner at Korn Ferry Hay Group, a human resources advisory firm. He estimated the number is about 10% now. How fast retail jobs will change and what they'll look like depends on three factors, Rowley said: the pace at which online shopping advances; the speed at which robotics and other technology progress; and shifts in the minimum wage. Advertisement Jobs for workers will get more interesting and be more impactful on the company's business, Rowley said. But the negative side is that there will be fewer entry-level jobs and there will be more pressure to perform. Some retail workers at the vanguard of the changes such as Laila Ummelaila, a personal grocery shopper at a Wal-Mart store in Old Bridge, N.J. speak glowingly of their new responsibilities. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the nation's largest private employer, has scrutinized every job in its stores as it looks to leverage its more than 4,000 U.S. locations against Amazon.com Inc.'s internet dominance. Wal-Mart now has 18,000 personal shoppers who fill online orders from store shelves, and 17,000 checkout hosts whose responsibilities are more extensive than the greeters of old, including keeping the area clean and making sure registers move efficiently. The company has also shifted workers from backroom clerical jobs and eliminated some overnight stocker positions in favor of more daytime sales help. The customers like the changes, company officials say, pointing to more than three years of sales growth at its established U.S. stores a contrast with other, suffering retailers. Ummelaila became a personal shopper after joining the company three years ago. To meet her store's goals, she must pick one item per 30 seconds. If she can't find something, she has to quickly get a substitute that's as good or better. You start to get to know the customers, you know what they like, she said, how they like their meat and how long they keep milk in the fridge. Advertisement Best Buy Co., meanwhile, has begun a free service in key markets in which salespeople will sit with customers in their own homes and make recommendations on setting up a home office or designing a home theater system. Best Buy said shoppers spend more with a home visit than they do at the stores. The project follows Amazon, which reportedly has been testing a program that sends employees to shoppers' houses for free smart home recommendations. At Steve Frederick's townhouse in Chicago, Billy Schuler offered advice about speakers that can be adjusted from a smartphone. Schuler, who had previously worked at Best Buy for 14 years, returned to the company to take on the new role. Customers are more relaxed when they are in their home, he said. We can do a walk-through of the house and see their needs. He likes to break the ice by calling the person and chatting a day or two before the visit. Frederick, who is spending close to $20,000 on the equipment, describes himself as old school and says he needed a lot of help. He said it was worthwhile. When you are spending that kind of money, you want to have someone come in and explain it, he said. Schuler declined to give specifics but said he is well compensated. Ummelaila said her pay went up to nearly $12 per hour, from $10, when she became a personal shopper. Advertisement Target Corp. credits its strategy of assigning dedicated sales staff in areas such as clothing, consumer electronics and beauty for helping increase sales, and it says having visual merchandisers create vignettes like shoppers would see in specialty stores inspires people to buy. You are making an outfit and telling a story on each rack, said Crystal Lawrence, who works at a Target store in Brooklyn, N.Y. She said she likes the variety in her new job, and Target says it plans to keep paying higher wages for those specialized roles. But a survey of nearly 300 retail workers conducted by the Center for Frontline Retail and Community Development Project at the Urban Justice Center found that of those workers whose job responsibilities have changed, more than 40% said they hadn't received corresponding pay increases. Wages for hourly retail workers have risen less than 9% since 1990, compared with 18% for private-sector workers overall. There has been some progress recently; some of the biggest retailers, such as Wal-Mart and Target, have made moves to increase pay in the face of low unemployment and competition for workers. For a long period, these retail jobs were just terrible on average, said Michael Mandel, chief economic strategist at the Progressive Policy Institute. Retail stores have been following one strategy: high turnover, low wages. That strategy is no longer viable. Mandel sees hope in technology, which he says historically has created more and better-paying jobs than it has eliminated. The National Retail Federation trade group points to government data showing that even in large supermarket chains where self-checkout has become standard, the number of employees per store has held steady over the 15 years through 2014. And the demand for grocery cashiers rose in the last few years, said Burning Glass Technologies, a company that analyzes labor market data. Advertisement McDonald's says the self-serve kiosks it has been rolling out won't result in mass layoffs, but will mean that some cashiers shift roles to accommodate changes such as offering table service. But a report prepared by Cornerstone Capital Group for the Investor Responsibility Research Center Institute predicts that more than 7.5 million retail jobs are at risk of being eliminated by automation over the next several years. Amazon is testing a grocery store in Seattle without cashiers, using cameras and shelf sensors to keep track of the items that shoppers grab and charge them. Eatsa, an automat-style restaurant in San Francisco, lacks cashiers as well diners order at kiosks, and workers prepare the food behind an opaque wall, with virtually no interaction between them. A labor group representing 1.3 million grocery and food workers is trying to combat automation by highlighting that workers' specialized skills such as the care they take in icing a rose on a wedding cake, or arranging flowers, or the ability of human workers to recognize spoiled food provide a benefit to shoppers. Separating progress for the consumer, for the worker, for the economy versus the stockholders those are completely different things, said Erikka Knuti, a spokeswoman for the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. Others say automation and happy workers are not necessarily incompatible. Advertisement Wal-Mart Chief Executive Doug McMillon foresees fewer sales associates at his stores, but says they'll be better paid and better trained. Wal-Mart has trained 225,000 supervisors and managers on topics such as new apps and better customer service. It says managers who go through the academies have better retention rates than those who do not. Workers who report to those managers stay longer. And entry-level workers who complete a new training program are more likely to remain. It's a shift retailers may have to speed up. Government figures show that in 2016, the rate of retail workers quitting their jobs was at its highest since 2007. Alfredo Duran, who started as a sales associate at Gap and worked at six retailers over 15 years, left the industry two years ago. As a manager at clothing chain Mango, he was making $75,000 a year. But once the store closed, he had trouble finding another job in retail because no one wanted to pay him for his experience. It's gone down. One person is doing three jobs. And you can't move up, said Duran, 38, of Queens, N.Y. He's now a concierge at a Manhattan hotel, making half of what he used to earn but happy he left retail. A look at retailers' new jobs Confronting changing shopper habits and increased competition from online sellers, retailers are creating new jobs at their stores and redefining employee duties. Here's a look at some new positions and shifting roles at major retailers. Advertisement Wal-Mart Personal shoppers: These workers fill online grocery orders from store shelves, in some cases finding one product every 30 seconds, and take the items to shoppers' cars at the curb. Checkout hosts: Not just greeters, they're responsible for overseeing the self-checkout and scan-and-go areas and helping customers navigate them. They also keep the checkout area tidy, judge if more registers need to be opened, and help customers with questions as they come and go. Target Visual merchandisers: They create the kinds of fashion or home design vignettes that shoppers may be more used to seeing in specialty stores than discount chains. Target says this inspires shoppers to buy more. Dedicated sales associates: These employees work only in a particular area, such as clothing, electronics, beauty and grocery, rather than shifting from department to department. They get extra training on the brands in their areas; their focus is helping shoppers. Advertisement Best Buy In-home advisors: They visit shoppers' homes and recommend products suitable for their spaces to help them create a home office or set up a home theater. The service is free. Bloomingdales Personal stylists: Some stylists now pull options for shoppers ahead of time based on their answers to an online questionnaire about price, favorite brands, style and sizes, and make refinements based on text conversations. That's similar to the styling services offered by online companies such as Stitch Fix. But instead of receiving clothes to try on at home and possibly send back, shoppers then work with stylists in person, at the store. Bloomingdale's is testing the service at its Manhattan SoHo store and says the online component offers speedier service. Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue also have personal stylists, as well as an online component. Pueblo voters give big support to public safety tax to fund police 75% of votes are in favor of Pueblo Measure 2B, collecting millions of dollars a year to fund 20 Pueblo Police Department officers and four sergeants. You are here: Arts Egypt will be the guest of honor of the upcoming Casablanca International Book Fair, the Moroccan Ministry of Culture and Communication announced Monday. The Morocco's flagship book fair, which will be held on Feb. 8-18, will shed light on the Moroccan-Egyptian cultural relations, the ministry said in a statement. It will also show the literature legacy of the Egyptian writer, Jamal El Ghitani, it said. El Ghitani, who died at the age of 70 in 2015, is considered one of Egypt's most acclaimed novelists. Several Egyptian writers, novelists and researchers are expected to take part in this fair. The annual Casablanca International Book Fair brings together hundreds of publishers from all over the world and attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors every year. You are here: Business The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) announced Monday a new policy to ensure zero growth of steel capacity in 2018. The new policy forbids plants from increasing capacity. In environmentally sensitive areas of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta, steel plants should remove at least 1.25 tonnes of outdated capacity for every 1 tonne of new capacity. Steel profits improved amid capacity cuts in 2017. "In the January-November period last year, combined net profits in the ferrous metal smelting and rolling sector rose 180 percent year on year to about 314 billion yuan (about 48 billion U.S. dollars)," said a MIIT statement. The steel sector must focus on quality and profits while cutting overcapacity, it said. You are here: Business A consumer right group has brought Chinese tech firm Baidu to court accusing its two apps "snooping on consumers' personal information," according to the court source. The Nanjing Intermediate People's Court in east China's Jiangsu Province confirmed on Monday that it has accepted a lawsuit filed by the Jiangsu provincial consumer rights protection committee. The committee accused the Beijing Baidu Netcom Science and Technology Co. Ltd. of ignoring an instruction to remove some functionality from Baidu Mobile and Baidu Browser apps which monitor users' contacts and activity. The committee began an investigation in July last year into "snooping" by 27 app developers. The other 26 firms all took measures to remove or optimize functions to adhere to the committee's instructions. Such application violates consumers' rights by leaking their personal information, often directly resulting in telemarketing calls and telecom fraud, the committee said. The committee's suit states that collection and use of consumers information must comply with laws on consumer protection and Internet security. After a slow start in the first quarter, Shanxi Province's economic growth rate had rallied to surpass the national average after three quarters in 2017. This was thanks to a transformational development trend, as the province finds economic drivers in sectors beyond coal. Over the first three quarters of 2017, Shanxi's service industry contributed to 57.2 percent of its GDP growth, 16.7 percent higher than the industrial sector. Of all industries above the designated scale (enterprises with annual revenue reaching 20 million yuan or more), the industries other than coal contributed to 64.8 percent of the province's industrial growth. This growth occurred while the province shut down 27 coalmines with a total production capacity of 22.65 million tons in 2017. Meanwhile, in the first 11 months of 2017, the power consumption of non-coal industries rose 11.7 percent year-on-year, and the power consumption of non-energy industries rose 13.3 percent year-on-year, both of which are above the average growth rate of power consumption in Shanxi's industries. The scale of emerging industries is also expanding. In the first 11 months of 2017, the scale of industrial and strategic emerging industries rose 10.6 percent year-on-year, and the output of new energy automobiles increased by 3.9 times. Start-up companies and technological innovations had boosted the economy. In the first three quarters of 2017, 298,000 new companies were founded in Shanxi, rising 20.8 percent year-on-year, including 936 companies identified as high-tech companies. Lending a hand to these new economic drivers, the provincial government helped to establish 30 provincial innovation platforms and 71 business incubators. It further optimized the structure of investment. In the first 11 months of 2017, the growth rate of investment in industrial technique upgrading had sped up, taking up 14.3 percent more than previously in the province's investment portfolio. The amount of investment in high-tech industry reached 21.96 billion yuan, a rise of 16.9 percent, including a rise of 17.3 percent in high-tech manufacturing investment and a rise of 16.8 percent in high-tech service investment. China's central Henan Province is aiming to become a logistics center serving the Belt and Road development. Riding the wave of China's proposed international cooperation initiative, the province is exploring ways for air-land-water coordinated transportation, becoming a link to all regions, and attracting more cross-border traders to the area. "Newly made winter clothing can always get transported in time to the company's headquarter in Spain and then head to outlets all over the world," said Mou Yimin, vice manager of a logistics company handling Spain-based Inditex's apparels and accessories in Zhengzhou, the provincial capital. Mou said Inditex's logistic network used to cover only first tier cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, but now it also extends to Zhengzhou because of the city's high efficiency in custom clearance and convenience as a transportation hub. In terms of connection over land, Zhengzhou is increasingly linked with the rest of the world on rail, which is notably attributed to the flagship train service under the banner of the China Railway Express. The Zhengzhou-Europe express railway service, which opened in 2013, hit the 1,000-trip milestone last December. The trains on this route travel at 120 kilometers per hour and make eight roundtrips every week, usually carrying motor vehicle components, electronic devices, flower seedlings and precision instruments. In terms of air transportation, the provincial capital has become the Asian logistic center of the "Silk Road in the air" between Luxembourg and Zhengzhou. Luxemburg's freight cargo planes take16 routine flights every week to its destinations, and can increase the frequency to 23 times per week during peak seasons. Through the modern Silk Road, cherries from Chile, dairy products from Europe and high quality red wine have entered Henan's market at a reasonable price. "Our company has moved from Shenzhen to Zhengzhou because of the city's high efficiency both in logistics and administrative procedures," said Lyu Jianhua, an administration manager. "Most of the time, we can finish the administrative procedures online without going to government offices." Henan Province has incorporated "internet plus" (applying the internet and other information technology in conventional industries) into its public service to cut red tapes and administrative procedures, thus forging a more pro-business environment. "Responding to the report to the 19th CPC National Congress, Henan Province will promote innovative policies to facilitate free trade and investment, and serve the development of the Belt and Road Initiative," said Zhu Zhaolong, vice head of the administrative office in the Zhengzhou area of Henan pilot free trade zone. City life in China is now inseparable from express deliveries as orders reached a new record high, with about 100 million each day since May last year. Logistic orders received during China's "Double-11" sales event, the Singles' Day-turned-online shopping mania fueled by substantial discounts, grew 5.3 times over the past five years from 152 million to 812 million. "The network of the express delivery has kept improved and the quality of service has been highlighted," said Fang Zhipeng, the general manager of the China Postal Express Delivery and Logistics Corporation. According to Fang, online retailing has accounted for 70 percent of the orders sent via express delivery services and the industry's compound growth jumped 54 percent between 2010 and 2016. According to Cainiao Network, a jointly-invested e-commerce platform by online retailer Alibaba and delivery providers like SF Express, the most intensive purchasing power still comes from big cities such as Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Hangzhou. The majority of online shoppers remained those born in the 1980s and 1990s, while older people born in the 1950s accounted for 1.03 percent of the express deliveries of their online transactions. Ant Financial [File photo] The United States has blocked the $1.2 billion (880m) sale of the money transfer firm Moneygram to China's Ant Financial, a subsidiary of Alibaba, citing geopolitical differences apparently arising in the years since the merger was announced. This is arguably the first salvo of direct protectionism from the American side, months after Alibaba announced job creation in the mainland United States. The obstruction is also a direct intervention by the U.S. government. The Moneygram firm was quoted by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) as saying that regulators overseeing foreign investments in the United States refused to support the takeover. This isn't the only such example. The BBC gave a list of protectionist measures recently undertaken by the United States, including launching a formal review of China's intellectual property practices, blocking the $1.3 billion sale of American Lattice Semiconductor to Chinese-backed Canyon Bridge Capital Partners, and objecting to two other major acquisitions: China Oceanwide Holdings Group's $2.7 billion purchase of the U.S. life insurer Genworth Financial, as well as Chinese buyout firm Orient Hontai Capital's $1.4 billion acquisition of the U.S. mobile marketing firm AppLovin. The trend also runs counter to the direction of EU-China relations. As per new reports, a massive overhaul of European tariff rules is in order, including how the EU counts duties on dumped imports. The overhaul comes in response to longstanding Chinese demand that China is given market economy status, marking an end to the prior EU premise that Chinese exporters get privilege from the government and work in non-ideal market conditions. These are unmistakably political moves. The EU is now offering China market status precisely as China and the EU are aligning against a protectionist United States. China and the EU have recently come closer together on Iran or North Korean relations, as well as on climate change. Despite structural concerns, trade seems to be the key factor bringing the EU and the West closer to China, with the United States retrenching. This comes after Donald Trump's dramatic stance during the APEC business conference, which entirely contradicted his earlier statements made while visiting Japan and China. Trump told the conference, "We are not going to let the United States be taken advantage of anymore." He also savaged the World Trade Organization, blaming them for the American trade deficit, and said that the U.S. preference for bilateral trade deals is important. He added that he wants to put America first. Trump confirmed his reluctance toward big trade agreements like NAFTA. and the TPP. Trump's statements starkly contrasted Chinese President Xi Jinping's full-throated defense of the modern trade system, in which he said it is essential to stay committed to open trade and an open economy, as protectionism would lead to being left behind. The Chinese president also highlighted the multilateral trading regime, as well as the idea of a free trade zone in the Asian Pacific. The United States, meanwhile, is giving mixed signals on trade deals and agreements, claiming to be essentially open to trade, but shunning multilateral agreements and instead focusing on bilateral agreements based on clear trading rules. Current realities, however, demand new practices. The comparative advantage of trade in the region has shifted away from the U.S. in favor of Asian countries a change that will potentially have long term consequences. Recently it was debated in London whether a major power relation along the lines of the Concert of Europe needs to be arranged, with the European Union, United States and China being three trade blocks, and where the founding principles would be non-interference, zero-protectionism, and open trade, or what the Chinese side calls win-win cooperation. Amidst that, this renewed protectionism on the U.S. side risks a caustic battle which will benefit no one. The American anti-China mood appears to be bipartisan, reaching to the extremes of both major U.S. parties. Nevertheless, it must be corrected. A trade war in 2018 would be mutually destructive, given geopolitical volatility in both the EU and the U.S., and would jeopardize the budding cooperation with China that began in 2017. Sumantra Maitra is a columnist with China.org.cn. For more information please visit: http://www.china.org.cn/opinion/SumantraMaitra.htm Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors only, not necessarily those of China.org.cn. Flash The tourism industry continued to boom in China in 2017, generating revenue of 5.4 trillion yuan (about 832 billion U.S. dollars), according to Li Jinzao, head of the China National Tourism Administration (CNTA) at a tourism conference in Xiamen in east China's Fujian Province Monday. On average, every Chinese person made 3.7 trips last year, Li said. Over 5 billion trips were made across China last year, generating a total estimated revenue of 4.57 trillion yuan in 2017 -- a 69-percent jump from 2012 and average annual growth of 15.8 percent over the past five years. Meanwhile, 129 million overseas trips were made last year. Tourism has created more than 80 million jobs and became an important industry to help the economy and reduce poverty, Li said. To better regulate the domestic tourism market, CNTA downgraded three 5A tourist destinations and warned or criticized more than 400 scenic areas for poor service and substandard hygiene over the past three years, Li said. He also introduced a three-step goal for China's tourism industry to lead China to become a strong tourism country by 2040. Flash Chinese President Xi Jinping met with visiting French President Emmanuel Macron at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on Monday evening. Xi said Macron's visit to China, as his first visit to Asia at the start of year, showed that he was "paying high attention to the China-France relationship." France was the first Western power to establish diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China. "Chairman Mao Zedong and General Charles de Gaulle made a historic decision with remarkable political foresight to forge diplomatic ties in 1964," Xi said. "The decision not only changed the world pattern at that time, but also has effects on the world development nowadays." "In the new era, we should follow the spirit of being responsible for history, stick to the right path so as to move toward a bright future of China-French ties," Xi said. Stressing that there are many uncertainties in today's world, Xi said China advocated the building of a community with a shared future for mankind, while France had similar views. "The two countries can enhance political mutual trust and fully tap the potential of cooperation transcending differences on the social system, development stage and culture," he said. China stands ready to work closely with France to enhance cooperation including that under the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative, Xi said. He said that China attached importance to coordination with France on major international issues in the hope of promoting world stability and prosperity. Macron said he was willing to exchange views with Xi on France-China relations and major international issues, during his first state visit to China. He said he hoped to increase mutual trust and advance France-China relations and EU-China relations via the visit. "France would like to take an active part in the Belt and Road Initiative," said Macron, adding that France would work with China to address common challenges of the international community such as climate change. He said he believed that his visit to China would be a new milestone in the history of France-China relations. Xi's wife Peng Liyuan and Macron's wife Brigitte Macron also attended the meeting. The French president is paying a state visit to China from Monday to Wednesday. He arrived in Beijing on Monday afternoon after a half-day visit to China's northwestern city Xi'an. Flash Iran's nuclear chief said Monday that Iran might reconsider its cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog (IAEA) if the United States fails to respect its commitments under 2015 nuclear deal, Iran Daily reported. "If the United States does not meet its commitment in the JCPOA, nuclear deal, the Islamic Republic of Iran would take decisions that might affect its current cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency," Ali Akbar Salehi told IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano in a telephone conversation. Besides, Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said Monday that Washington tried to destroy the nuclear deal last year and may destroy it in the coming days. "It has been more than a year since the U.S. president sought to destroy the JCPOA with all his efforts," said Araqchi, adding that "In Iran, we are prepared for any scenario." If the U.S. administration decides to breach the nuclear deal, "the international community and our region will be the biggest loser, since a successful experience in the international arena will be lost," he said. "Our region will not become a safer region without the JCPOA," he stressed. On Oct. 13, Trump announced that he had decided to decertify Iran's compliance with the Iran nuclear deal reached in 2015, a move that did not pull the United States out of the deal but triggered a 60-day window for Congress to decide whether to reimpose nuclear-related sanctions on Iran, even it means violating the deal on the U.S. side. In the past two months, the U.S. Congress did not come up with any resolution to reimpose sanctions. With no action from Congress, the ball was passed back to Trump, who should decide in mid-January if he would like to waive energy sanctions on Iran. The nuclear deal was reached between Iran and the six world powers of Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus Germany in July 2015. So far, the deal has helped defuse the Iran nuclear crisis and bolstered the international non-proliferation regime. The IAEA, tasked to monitor Iran's nuclear activities, has certified eight times Iran's compliance with the nuclear deal. Flash China said Monday that it expected that Japan could meet it "half-way" to improve bilateral ties this year. Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang made the remarks at a daily press briefing, when commenting on reports that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe recently said that he wanted 2018 to be the year which people in Japan and China saw a "great improvement" in bilateral relations. Lu said that China has noted the positive remarks and hoped Japan would act upon the four political documents and four-point principled consensus between China and Japan, and seize the opportunity of the 40th anniversary of the signing of the China-Japan Treaty of Peace and Friendship, to create favorable conditions for bilateral exhange and cooperation. Flash Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will pay an official visit to Rwanda, Angola, Gabon, and Sao Tome and Principe from Jan. 12 to 16, a foreign ministry spokesperson said Tuesday in Beijing. "Over the past 20-plus years, Chinese foreign ministers have always chosen Africa as their first trip in the new year. Wang's continuation of this tradition shows that China consistently pays great attention to China-Africa ties," spokesperson Lu Kang said at a daily press briefing. Wang's visit will promote political mutual trust, strengthen mutually beneficial cooperation, and prepare for the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) summit, which will be hosted by China this year, Lu said. Flash The 6th Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (LMC) Senior Officials' Meeting was held here on Tuesday, with high-level officials from the six Lancang-Mekong countries finalizing the Five-year Action Plan and the Phnom Penh Declaration for Wednesday's 2nd LMC Leaders' Meeting. Co-chair of the meeting Huang Xilian, deputy director-general of the Asian Affairs Department of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, told Xinhua that the Senior Officials' Meeting discussed the significant progress the LMC mechanism has been made since its establishment only less than two years ago. "The Lancang-Mekong Cooperation has shown a characteristic of pragmatism, high efficiency, project-based, and people's livelihood-prioritized," said Huang. According to him, the meeting has reviewed several important documents for Wednesday's summit, including the Phnom Penh Declaration and the Five-Year Plan of Action on LMC (2018-2022). "We have reached a consensus on the Five-Year Action Plan proposed by China, which covers more than 20 cooperative areas and will set as a guideline document for the development of Lancang-Mekong Cooperation in the next five years," Huang said. The Phnom Penh Declaration will express the strong political will of all six Lancang-Mekong countries, namely China, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, to promote the LMC for greater achievements, the Chinese official said. The meeting also reviewed the list of the second batch of tentative LMC projects, which have attracted more than 200 project applications, and reports of the six working groups of priority areas, Huang added. All sides are expecting Wednesday's summit will reach new consensus on the future development of LMC and point a new direction for the mechanism, he told Xinhua. Co-chair Sok Siphana, an advisor to the Cambodian government, hailed the dynamic Lancang-Mekong Cooperation mechanism. "This initiative has been very dynamic, the spirit of cooperation is very strong, that's why we have been moving very fast in less than three years to reach the summit level," he said. As there is no division of the mechanism, Siphana didn't see any political challenge, but more of a operational level of challenge. "Because it's so broad in scope, ranging from connectivity, cross-border issue to agriculture, poverty, and water management, to us, as a Mekong-Lancang secretariat, the big challenge is to coordinate with many ministries in the country." "To me, it's more about sweat than political headaches," he said. The Second Lancang-Mekong Cooperation Leaders' Meeting, themed "Our River of Peace and Sustainable Development", will be held in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh on Wednesday. Flash Japan's Foreign Minister Taro Kono said on Tuesday that Japan cannot accept South Korea's new policy position on a deal struck in 2015 between the two countries over Japan's wartime conscription of "comfort women." "The steady implementation of this agreement is both countries' duty to the international community," Kono was quoted as telling a press briefing on the matter, following South Korea announcing its policy position. "We cannot accept at all South Korea's demand of further action from Japan despite the fact that, with this 2015 agreement, we affirmed the final and irreversible resolution of the comfort women issue," Kono added. He went on to say that while Tokyo will "swiftly protest" the new policy through the "appropriate channels" he was confident that South Korea "is aware that this agreement is one of the cornerstones of future-oriented bilateral relations." Japan's foreign minister said that the government here would like further clarification as to what Seoul means by "matching Japan's contribution." Seoul has said that it will not seek to renegotiate the deal, but will plan to match the 1 billion yen (8.9 million U.S. dollars) paid by the Japanese government under the deal, with South Korea's Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha saying that it will decide how to use Japan's payoff. Under a landmark bilateral deal reached two years ago, both countries agreed that the "comfort women" issue that had led to diplomatic ties between both countries becoming significantly strained, would be "finally and irreversibly" resolved. South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who took office in May, and his administration, however, have said that they are revisiting the process under which the accord was made under the previous government, noting that the pact does not reflect the will of the majority of South Korean People. The so-called "comfort women" issue involved soldiers from the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II, coercing and, in some instances, kidnapping girls and women and forcing them to work as sex slaves, servicing Japanese soldiers at military brothels during the war. Many of the women forced into the sex trade by the Japanese aggressors came from the Korean Peninsular, although thousands of women were also trafficked from many other parts of Asia, including China. Euphemistically, these sex slaves have come to be known collectively as "comfort women." Statues erected to pay honor to these "comfort women" draw the ire of the Japanese government, the right wing forces of which have been trying ardently to whitewash its war time atrocities. While Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, the government's top spokesman, said Tuesday that Tokyo is "not thinking of moving even a millimeter on the deal." The Trump administrations latest change in immigration policy has shaken the believers and converts from El Salvador who fill Spanish-speaking evangelical churches in the United States. The Department of Homeland Security announced Monday that it would end temporary protected status (TPS) for the roughly 200,000 Salvadorans allowed to live in the US without fear of deportation following a pair of earthquakes in their country in 2001. After a decade-plus of working, worshiping, and growing families in the States, TPS recipients now have until next September to leave or obtain green card status; if they stay past the deadline, they will face the risks of living in the US illegally. El Salvadorone of the most Protestant countries in Latin Americarepresents the largest group of Latin American immigrants to the US outside of heavily Catholic Mexico. So the news hit especially hard at evangelical churches like Casa Del Alfarero in Silver Springs, Maryland. The Assemblies of God congregation is 90 percent Salvadoran. In the decades since senior pastor Jose Arce Jr.s father founded the church in 1974, there have been so many changes in immigration law, he said. We just encourage people to trust God first of all. Hes going to make a way, because hes always done that. Arce, the National Latino Evangelical Coalition (NaLEC)s representative in Washington, also tries to offer practical support to his members. He advised weeks ago that parents get passports for their American-born children to verify their citizenship, and has partnered with area law firms for legal guidance. With 200,000 recipients, El Salvador makes up the largest share of TPS residents. For comparison, neighboring Honduras has an estimated 86,000 nationals allowed in the US under the program, while Nicaragua has 5,000. Along with Guatemala, the four nations rank as the most Protestant in Catholic Latin America, according to the Pew Research Center. Not only is the evangelical population growing in Central America, further pushed by poverty and violence, these countries in particular are sending a growing number of immigrants to America. Pew noted last month that immigrants from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras have increased by a quarteroutpacing other countries. Immigrants from this region cite work as their top reason for heading to the US, the researchers found. As CT reported in 2017, immigrant pastors and churches channel funds back to ministries in their home countries, such as one Los Angeles pastor from El Salvador, whose father experienced kidnapping and death threats while leading a church back home. Before this weeks news about protections for Salvadoran immigrants, the Department of Homeland Security announced in November that TPS status for Hondurans could end as soon as July, while TPS for Nicaraguans would end in January 2019. If actions like this continue, they will have a spiritual impact on the country, said Tony Suarez, executive pastor of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference (NHCLC). Mondays announcement had him thinking of a heavily Salvadoran congregation he pastored in Virginia Beach, Virginia, and how its families would be weighing options for what to do, who stays, and who goes. While churches may not see an immediate impact to the TPS announcements, it could eventually lead to churches closing their doors, he said. The Hispanic Baptist Pastors Alliance, a group of 60 Southern Baptist leaders, reported last March a drop in attendance in Latin American congregations following Trump administration policies that did away with exemptions for certain undocumented workers. In a Pew report, half of Hispanic Christians in the US said they worried about themselves or someone close to them getting deported. Arce said he doesnt imagine that fear would be enough to keep Salvadorans away from his church, and is hopeful that good news is coming. Their identity is in Christ. They know their place, the pastor said. God, he moves our steps. Many of them came to Christ here. God will make a way for them. Matthew Soerens, director of church mobilization for World Relief, tweeted about Mondays decision, noting that disproportionate number of Salvadorans in evangelical congregations and the high number of TPS recipients who are lawfully employed (over 90 percent of men and 80 percent of women). Important to note that, as TPS is withdrawn, it doesnt necessarily mean all 200K people will be deported. They'll be at same risk of deportation as 11 million other undocumentedexcept that they have all relatively recently provided their addresses to the federal government, he said. What is more certain is that most will lose their jobs, because employers will be lawfully required to let them go when their currently valid work authorization expires. For the El Salvador nationals impacted by the TPS change, leaving the country potentially brings double turmoil: first, the difficulty of leaving behind a home, a job, and even their kids (an estimated 190,000, who are now US citizens); and second, the fear of returning to a country dominated by shady gang violence that has resulted in one of the highest murder rates in the world. After Christmas, a member of Arces church came to him to say that his uncle, who had returned to El Salvador to celebrate the holiday, had been murdered within 24 hours of his arrival. His Maryland congregation is full of stories of threats and tragedies at the hands of the Salvadoran gangs. The Evangelical Immigration Table, a national coalition of denominational and ministry leaders, issued a letter last week discouraging the administration from pulling El Salvadors TPS and forcing Salvadorans to go back. These individuals are now firmly established parts of our communities, including many who are members of our local churches and students within our colleges, stated the heads of the National Association of Evangelicals, World Relief, and the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities, among others. Several of our organizations operate or support ministries in Central America, and our colleagues there are deeply concerned about the impact of a withdrawal of TPS on the country as a whole, which is facing serious challenges of violence and poverty. The issue of family unity has been a major concern for faith groups lobbying for immigration reform. NaLEC president Gabriel Salguero also opposed the TPS shift, emphasizing that his organizations stance stems from its commitment to family and family unity. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) committee on migration also wrote the Trump administration, advising against removing protections for Salvadorans. Attention turns yet again to Congress to try and move forward and hopefully work together to provide protection, Ashley Feasley, a migration policy director for the USCCB, told Crux. It is a vital moment of decision for our elected lawmakersthe need to act is vital and its woven with the idea of what type of nation we want to be. Lawmakers are meeting this week to try to develop a bipartisan plan for immigration reform. Advocates believe that not only could a legislative measure secure a legal path for Dreamersyoung adults who came illegally as childrenbut also for Salvadoran families and others who desire to remain in the US. This is one of those wait unto the Lord moments, said the NHCLCs Suarez. We need God, we need the government, and we need our fellow citizens. home World Northern Ireland churches ban handshakes as Australian flu spreads across UK A Catholic diocese in Northern Ireland has temporarily banned handshakes in an effort to minimize the risk of contracting the Australian flu, which has now spread across the U.K. The outbreak of the H3N2 virus, commonly known as "Australian flu," in the U.K. and Northern Ireland has prompted the Catholic diocese of Down and Connor to introduce new sanitary measures. "Having received medical advice concerning the increasing risk and impact of Australian flu, the diocese of Down and Connor has decided to reactivate ... precautionary measures originally established by the diocese in response to the swine flu epidemic in 2009," Bishop Noel Treanor said in a statement, according to The Guardian. Treanor encouraged parishioners to use disinfecting hand gels and soaps to minimize the risk of infection and urged them to stay home if they start exhibiting flu-like symptoms. "The customary sign of peace handshake exchanged during mass is suspended until the risk of infection is significantly reduced ... Other provisions will be made for those who suffer from a coeliac condition, such as separate chalices," Treanor continued. It is feared that H3N2 has spread to almost all parts of the U.K. following a surge in flu cases over the weekend. About 4.5 million people are believed to be infected with the flu over the past week, according to the online tool FluSurvey. The Independent reported that several people in Ireland have died due to the deadly strain. The statement from the diocese commended those working in the medical field, noting that "hospitals across Northern Ireland are currently experiencing high numbers of patient admissions of those suffering from respiratory illnesses directly linked to the flu virus." "These precautionary measures are temporary and will remain under review until the risk of infection is significantly reduced," the diocese went on to say. The H3N2 virus has been dubbed the Australian flu because it was the same strain of flu that has struck the country last winter. There have been at least 170,000 confirmed cases in Australia at the end of winter, more than twice as many as in last year. Dr. Richard Pebody, acting head of respiratory diseases at Public Health England, said that the flu vaccine is the best protection from the illness, adding that "it isn't too late to get vaccinated." He noted that FluSurvey's map only contains data from 7,500 Britons and should be interpreted with caution because it simply provides information for flu-like illnesses and does not specifically reveal the rising number of cases of the H3N2. Symptoms of the Australian flu can include an aching body exhaustion, loss of appetite, sudden fevers, nausea and headaches, according to the U.K.'s National Health Service. home World Over 100 Christians demand removal of 'Lucifer' statue in Greece Over 100 Christians in Greece are demanding the removal of a sculpture in the Athens suburb of Palaio Faliro because they believe that the statue symbolizes Lucifer. On Sunday, residents of Palaio Faliro held Greek flags, icons and sang hymns at the site where the sculpture called "Phylax" stands. The sculpture, which depicts a red naked man with wings, was created by renowned artist Kostis Georgiou and installed on Dec. 5 near the Palaio Faliro marina in Trokadero, Athens. According to Neos Kosmos, the statue was commissioned by the Martinos shipping family, who, in turn, donated it to the Palaio Faliro Municipality. The statue has been vandalized twice since its installation in an apparent response to the Municipality naming it "guardian-angel" of the South Athens suburb. Phylax in ancient Greek means guard, watcher and protector, but Mayor Dionysis Hatzidakis maintained that it does not symbolize the guardian angel as depicted in the Christian faith. Vandals have reportedly thrown paint at the statue and cut the power to the tram line that powers the sculpture and keeps it illuminated at night. In an open letter to the mayor, parish priest Patapios Argyros contended that the sculpture depicts a soldier of Satan and has called for its removal. "The sculpture is a demon and a soldier of Satan that, instead of being honoured, must be despised as blasphemous to the holy trinity. It is an affront to Orthodoxy and the Christian faith," the priest said. In an interview with Greek Channel Skai TV, the artist dismissed the assertions that the sculpture is a depiction of Satan. "Who says that the colour of Satan is red? there are angels with red wings and red hair," Georgiou said. Georgiou contended that the criticisms against his work were led by "some ultras like the newspaper Eleftheri Ora" and a "hate-preacher" he identified as Fr. Kleomenis. "It is supposed that the opponents are Christians but their soul is anti-Christian," he added. The artist said that he is surprised at the reactions triggered by the sculpture, and noted that his work is "independent of any approach to religious symbols and emblems." "Those who condemn it as anti Christ and satanic, are wrong," he said, adding that a similar work that was displayed in Mykonos last summer had not triggered any reaction. "If they want to demolish, let them do it. If they want to burn it, let them burn it as they were burning books in the past," he said. Residents of the suburb have been collecting signatures in an attempt to pressure the municipality to remove the sculpture. home World Turkey's historic Iron church reopens after 7-year restoration A church built by the Bulgarian community in Istanbul in the 19th century reopened on Sunday after a seven-year restoration project. Sveti Stefan, also known as the "Iron Church," is said to be the only church that was mainly made of iron. It was built on the banks of Istanbul's Golden Horn in 1898 with 500-tons of prefabricated iron components from Austria, according to Voice of America. Vasil Liaze, head of a foundation overseeing the church, stated that the restoration project had cost TL 16 million ($4.3 million) and that TL 15 million ($4.01 million) of the budget was provided by the Turkish government. The opening ceremony on Sunday was attended by Turkish President Recep Tayyip ErdoAYan, Prime Minister Binali YAldArAm and Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov. ErdoAYan stated at the ceremony that the government has the responsibility to ensure that everyone, no matter their beliefs, has the right to freely practice their faith. "Certain bitter memories in history should not be allowed to taint the long history of living side by side," the president said, adding that the government has been working since the beginning to restore places of worship of all citizens. Borisov had vowed that Bulgaria would work to "normalize and improve" Turkey-European Union relations as his country assumes the presidency of the EU. According to Daily Sabah, the Bulgarian Metochion, a renovated addition of the church, was reopened in 2016 and hosted an exhibition of the history of the Bulgarian community in Turkey. The three-story building was originally built as an addition to the church but it was gradually turned into a community and cultural center for the Bulgarian community in Istanbul. Over the years, the Metochion had been converted into a school, a printing house and a nursing home before it was abandoned by the community. The Turkish president contended that the government has supported the restoration of more than 5,000 historical artifacts in the Middle East, North Africa, South Asia and the Balkans in the past 15 years. "We do not separate freedom of worship in the Iron Church from the freedom of worship in the Muradiye Mosque in Filibe [Plovdiv]. That is why my friend Boyko bringing Bulgaria's Chief Mufti Mustafa AliAY to this ceremony is important," he said. Another historic church in Istanbul's EdirnekapA district opened in early November in a ceremony attended by Turkish and Greek Orthodox dignitaries. ErdoAYan also pointed to other examples of state-sponsored restoration of several churches, including the Great Sinagogue of Edirne, the Aya Nikola Church in GAkAeada, the Syriac Catholic church of Askenderun, DiyarbakAr's Sur Armenian Protestant Church, the Nizip Fevkani Church in Gaziantep and the Taksiyarjis Church in Cunda Island. home World US State Department puts Pakistan on special watch list of 'countries of particular concern' Pakistan has been placed on the U.S. State Department's special watch list of "countries of particular concern" (CPC) for "severe" violations of religious freedom. On Thursday, the State Department announced its annual CPC list based on observance of ongoing violations of religious freedom in countries across the globe. "In far too many places around the globe, people continue to be persecuted, unjustly prosecuted, or imprisoned for exercising their right to freedom of religion or belief," department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said, as reported by Catholic Herald. "Today, a number of governments infringe upon individuals' ability to adopt, change, or renounce their religion or belief, worship in accordance with their religion or beliefs, or be free from coercion to practice a particular religion or belief," she added. Pakistan has drawn criticism for the treatment of religious minorities, such as Christians, Ahmadi Muslims and Hindus. Many have faced death and imprisonment under Pakistan's blasphemy law as sectarian violence continues to rise in the country. A report published by U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) in 2017 noted that many Hindu and Christian girls are vulnerable to forced conversions into Islam and marriage due to the lack of legal protections for religious minorities. Pakistan's designation came as the U.S. had suspended security assistance to the country for its failure to take "decisive action" against extremist groups. President Donald Trump said last week that the U.S. had "foolishly" provided $33 billion in aid to Pakistan in the last 15 years, but had received nothing in return but "lies and deceit." Last April, USCIRF had recommended that Central African Republic, Nigeria, Pakistan, Russia, Syria and Vietnam be added to the State Department's list of CPCs. USCIRF applauded the State Department for adding Pakistan to a watch list, but it expressed disappointment that the other recommended countries were not mentioned at all. Last year, the countries of Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan have been designated by the department as CPCs. U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had decided to re-designate the 10 countries as CPCs this year. Nauert said that the purpose of designating certain countries of concern was to focus on the work needed to advance religious freedom in those nations. "The protection of religious freedom is vital to peace, stability, and prosperity. These designations are aimed at improving the respect for religious freedom in these countries. We recognize that several designated countries are working to improve their respect for religious freedom; we welcome these initiatives and look forward to continued dialogue," she said. My passion: Old Master drawings Old Master drawings specialist Furio Rinaldi looks at works by Italian artists across three centuries, explaining how like a fingerprint they can offer insights into the creative process. All are offered in Old Master & British Drawings on 30 January To really understand and appreciate drawings you need to have physical contact, explains Furio Rinaldi, Associate Specialist in Old Master drawings at Christies in New York. You need to hold it in your hands. [A drawing] has a front, it has a back, the paper has a texture. Then theres the ink, the flowing lines, the chalk; its unvarnished, unedited, the specialist enthuses. The drawings selected by Rinaldi are all offered in the Old Masters & British Drawings sale in New York on 30 January, and were executed by Italian artists highly representative of the eras in which they lived. Giorgio Vasari epitomises the theory and practice of disegno the physical act of drawing on paper and the intellectual concept of the design in the 16th century, explains the specialist. Guercino [Giovanni Francesco Barbieri] is undeniably the most prolific and inventive draughtsman of 17th-century Italy; Tiepolo pushed the boundaries of drawing for the 18th century; and Giuseppe Bezzuolis monumental cartoon exemplifies the art of drawing at the dawn of modernity in the 19th century. Giorgio Vasari was an essential figure in the definition of the modern concept of drawing. An incredible draughtsman, he is also a very reliable source on drawing and design practices in the Renaissance, says Rinaldi, admiring a pen-and-ink drawing by the artist that depicts The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John the Baptist. The notion of drawing as we know it today was born in the Italian Renaissance and, as Rinaldi explains, this example is all about the elegance and ornamental complexity of the figure. Its something that only Vasari could do, he says. The red chalk work by Guercino pictured above is an example of a drawing that is at once both a work of art and a vital historical document. This Holy Family is in fact an important visual record of a painting now lost, possibly the artists last work, which he executed at the very end of his career, reveals the specialist. Among the many highlights in the sale is a large drawing, above, by Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo (1727-1804), whom Rinaldi considers the most important draughtsman of the 18th century. This drawing, which depicts the Holy Familys flight into Egypt and arrival at the gates of Memphis, is not, however, a preparatory work for a commission; Tiepolo executed the piece entirely for himself. All the figures are seen from the back, which is an incredibly modern choice it is an almost cinematic depiction of this moment, the specialist notes. And theres another important detail. [Old Master] drawings are not usually signed, because they were not considered finished works, Rinaldi explains. By the time Tiepolo completed this drawing, however, works such as this were becoming increasingly valuable, and the artist clearly felt compelled to sign and take ownership of it. Open a larger version of this image Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo (Venice 1727-1804), The Nursing of Punchinello. 14 x 18 in (35.4 x 47 cm). Estimate: $600,000-1,000,000. This lot is offered in Old Master & British Drawings on 30 January 2018 at Christies in New York This is also the case with another masterwork by Tiepolo, The Nursing of Punchinello, which, like The Holy Family Entering Memphis, was part of a series the artist developed without a specific patron. In Punchinello, Tiepolo fully expresses his outstanding narrative abilities and sense of humour, Rinaldi continues. This drawing is an homage to Venice, the land of the Commedia dellarte, clearly channelled through the drawings watery and luminous wash technique, recalling the effects of light on the lagoon. A cartoon by Giuseppe Bezzuoli (1784-1855), below, is described by Rinaldi as an incredible new discovery. The cartoon was drawn in 1848 for a ceiling fresco in Palazzo Gerini in Florence, and is a full-scale design for the final work. Brett Coomer/Staff Jack Gerard, president of the American Petroleum Institute, urged President Donald Trump Tuesday not to forget about the energy sector when it comes to fixing the nation's infrastructure. "Too often, the infrastructure conversation is limited to highways, roads and bridges - which rely heavily on government funding," he said in a prepared speech at an API event in Washington. "By expanding our focus beyond traditional infrastructure and considering the great opportunity of energy infrastructure investments, we could potentially double the economic benefits of infrastructure in this country." HFF A boutique office building in the Galleria area near the Tanglewood and Memorial Villages neighborhoods has changed hands between two Houston-based owners. A partnership led by Braun Enterprises has purchased 5757 Woodway, a 162,188-square-foot office building on 4 acres east of Augusta Drive, commercial real estate firm HFF announced. Houston Association of Realtors Harris County Commissioners Court on Tuesday unanimously voted to work with Montgomery County to seek state funds to study flood control in the San Jacinto River watershed, including Lake Conroe and Lake Houston. The counties would, along with other agencies, apply for a Texas Water Development Board grant. The vote Tuesday comes more than four months after Hurricane Harvey's deluge swelled waters in the Lake Conroe reservoir, forcing torrential releases that flooded hundreds of homes along the river. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Four people were arrested Thursday following a raid in the Santa Fe neighborhood in south Laredo, police said. RELATED: Drug bust at International Bridge yields over $900k of heroin, meth Daniel Martinez, 30, was charged with manufacture, delivery of a controlled substance and possession of marijuana. Kevin Costilla, 18, Adolfo Martinez, 23, and Veronica Martinez, 51, were each charged with possession of marijuana. Laredo police said they were arrested after LPD received an anonymous tip on possible narcotics activity at a home in the 600 block of Santa Martha Boulevard. Police conducted surveillance of the home as undercover officers purchased drugs. They later obtained a search warrant and executed it at about 4:45 p.m. Thursday. READ MORE: Settlement reached after Dimmit County official allegedly told woman "I'm going to rape you" Police said they found narcotics in the kitchen, living room, bedroom and a restroom. They seized two baggies of cocaine weighing 4.1 grams, 51.7 grams of marijuana, $600 and a .380-caliber handgun with an extended magazine. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate College presidents today must be prepared to manage their campuses reputations and maintain student safety amid man-made and natural crises, a report out this fall from the Journal of Education Advancement and Marketing found. Crisis-prone universities are vulnerable to threats of violence, due to their open access to the public, and other risks in an era of student protest and political division, State University of New York at Albany professor Eric Stern and communications administrator Joseph Brennan wrote in the report. This has significant implications for the way that universities select and prepare not only their leaders, but also those who advise and support top leadership in crisis situations, they wrote. Texas campuses in 2017 perhaps typified the crises both man-made and natural that universities must navigate. Universities and colleges in Houston feared the worst when Hurricane Harvey approached in August. Though largely physically unscathed, campuses here had to assist their students, many of whom suffered damaged homes, and reorganize course schedules. Presidents and other university administrators communicated often with students and their families in an effort to ease concerns and spread important information. Violence near the University of Virginias campus in August put schools nationwide on edge as students and staff feared that protests would turn violent at their colleges, too. A white nationalist shortly after announced a White Lives Matter event at Texas A&M University for Sept. 11, which the university later canceled. Regents supported the university's decision to call off the event. One University of Texas at Austin student died in a stabbing by a fellow student in May as rumors spread on social media about a potential second attacker. UT-Austin President Greg Fenves validated students feelings in a news conference after the attack: There is fear, and that fear is justified We have lots of emotions, including fear and distrust, and we recognize there is tremendous pain among the student body. Colleges long recruited academics to lead their institutions, but in recent years, boards have hired leaders with business experience, recognizing that leading institutions with massive budgets and thousands of employees takes management expertise. But the fall report indicates that apart from business acumen, crisis communications expertise may be a commodity that search committees should also seek in college presidents. The authors recommend that university leaders study reputational threats in addition to safety preparedness as they consider how to respond to crises. Colleges and universities sometimes seem to almost purposefully have been designed to produce crises, the authors wrote, citing open access to criminals and the passionate debate that occurs on college campuses. Lindsay Ellis writes about higher education for the Chronicle. You can follow her on Twitter and send her tips at lindsay.ellis@chron.com. An attempt to eradicate a wolf spider led to an apartment fire and residents looking for new homes. Lindsay Wisegrave told the Record Searchlight that a man living in a Redding, California, apartment used a torch lighter to kill what she called "a huge wolf spider." The fire spread from the spider to the apartment when the arachnid ran into a mattress, setting it ablaze. From there, the fire spread to drapes and other parts of the bedroom, Wisegrave told the newspaper. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate On April 16, 1947, one of the largest industrial explosions ever killed an estimated 576 people in Texas City, about 40 miles south of Houston. Recently uncovered video from the incident shows that smoke and flames that raged in Texas City after the deadly blasts. A cargo ship called the Grandcamp, which had previously been docked in Houston, was docked in Texas City. While there, it was being loaded with ammonium nitrate fertilizer, an extremely flammable substance. ON HOUSTONCHRONICLE.COM: Plans for Texas City ammonia plant spark environmental, health concerns A fire broke out in the ship's cargo hold and despite efforts to extinguish the flames, the fire spread. At 9:12 a.m., the ship exploded. The blast was so massive that it leveled or damaged more than 1,000 surrounding buildings, shattered windows in Houston 40 miles away, and in Denver, over 900 miles away, a seismograph registered the explosion as if it were an earthquake. See rare video from the aftermath of the deadly blasts collected from the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) Historical Museum and Research Center... Now Playing: See historic, rare footage of the aftermath of the deadly 1947 explosion in Texas City. The Texas Department of Public Safety counts it as the deadliest industrial accident in U.S. history. Video: Houston Chronicle There is another, more graphic video on YouTube of the grim task that officials had to undertake in the wake of the disaster. Charred bodies and various body parts can be seen in the clip as medical staff worked to identify the corpses using dental records and other means. That footage can be seen on LiveLeak. The fire from the devastating explosion continued to grow throughout the day. The bright orange smoke, caused by burning nitrate, attracted crowds that included schoolchildren. As the flames grew, they spread to another ship, the SS High Flyer, and fifteen hours later a second blast occurred. Along with the 576 people killed by the blasts, more than three thousand people were injured. Neighboring emergency staff, including police, fire and medical personnel from Houston, raced to the Bay Area community to help. RELATED: The 20 worst days in Houston's history Over 1,000 people attended the memorial service at the Central High School gymnasium and celebrities such as Frank Sinatra and Jack Benny also participated in fundraising events to bring thousands of dollars for the recovery effort. In June 1947, the 63 bodies that remained unidentified were buried in a city park during a mass funeral service. Following the explosion, more than 3,000 lawsuits against the federal government were filed because the ammonium nitrate came from U.S. ordnance plants. By 1955, Congress resolved the lawsuits by settling the claims for $16.5 million. Furthermore, the accident resulted in new regulations for the manufacturing and shipping of chemicals. Craig Hlavaty is a reporter for Chron.com and HoustonChronicle.com. He's an intolerable native Texan with too much ink in his skin and too much brisket stuck in his teeth. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A Dickinson suspect is accused of taking a dog from another person's yard in the middle of the night and committing shocking abuse against the animal on Thursday. Police received the call at about 2:30 a.m. on Jan. 4 in the 3100 block of Ohio Ave, according to a Dickinson Police news release. Witnesses said they saw a man harming a pitbull, punching the dog in the head, kicking the dog, swinging the dog in the air by a belt around its neck and slamming the dog to the ground. MYSTERY: Ducks shot with arrows repeatedly in Pearland When officers arrived, they found Jeremy Dewayne Burton, 25, walking a dog in the street. Burton apparently did not know the dog's owner and had taken the dog from its yard while walking down the street, police said. Officers said the dog had a cut on its head, was cowering and could barely walk, the release states. Burton reportedly told officers "he was stressed out and angry and was taking his frustration out on the dog," the release states. Burton was arrested and charged with felony cruelty to a non-livestock animal. He was booked into the Galveston County Jail and his bond was set at $60,000. The dog was released back to its owner. There is no police record of whether the dog required veterinary attention after the incident. Dana Burke is a digital reporter at Chron.com. You can read more of her stories here and follow her on Twitter at @danapburke. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A suburban steakhouse chain will open late this year in the historic River Oaks Shopping Center, the latest change to the much-discussed retail landmark whose owner has modernized it over the years much to the consternation of local preservationists. Perry's Steakhouse & Grille said in an announcement Monday that it would open at the center in late 2018 in a 12,730-square-foot space at the southeast corner of West Gray and McDuffie. It will take over the former California Pizza Kitchen space. The new restaurant will have a two-story design with a bar on the first floor and the main dining room on the second. The spot will be large enough to accommodate 350 diners. Now Playing: FOX 26 News segment contributor and Houston Restaurant Weeks founder Cleverley Stone Video: KRIV The low-slung shopping center that stretches along both sides of West Gray east of Shepherd has long been an architectural treasure. But its Art Deco aesthetic has been altered amid changing trends in retail design and development. RELATED: Downtown apartment tower gets green light Several years ago, a portion of the building was demolished to make way for a two-story Barnes & Noble, a Starbucks and other retailers. Built in the 1930s and '40s, the property was declared a city of Houston landmark in 2007, though the designation offers little protection. Owners who want to make physical changes to such properties are required to submit their plans to the Houston Archaeological and Historical Commission for a "certificate of appropriateness." If denied, however, the owner can still move forward after a 90-day waiting period. Last summer, the commission filed a denial for the Perry's redo, saying owner Weingarten Realty's proposed changes did not preserve the property's historical character. RELATED: Land-use expert's 'anti-Houston bias' faded Among other items, the commission commented on how the changes would be out of scale with the rest of the shopping center. It also said aluminum screens and limestone would create a much more modern appearance than the original structure. A denial was also filed for Weingarten's proposal to replace a different portion of the property with a 30-story apartment tower. "The demolition of this section of the historic shopping center irrevocably alters the shopping center as a whole, which is distinguished by its low modular planes and simplistic architectural features. The proposed tower is not in scale or proportion with the shopping center and detracts from the historic look and feel of the remaining sections," the commission wrote. Weingarten said Perry's is a positive addition to the center. LISTEN: The first annual 'Loopie Awards' highlights the best in Houston real estate "Our team is also excited to offer complimentary valet to Perry's customers to balance out the parking for all River Oaks Shopping Center customers," Weingarten vice president and regional director of leasing, said in the announcement. Weingarten officials could not be reached for additional comment. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A group of people, scantily clad from the waist down, took over public transit in San Francisco Sunday afternoon. As part of the annual "No Pants BART Ride," about 45 pants-less people boarded a Daly City-bound train at the Civic Center/UN Plaza Station around 1:15 p.m. They chatted, joked, and posed for pictures as the train headed south. "Alright, so what's the occasion?" asked one bemused passenger. Participants were instructed to act normal and deflect questions about their unconventional outfits. Now Playing: A group of about 45 pants-less people boarded BART trains Sunday afternoon as part of the annual "No Pants BART Ride" on Jan. 7, 2018. Video: Alix Martichoux / SFGATE "I forgot to wear my pants," responded one man wearing only underwear from the waist down. ALSO READ: Where to get naked in the Bay Area and not feel weird about it But another participant spilled the beans, explaining it was part of the annual ride, which stages similar events around the world. Besides, if the tightly-clustered and unusually friendly bunch of pants-less people didn't make it obvious something out of the ordinary was going on, the constant clicking of news cameras certainly did. "This is not an exhibitionist thing, to be very clear," co-organizer Jay Zalowitz told SFGATE last year. "This is a spontaneous delight and meant to bring enjoyment out of people's day. We ran into some soldiers on the way back from Oakland Airport and you should have seen the smile this brought to their faces and that alone makes something like this worth it." The group disembarked at Balboa Park Station and posed for a group picture before returning to Civic Center. From there, they headed off to an afterparty, which yes, is also pants-less. MORE FROM LAST YEAR: Annual 'no pants' BART ride attracts participants despite huge storm The event was started in 2001 by New York City-based prank collective Improv Everywhere and has since spread to other metropolitan areas, including New York, Boston, Prague and Berlin. SFGATE's Dianne de Guzman contributed to this report. Read Alix Martichoux's latest stories and send her news tips at amartichoux@sfchronicle.com. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate As the Cy-Fair Independent School District plans to rebuild Moore Elementary School after it was damaged by floodwaters from Hurricane Harvey, the school's campus counselor is working to help rebuild lives. Moore is one of about 30 Houston-area schools severely impacted by Hurricane Harvey. The storm flooded not only Moore Elementary at 13734 Lakewood Forest Drive with more than 2.5 feet of water, but also the entire community. Jennifer Nichols and her staff at Moore are working with resources from UNICEF USA in partnership with The Mayor's Office of Education and Mental Health America of Greater Houston and Save the Children. "It's been a very long road," said Nichols. "Our situation is kind of unique." Nichols said floodwaters forced at least 135 families to leave their homes. "UNICEF is giving something very unique in helping teachers - especially homeroom teachers - with single event and complex event trauma and how it affects brain development," said Nichols. Students and their families experienced the trauma of their homes being flooded and high-water rescues. Repercussions exist, she said, such as families living in the second story of a home whose first floor flooded, in a motel room or in a crowded RV parked in their driveway. Within that small space, families are cooking meals, doing homework and getting ready for work. "Three kids, two dogs, two adults in a RV in a driveway," said Nichols. "It's hard and not knowing where the end is - that's what so hard." Those stresses impact the ability to learn, she said. Educators responded well to the first psychoeducational training offered through UNICEF in November, she said. Moving forward teachers are learning to be more sensitive to their students who will not be the same for a while and what to expect in terms of behaviors and academic performance. Nichols talked of focusing on mindfulness training and learning tools such as deep breathing to help calm the brain which can become hypervigilant due to the trauma experienced by those impacted by Harvey. While UNICEF worked to help restore normalcy to classrooms after Harvey, it's also looking at the psychological-social impact that may appear three to six months later, said Caryl Stern, president/CEO, UNICEF USA. UNICEF brings years of experience in how to respond to an emergency, though it rarely works in industrialized nations. Stern said her agency is not only working with teachers but also psychological-social agencies to provide support to families with a particular focus on children. "A healthy mom is a healthy child," said Stern. Making the UNICEF programs even more valuable, according to Lisa Szarkowski, vice president, Humanitarian Emergencies and Executive Communications, UNICEF USA, is the Oct. 30 report released by the Houston Endowment and Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute, identifying gaps in mental health care for young people in Houston. Szarkowski said Houston has a lack of clinicians trained in trauma for children as well as a lack of Spanish-speaking clinicians. "We're working to compensate for those gaps," she said. UNICEF will work on these interventions for at least a year, she said. "Trauma is not neat and nice and tied up with a bow." "What we're learning from training," said Nichols, "is that trauma is a very unique experience." For example, two people whose homes were flooded and had to be rescued by boat in rushing water will react differently based on prior traumas that they've experienced such as the death of a family member or a pet. "The No. 1 thing is to get to know the kids so we understand their story," she said. Learning their stories through the prescreening will determine the best strategy to help them, she said. Parents were asked to allow their students to participate in a monitored program of small groups for those most affected by Harvey, starting in December, said Nichols. She's scheduled eight sessions with 10 groups that each have between five and seven students in grades 2-5. Using Journey of Hope curriculum created by Save the Children, she offers a variety of activities from art and storytelling to fun with a parachute. The program originally was developed for students impacted by Hurricane Katrina, explained Nichols, and has since been used to help children who've experienced other tragedies. "They're learning about emotions - how to normalize them and how to better deal with them going into the future. "We're giving them tools to better equip them for future trauma and trauma they've already experienced. Everyone who could be served is being served. We didn't turn anyone away." While Moore Elementary had 130 students impacted by Hurricane Harvey, Nichols' groups don't include all the students for various reasons including their families being unable to find replacement housing within the school zone and moving to another school. In those cases, Nichols said she's reached out to the new school to tell them about the student and how he/she might need a little extra love and maybe a mentor. "Most students given the proper support at home and school are able to navigate through trauma and come out the other side pretty much unscathed," said Nichols, who also plans for other efforts to reach out to staff. "A lot of horrible things happened with Harvey," said Nichols, who added, "I lost my entire counseling office. "Some had been in the (school) building for 20 years and lost everything," she said. That's been countered in part by the district and community response. "Cy-Fair ISD has as a whole been so loving," Nichols said. "The community really responded and raised us up and made us feel good." Church and nonprofit groups stepped forward to provide food, gifts and other support for the holidays to 25 Moore Elementary families impacted by Hurricane Harvey. Nichols thanked everyone for their support. "Teachers are trying their best. No amount of support can really fix it all. It is what it is. They are hurting still." Contributing to the situation are the unknowns of when people can repair their houses and move back home. Coming to school everyday and making it happen is exhausting, she said. Moore students and staffed are housed for the school year at the Old Matzke Elementary at 13102 Jones Road. Part of the training is to check in with staff on how kids are doing and how they (the staff) are doing, she said. "Moore Strong is our saying," said Nichols. "We love each other and we're going to get through this no matter how long it takes." Saying that UNICEF works to empower a community, Stern added, "I have truly been heartened by the generosity of spirit of the Houston community. If there is a silver lining to the dark cloud, it's how beautifully your community came together. We were all awed by it." While Michael Ondruch earned a marketing degree at Sam Houston State University, he found the pull of community service and family tradition - his grandfather and older brother entered the firefighting field - stronger. For over two years, he's been paramedic/firefighter at the Katy Fire Department. Last month, American Legion Post 164 honored him as Firefighter of the Year based on the recommendation of Fire Chief Russell Wilson. "He stands out in service above and beyond," said Wilson. Noting that Ondruch is among the newer firefighters, Wilson said his attitude and willingness to learn - his work ethic are stellar. Selecting Jarrod Bowen as paramedic of the year and Ondruch as firefighter of the year was a difficult decision because the department has so many talented members and it was a real challenge to name someone to stand out. "Both are great young men," he said of Bowen and Ondruch. The selection made Ondruch, 25, feel very honored. "The award means a lot to me." "I don't do a job for an award or for glory. I do it to help people," he said. Receiving the award won't change him, he said, because he lives by Mahatma Gandhi's "Be the change you want to be in the world." There's the time his crew visited a day care during spring break to show them the truck and equipment when they received a call for a motor vehicle accident. As Ondruch suited up to respond, he looked over and saw the youngsters staring at him. "How I perform now in my actions could create future firefighters," he said. He finds serving the community and helping people rewarding. He prefers serving as a jack of all trades and wearing a lot of different hats as opposed to an 8-to-5 office job. "Helping the department in the best way I can" his is focus. As an early arrival at the department, he starts the coffee for the rest of the crew. Coffee is an important mainstay at the department, according to Ondruch, as is training. He became a paramedic last August and is looking forward to more classes to advance his skills. "We're fortunate we do as much training as we do to be the best patient advocates we can be," said Ondruch, as well the most efficient and safest methods for firefighting. "I know I have a job to do and I have to do that job. If I don't, someone else could get hurt." In his spare time, he likes restoring cars and trucks. His projects include a 1954 Chevy half ton and a 1983 Toyota Celica. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A man who was on LSD when police used a Taser on him four times has lost his excessive force lawsuit against Harris County. In an opinion filed last month, a federal judge sided with Harris County in the suit brought by Jared Allen White in 2013. White was charged with assaulting a public servant in September 2012 after deputies with the Harris County Precinct 4 Constable's office stopped him as he walked in the middle of Tomball Road, court records show. Those charges were dismissed in 2013. White's lawsuit, which listed only Harris County as a defendant, alleged that officers had hogtied him and laughed as they shocked him. It also said that Harris County did not have adequate policies or procedures in place for using Tasers. Now Playing: Texas News & Crime Video: Houston Chronicle "Unfortunately, concern for White's well-being quickly morphed into aggression," the complaint said. "The officers laughed and thought it was hilarious watching White being tasered and falling on his face with his hands handcuffed behind his back," the complaint said. U.S. District Judge Lynn N. Hughes, in an opinion filed last month, found that the deputies had not violated White's constitutional rights, and disagreed with White's claims about the county's Taser policies. White had told deputies that he had ingested LSD, a hallucinogenic drug, and that he wanted them to shoot him because he had recently lost his wife and son, according to the summary judgment. After deputies tried to detain him, White ran away, after which he was Tased and handcuffed, the summary judgment states. "Several police officers tried to restrain him to keep him from wandering among the cars. He pulled away from them and darted across the grass toward the highway," the judgment states. "The officers chased him, and one hit him with a Taser. Subdued, the man lay on the ground while the officers handcuffed him. The officers told him to stay on the ground, but he stood - twice. Each time, an officer zapped him with a Taser, not knowing if the man would try to harm an officer or bolt away." "The officers then tried to walk the man to a car, but on the way, he fell," the judge reads. "From the ground, he began kicking, hitting one officer's face and neck. An officer Tasered him. The man says that the last three hits with the Taser were constitutionally excessive. The county says that they were reasonable. The county will prevail." Robert Downen is a metro crime reporter for the Houston Chronicle. Send him tips at robert.downen@chron.com and follow him on Twitter. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston is set to receive the first $6 million of $125 million in state funding to build a new psychiatric hospital, the first such public facility in Harris County in 31 years. The 300-bed hospital will be built on land adjacent to the 274-bed, UTHealth-run Harris County Psychiatric Center, providing relief in an area so underserved that the Harris County jail is considered the state's largest mental health facility. "This is a game changer for Harris County," said Dr. Jair Soares, chair of psychiatry at UTHealth's McGovern Medical School. "It should decompress the situation at the jail and allow local patients who needed longer stays to be treated near home." Combined with the Harris County Psychiatric Center, the new hospital would make the UTHealth Continuum of Care Campus for Behavioral Health the largest such academic center in the nation. The Texas Health and Human Service Commission's announcement Monday it is releasing the first round of funding approved by the 2017 Legislature for mental health projects around the state. UTHealth hopes to break ground on the new hospital by early 2019 and begin admitting patients in fall 2021. The new hospital will admit many patients currently discharged by HCPC, which has only acute-care beds and where the average length of stay is about seven to eight days, partly because it has roughly 45 patients waiting to be admitted at all times. The new hospital will have some acute-care beds but mostly be comprised of sub-acute and residential treatment beds. It also will mark a new model of state residential psychiatric care. Under the nearly 100-year-old model, psychiatric patients requiring long-term treatment are sent to state hospitals in areas far from where the patient and their families live. Rusk State Hospital, the closest to Houston, is more than a three-hour drive. Rusk is where HCPC patients needing longer term care theoretically would go, though Soares said only a small percentage do. The new model calls for such treatment to be delivered in cities, near other psychiatric facilities, as part of an effort to emphasize a continuum of care and do away with the stigma historically associated with mental illness. HHSC said Monday it will give UTHealth the first installment to allow planning to begin and architects to be hired to design the facility. Soares said the center hopes to receive the rest of the funding, to be given in installments, as the year unfolds. "This is a huge deal for Houston," said state Rep. Sarah Davis, R-Houston, a member of the House budget-writing committee who played a key role in passing the mental health funding. "It addresses an obvious need and has the potential to save taxpayer dollars by keeping patients out of jails, where they're more expensive to house, don't get adequate long-term psychiatric care and typically end up back on the streets." Harris County Judge Ed Emmett, a long-time advocate of the need for more public psychiatric beds, added that "this is some of the best news I've heard relative to mental health in some time. It doubles capacity still not enough and puts mental health into the whole Texas Medical Center research environment where it will get the same due as conditions like cancer and heart disease." Currently, the only public in-patient psychiatric care in Houston besides HCPC are 32 beds at Ben Taub Hospital, including 12 in its emergency center. The Texas Medical Center owns the land, currently occupied by a small parking garage, where UTHealth will build the new hospital. The TMC is donating the land to the state, which will be considered its owner. UTHealth has a similar arrangement with HCPC, which is jointly owned by the state and county. Harris County Mental Health Court Probate Judge Rory Olsen said the announcement "shows the State of Texas is working diligently to improve mental health services for the people of Texas." "When HCPC opened, it had adequate capacity to serve our needs," said Olsen, whose 2013 writing on the subject is credited by UTHealth leaders for galvanizing the movement for a new facility. "But in the 31 years that have since passed, the county has grown and our population has grown. Thus expansion is needed to continue staying ahead of the curve." HCPC was originally intended to house 500 beds. Because of limited funding, it was built to only house 250. Patients who are discharged from HCPC even though they would benefit from longer-term care often run into trouble with law enforcement. The Harris County jail calculates that it houses more psychiatric patients than all of the state hospitals combined. Besides the $6 million Texas HHSC announced Monday will be coming soon to UTHealth, the agency said it will soon release another $41.7 million for other state projects, part of the 2017 Legislature's $300 million effort to begin improving public in-patient psychiatric care. The funding represents the first phase of a three-phase effort expected to be continued by the 2019 and 2021 Legislatures. UTHealth leaders said the campus will be designed to address not only different levels of care but also to integrate the different types of care, including psychiatric, substance abuse and medical care. It will allow psychiatry and behavioral sciences to continue its research into the causes and treatment of behavioral health issues, and to expand its training of the next generation of healers. Soares said there has some been some preliminary internal design work done on the building, but bidding for the project's architect has yet to go out. "It will be great to have the two hospitals together on one campus, providing a continuum of care," said Soares, also executive director of the HCPC. "It should have a significant impact on the vicious cycle we see of patients being discharged from acute beds, only to end up returning to treatment or being arrested." This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate On Monday, the clock started ticking on Patricia Merlos' life as she knows it. Eighteen months. That's how long the 25-year-old human resources analyst has to decide what to do in response to the Trump administration's announcement Monday that it plans to terminate a humanitarian program that has allowed some 260,000 Salvadorans, many of them in Texas, to live and work in the United States for the past 17 years. Merlos' parents brought her to the U.S. from El Salvador as a baby, carrying her across the U.S.-Mexico border and settling in Houston. After earthquakes struck El Salvador in 2001, she and her parents were granted permission to live and work in the United States with Temporary Protective Status. It lasts only six months to 18 months, technically, before it has to be renewed. Time and again, the U.S. government extended that permission for El Salvador. Until Monday. Now Merlos, who has a bachelor's degree from the University of Houston and a job she loves, has to decide. Can she somehow figure out a way to stay legally in the U.S.? Would she be better off staying in the U.S. without papers? Or should she return to El Salvador, a country she has no memory of? She's seen pictures, she said, and has talked to aunts left behind in the small town of Usulupan who talk of having to pay off gangs that charge "taxes." "I can't imagine," Merlos said. A NEW AMERICA: Five storylines on the frontline of the immigration debate in Houston Monday's decision was hailed by supporters of tighter immigration controls, who have argued for years that Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, has been extended far beyond the initial crisis periods after natural disasters, creating de facto long-term immigration benefits for recipients. But opponents argue that the decision will send thousands of people who have lived and worked in the U.S. for years - and paid taxes, contributed to Social Security and raised American-born children - back to a deeply impoverished country wracked by gang violence. Advocates and Salvadoran officials, including the Houston consul, are hoping Congress will step in before next September with legislation that will override the administration's decision. Marie D. De Jesus/Houston Chronicle Tearing apart families The decision is expected to have a ripple effect on the economy in Houston, where Mayor Sylvester Turner estimated some 19,000 people from El Salvador have TPS. Many of them have been here long enough to open their own businesses. Turner also estimated that more than 20,000 U.S. citizen children in the Houston area have parents from El Salvador with TPS. "When TPS ends," he said, "these families could be torn apart." Losing all 36,300 Salvadoran TPS holders in Texas would cost the state $1.8 billion in GDP annually, according to a study by the Center for American Progress. Of the 30,600 who work, the study reported, 20.9 percent work in construction - an industry dealing with a tight labor market, especially after Hurricane Harvey. Another 12.8 percent work in administrative, support and waste management services while 12.6 percent work in accommodations and food services. BY THE NUMBERS: Trump is ending protections for immigrants from El Salvador. Here's what that means for Houston The Congressional Research Service reported in November that there were 260,000 TPS recipients from El Salvador in the U.S. The Center for American Progress estimates ending TPS would lower the national GDP by $109 billion over 10 years. Furthermore, according to a recent survey, 77 percent of Salvadoran and Honduran TPS holders send remittances back to relatives still in those countries. In 2015, remittances from the United States to El Salvador totaled more than $4 billion, according to the World Bank, amounting to more than 15 percent of the country's GDP. Salvadorans are by far the largest beneficiaries of the TPS program, which provides special legal status for people whose countries have been affected by civil conflict or natural disasters. The Obama administration had extended the protections in 2016, setting up Monday's deadline for another extension. Merlos saw Monday's decision coming back in November, when the Trump administration announced plans to do away with TPS for Haiti, which had been granted temporary protection in response to a 2010 earthquake. CRACKDOWN: Trump moves to end 'catch and release', prosecuting parents and removing children who cross border El Salvador was next, Merlos feared. "It was something we were all expecting," Merlos said, "but it's still scary." Nicaragua and Sudan also have lost TPS under the new administration. Michael Ciaglo/Houston Chronicle Move called 'cruel' U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, a Houston Democrat, called the decision "cruel," citing reports from religious organizations that El Salvador is ill-equipped to accommodate the return of that many people because of violence, food insecurity and lingering devastation from natural disasters. Other critics of the decision noted that the State Department currently has a travel warning for Americans considering a visit to El Salvador. In rendering her decision, recently confirmed Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said that conditions in El Salvador have improved sufficiently, determining that "the original conditions caused by the 2001 earthquakes no longer exist." DEEPER UNDERGROUND: Businesses feel the pinch as undocumented consumers limit shopping expenses She cited millions of dollars in international aid since the earthquakes that helped finance water and sanitation projects and reopen schools, roads and hospitals damaged by the quakes. She also noted that the U.S. government has repatriated more than 39,000 Salvadorans in the last two years - which the administration takes as evidence that the country of 6.2 million is able to handle the return of its citizens. Houston immigration attorney Gordon Quan, who represents about 10 clients who have TPS, said the cancellation of the protected status should not be a surprise to anyone. "They're shocked that somebody actually ended it, but I was shocked it was extended every 18 months so many times," Quan said. "So I don't think they should be surprised it ended, especially with a guy like Trump.'' Quan said some TPS recipients may be able to find a way to stay in the U.S. legally by various means, including marriage or through their employers. STRANGERS IN THEIR HOMELANDS: Trump's deportees are often preyed upon by gangs "They have a year and a half to get things together," Quan said, "and I think they need to seek legal advice from an attorney in the (immigration) field and see what else they can do." In a roomy but modest beauty salon on Hillcroft in southwest Houston, El Salvador native Silverio Perez watched the news with disappointment on a large television hanging on the wall. "It's not fair," Perez said as he turned on a hair clipper, his client nodding in agreement. "With so much that our community has contributed to this country!" BRYAN R. SMITH/AFP/Getty Images 'Very disheartening' Perez has been living in the United States for 26 years, 17 of them with TPS. He said he was concerned about his and his family's future. He said he has a son and two U.S.-citizen grandchildren. Perez said his salon business, which he opened in 2000, provides enough income to sustain his family and employs five barbers and hairdressers. "We have worked hard in this country. We pay taxes," he said. "What is going to happen with all the money I have been paying for years for retirement to the Social Security Administration? What is going to happen with what we have accumulated? Are we just going to be deported and that's all?" Perez added that he hopes politicians "could find an alternative that allows us to stay legally here." He said he could not imagine his family going back to El Salvador. "I do not intend to leave," he said, "unless they take me by force." Merlos is more measured, but also struggling with the decision she faces. She said she hopes for a legal path but sees her only real options are to marry a U.S. citizen or get her employer to sponsor her. "It feels very disheartening," Merlos said. "If I were to stay here illegally, I'm sure I could find work, but it wouldn't be the same work I do now. But it would still be better than going back to El Salvador." Ileana Najarro and James Pinkerton contributed to this report. *** A NEW AMERICA: President Donald Trump has empowered federal authorities to deport immigrants here illegally, promised to punish so-called sanctuary cities and is pushing Congress to start funding a complete wall along our southern border. Fearful of being exposed and sent back to countries that may no longer be familiar or welcoming, immigrants are withdrawing even more into the shadows. The worry extends to their spouses and children, who, in many cases, are American citizens. Click here to read our series "A New America" on our subscriber website, HoustonChronicle.com. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 3 1 of 3 Show More Show Less 2 of 3 Show More Show Less 3 of 3 Police are asking for the public's help in identifying the gunmen responsible for killing a man in a convenience store parking lot not far from Texas Southern University. Crime Stoppers and the Houston Police Department released surveillance photos from the convenience store that captured two men approaching the victim in the store's parking lot around 6:20 p.m. on December 6. An argument ensued, and one of the men pulled out a pistol and shot the 25-year-old male victim. Sending a child to private school can make a sizable dent in anyone's wallet. Institutions that best prepare students for college can often cost as much or more than the universities. That's why it makes sense to see which private schools offer the best value for their steep price tag. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A Dallas woman accused of destroying at least $300,000 worth of sculptures and original paintings - including two original Andy Warhol works - at the River Oaks home of a Houston lawyer is challenging that attorney's story. Lindy Lou Layman, 29, appeared in court Tuesday after a charge of criminal mischief was filed by well-known Houston trial attorney Anthony Buzbee on December 23. "We certainly disagree with Mr. Buzbee's rendition of the facts when he spoke to the media and we disagree with what was said in probable cause court," said Layman's defense attorney Justin Keiter. Now Playing: Latest Local And State News Video: Houston Chronicle Asked what the real story was, Keiter deferred: "I'll save that for the courtroom." Police allege that Layman threw two abstract sculptures and destroyed three original paintings at Buzbee's mansion. Prosecutors have said Layman was on a first date with Buzbee, the high-profile attorney who successfully defended former Texas Gov. Rick Perry in an abuse-of-power case, when she became intoxicated and refused to leave. She then poured liquid on the paintings and threw the sculptures, according to court records. "Our side has the rest of the story," Keiter said after Layman appeared before state District Judge Kelli Johnson, who set typical bond conditions. Layman is free on $30,000 bail is prohibited from using drugs or alcohol or contacting Buzbee. "We have no interest in having contact with Mr. Buzbee," Keiter said. "That's fine with us." Assistant Harris County District Attorney Kelsey Leiper declined to comment after the brief hearing. Outside of the courtroom, Keiter said Layman had been maligned by new coverage of the incident. "She's weathering the storm of the intense media scrutiny that she has endured," Keiter said. "She's a great person." Layman, who appeared with her father, did not speak in court or after the hearing. Similar to allegations of theft or embezzlement, the level of the charge is determined by the value of the objects in question. In this case, Layman is accused of the maximum, a first degree felony. If convicted, she could face life in prison. WASHINGTON -Special counsel Robert Mueller has told President Donald Trump's legal team that his office is likely to seek an interview with the president, triggering a discussion among his attorneys about how to avoid a sit-down encounter or set limits on such a session, according to two people familiar with the talks. Mueller raised the issue of interviewing Trump during a late December meeting with the president's lawyers John Dowd and Jay Sekulow. Mueller deputy James Quarles, who oversees the White House portion of the special counsel investigation, also attended. The special counsel's team could interview Trump soon on some limited portion of questions -possibly within the next several weeks, according to a person close to the president, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal conversations. "This is moving faster than anyone really realizes," the person said. Trump is comfortable participating in an interview and believes it would put to rest questions about whether his campaign coordinated with Russia in the 2016 election, the person added. However, the president's attorneys are reluctant to let him sit for open-ended, face-to-face questioning without clear parameters, according to two people familiar with the discussions. Since the December meeting, they have discussed whether the president could provide written answers to some of the questions from Mueller's investigators, as President Ronald Reagan did during the Iran-Contra investigation. They have also discussed the obligation of Mueller's team to demonstrate that it could not obtain the information ite seeks without interviewing the president. The legal team's internal discussions about how to respond to a request for an interview were first reported Monday morning by NBC News. Dowd and Sekulow declined to comment. In a statement, Ty Cobb, the White House lawyer overseeing the administration's response to the Mueller investigation, said that "the White House does not comment on communications with the OSC out of respect for the OSC and its process," referring to the special counsel's office. "The White House is continuing its full cooperation with the OSC in order to facilitate the earliest possible resolution," Cobb added. Cobb had repeatedly said all interviews of White House personnel by Mueller's office were on schedule to be completed by the end of December or early this year. On Monday, he said he remains confident that any portion of the investigation related to the president or the White House will wrap up shortly. Mueller and Trump's legal team plan to meet again soon to discuss both the possible terms and substance of the interview, as well as Mueller's timeline for the investigation, according to one person familiar with the plan. Russia investigation Trump's lawyers hope to obtain from the special counsel's team a clear idea of the categories of questions that would be posed to the president. For months, Trump's legal team has been researching the conditions under which the president would be required to submit to an interview with the special counsel, who is investigating Russia's meddling in the 2016 election. "No lawyer just volunteers their client without thinking this through," said one of the people familiar with the talks. It has long been expected that Mueller would seek to interview Trump, in part because the special counsel is scrutinizing whether actions he took in office were attempts to blunt the Russia investigation, according to people familiar with questions posed to witnesses. In May, Trump fired FBI Director James Comey after Comey testified on Capitol Hill that he could not comment on whether there was evidence that Russia had colluded with the Trump campaign. The president also dictated a misleading statement later released by his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., about a meeting that Trump Jr. had with a Russian lawyer during the presidential campaign. Veteran prosecutors said it is unlikely that Mueller would agree to have any witness, even the president, submit a declaration or provide written answers to questions to avoid a sit-down interview. Some experts said a presidential interview could signal that Mueller's investigation into the Trump's actions is nearing its end, but they cautioned that the special counsel might have a different strategy. "It would certainly seem they would be close to wrapping up as it relates to the core matter they are investigating," said Solomon Wisenberg, a deputy independent counsel who questioned President Bill Clinton in 1998. "You would want to know as much as possible before you go to the president. " Asked on Saturday if he had agreed to be interviewed by Mueller, Trump said he had nothing to hide. "Just so you understand, there's been no collusion, there's been no crime, and in theory everybody tells me I'm not under investigation. Maybe Hillary (Clinton) is, I don't know, but I'm not," Trump told reporters at Camp David. "But we have been very open. We could have done it two ways. We could have been very closed, and it would have taken years. But you know, sort of like when you've done nothing wrong, let's be open and get it over with." "Because, honestly, it's very, very bad for our country," the president added. "It's making our country look foolish. And this is a country that I don't want looking foolish. And it's not going to look foolish as long as I'm here." In June, after Comey told a congressional panel that Trump had privately asked for his loyalty, the president said he would be willing to testify under oath to dispute the fired FBI director's claims. "One hundred percent," Trump said when asked if he would give a sworn statement to Mueller. Presidential precedents Sitting presidents have been interviewed by prosecutors in the past, though courts have urged government investigators to seek such interviews only when they cannot obtain relevant information another way. Clinton's attorneys repeatedly fought independent counsel Kenneth Starr's attempts to interview their client until investigators obtained a subpoena to force his testimony. It was the first grand jury subpoena served on a sitting president. Clinton then negotiated to testify before a grand jury via video and audio link from the White House Map Room. In the videotaped interview in August 1998, which lasted four hours and saw questions from three prosecutors, Clinton admitted to inappropriate sexual activity with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, but he claimed he had been legally correct in denying that he had had sexual relations with her. He also denied having committed perjury in a lawsuit brought by Paula Jones. Not all presidential interviews with prosecutors have come at the end of an investigation. In 2004, President George W. Bush sat for an in-person interview with special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, who was investigating whether senior White House aides leaked a CIA operative's identity and broke her cover as punishment for her husband's criticism of the Iraq War. Bush volunteered for the interview, which lasted 70 minutes and was conducted in the Oval Office. Bush was far from the last one interviewed in the probe; Fitzgerald later questioned several more central witnesses. "The leaking of classified information is a very serious matter," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said at the time, adding that Bush was "pleased to do his part" to aid the investigation. Reagan testified in the Iran-Contra investigation while in office and twice more after he left office. He also answered in writing some written questions presented to him by the grand jury and the independent counsel in the probe. In 1975, President Gerald Ford was interviewed as part of a grand jury investigation into an assassination attempt. In a taped session in the Old Executive Office Building, Ford shared his recollections of events when Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a Charles Manson follower, tried to shoot Ford at close range in Sacramento, Calif., in September 1975. The tape was used at her trial that year. Three days after it collided with another ship off the coast of Shanghai, the tanker Sanchi is on fire and leaking oil into the East China Sea. And experts fear that is not even the worst-case scenario. At least 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshi citizens were aboard the tanker when the collision occurred. One body has been recovered but not publicly identified. Rescue crews said there were no signs of survivors. Since the crash, the Sanchi has been billowing thick plumes of black smoke into the air. Unless the fire can be brought under control, officials worry that the ship might explode and sink, releasing its 1 million barrels of oil into the water. The resulting spill would be about three times as big as the Exxon Valdez spill of 1989, one of the worst environmental disasters in history. It would double what the Prestige oil tanker released when it sank off the coast of Spain in 2002. That accident damaged beaches in France, Spain and Portugal, and led to the closure of one of Spain's richest fishing areas. The Sanchi was transporting oil from Iran to South Korea on Saturday when it ran into the CF Crystal, a Hong Kong-registered ship carrying grain from the United States. The crash occurred about 160 miles off the coast of Shanghai and near the mouth of the Yangtze River. The cause remains unknown. Experts are especially worried because the ship is carrying condensate, an ultralight version of crude oil. Condensate is highly toxic and even more combustible than regular crude oil. It also is nearly colorless and odorless, which makes it difficult to detect. "This stuff actually kills the microbes that break the oil down," Simon Boxall of the National Oceanography Center at the University of Southampton told the BBC. "If she sinks with a lot of cargo intact, then you have a time bomb on the sea bed which will slowly release the condensate." An oil leak into the East China Sea could also have a serious effect on the waterfront's wildlife. AUSTIN -- Gov. Greg Abbott on Tuesday endorsed the Republican challenger to Galveston state Rep. Wayne Faircloth, a move that is expected to deepen simmering divisions within the state Republican party. In a new video, Abbott called Mayes Middleton a "principled conservative a conservative who will be a tireless advocate for his constituents." "In the next legislative session, we have an opportunity to continue to pass reforms that make Texas even better," Abbott said. "To do this, we need leaders who will work with me to advance a conservative agenda that will benefit every Texans our great state. That is why I am endorsing Mayes Middleton for state representative." Middleton is an oil and gas businessman and rancher from Chambers County and is a board member of the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. Abbott's endorsement of Middleton is his second of a GOP primary challenger to a Republican incumbent running for reelection to the Texas House. In November, he endorsed Houston businesswoman Susanna Dokupil, who is challenging state Rep. Sarah Davis, R-West University Place. An insurance agent and former member of the Dickinson City Council, Faircloth has served in the House since 2015, when he won election to replace a Democrat who did not seek reelection. Faircloth's district includes parts of Galveston and Chambers counties south of Houston. In a crowded race to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Ted Poe, state Rep. Kevin Roberts is hoping a growing list of endorsements will give him an edge. As he knocks on doors, Roberts is giving potential voters a handout that includes a glowing endorsement from Harris County Judge Ed Emmett. "He is thoughtful and makes decisions based on facts," Emmett says in his endorsement. "I look forward to Kevin being in Congress to help us with flood control projects that are so desperately needed." Roberts is also touting endorsements from Harris County Commissioner Jack Cagle and Harris County Constable Mark Herman. Endorsements can have limited impact in some more high profile races. But in a contest like the 2nd Congressional District in which nine Republicans with relatively low name-ID are battling it out, an endorsement can make all the difference said Cal Jillson, political science professor at Southern Methodist University. Roberts said he's proud of the endorsements. "They are endorsing me because we've worked together," Roberts said in an interview. He added that his endorsers have seen him get things done, which is a key part of his campaign pitch to voters. With eight opponents who have never held office, Roberts said he's offering voters someone who already had experience in government. "We can't afford to send someone to Congress who needs to spend a year learning how to do the job," Roberts said. Besides Roberts, the candidates running for the 2nd Congressional District are longtime Republicans activist and donor Kathaleen Wall, businessman Rick Walker, former Navy SEAL Dan Crenshaw, hospital CEO David Balat, heart surgeon Jon Spiers, attorney Jonny Havens, businessman Justin Lurie and attorney Malcolm Whittaker. The candidates are looking to replace Poe, who announced in 2017 he will not seek re-election. The 2nd Congressional District stretches from parts of west Houston and wraps around the northern sections of Harris County to include Humble and Atascocita . In November, the winner of the March 6 GOP primary will face one of five Democrats who are battling in the Democratic primary on the same day. The Democrats are Ali A. Khorasani, H. P. Parvizian, J. Darnell Jones, Silky Malik, and Todd Litton. It took just three weeks for Democrat Tahir Javed to show he is serious about running for Congress to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Gene Green. Javed, CEO of a health care company, raised almost $253,000 in just three weeks according to a statement put out by his campaign. The former Beaumont resident who has just moved to Houston, said it took just a few events to raise the money, giving him even more confidence in his bid for the 29th Congressional District, which includes parts of Houston, South Houston and Pasadena. "This is a great sign we will have the resources to win in March and November, and bring progress and change to Washington," Javed said. Campaign finance reports tallying how much all of the candidates raised and spent since the race started are required to be reported to the Federal Election Commission by Jan. 31. Javed, who owns more than 25 businesses, said he hasn't ruled out putting his own money in the campaign as well. "If needed, yes," the 51-year-old Javed said in an interview. Javed is part of a crowded field of Democrats battling in the March 6 primary. State Sen. Sylvia Garcia, Augustine Reyes, Dominique Michelle Garcia, Hector Morales, Pedro Valencia and Roel Garcia. On the Republican side, four candidates have qualified for the GOP primary. They are: Carmen Maria Montiel, Jaimy Z. Blanco, Phillip Aronoff and Robert Schafranek. Green, a Democrat, has represented Houston in Congress since 1992. Green has endorsed Sylvia Garcia to replace him and attended a rally on Saturday in support of her campaign. The primary is March 6, but early voting in the race begins on Feb. 20. Jeremy Wallace writes about state politics and government for the Chronicle. Follow him on Twitter at @JeremySWallace. The summers final Live on the Waterfront concert was held Wednesday evening at Prince Arthurs Landing. The popular series in Thunder Bay has completed nine weekly shows that began on July 13. Wednesdays concert was unique as it was held one hour later in the evening to mesh with the 10 p. We attempted to send a notification to your email address but we were unable to verify that you provided a valid email address. Please click here to update your email address if you wish to receive notifications. Otherwise, you may click here to disable notifications and hide this message. Fundatia de Binefacere Caritas Moldova solicita oferte de pret de la companii cu privire la dezvoltarea designului pentru Sala Events & Sufragerie BOSTON TOWNSHIP - Despite cold and sleet, about 50 enthusiasts gathered in the valley on Monday to break ground for the Cuyahoga Valley National Park's $6 million state-of-the-art visitor center. Excitement has been building for the center, which in May 2019 will begin serving as the national park's new front door. In recent years, the park's visitor population has evolved from mostly locals to about 20 percent from out of state, said Pam Barnes, the national park's community engagement supervisor. The 51-square-mile park averages 2 million visitors per year. 'It's an expectation when you're going to a national park, to have a visitor center," Barnes said. "It's really something we needed." The visitor center for the state's only national park is being designed and built by an Ohio-based team, including Peninsula Architects of Peninsula; Environmental Design Group of Akron; Regency Construction Services of Lakewood; and Hilferty & Associates of Athens. The center is being developed at the corner of Riverview and Boston Mills roads in an historic two-story, 3,600-square-foot building that once served as a store and provided housing for workers of a nearby mill. In the old store, some ceilings and walls are being removed to accommodate several indoor exhibits and information stations that will help orient visitors to the park. The exhibits will offer information on the park's history, geography, natural resources and the surrounding areas. Visitors will be able to plan their visit and provide input about their experience. A decorative floor-to-ceiling map of the park will be featured inside, and even the outdoor balconies will offer exhibits. The river and locks will be a central part of the story. An outdoor pavilion and courtyard will provide park information and resources for visitors 24/7. Two adjacent smaller buildings will serve as public restrooms and office space. All the buildings will be rehabilitated to reflect the historic feel of the Village of Boston. The Conservancy for Cuyahoga Valley National Park is managing fundraising, planning, design and construction for the project. Once the center is constructed, the conservancy will turn over operations for the center to the national park service. Want more Akron news? Sign up for cleveland.com's Rubber City Daily, an email newsletter delivered at 5:30 a.m. Monday through Friday. CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Canton police detective Bryan Allen watched a video on his computer that disturbed him so much that he left work and went home to process what he saw. Allen is 22-year veteran of law enforcement and a member of the Cleveland FBI's Child Exploitation Task Force and the video was of a man raping a boy, no older than two years old. Allen is required to look at these sorts of videos as part of his job, and his job takes its toll. "Some of them just take it out of you," the 48-year-old detective said. Allen and the hundreds of other investigators who work child pornography and exploitation cases nationwide must reckon with the short- and long-term psychological impact of repeatedly being exposed to images of helpless children being violated. Three investigators interviewed by cleveland.com spoke of the taxing nature of the work. All three have to undergo a yearly psychological evaluation to ensure they are still mentally capable of working cases involving child pornography. The caseload is overwhelming. Each case requires that investigators view acts of brutality inflicted among the most vulnerable in our society. The investigators said they have found ways to cope, from deciding when and how to look at the images to finding outlets to relieve the resulting stress. Some commiserate with their fellow investigators. Canton police detective Bryan Allen, who works on the FBI's Child Exploitation Task Force, poses for a photo at the FBI's Canton office in October. The devil in a hard drive Fifteen years ago, then-Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason sat at his desk and lamented the dangers of the internet for disseminating harmful material. "This internet thing is like the devil," he said. "It opens the world up to everyone and everything." But the amount of child exploitation present on the internet then pales in comparison to what exists today. Since 1998, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children fielded more than 25 million tips of child exploitation, the organization's spokeswoman Christine Barndt said. More than half of those tips came within the past two years. Despite increased prosecutorial efforts at the local, state and federal levels, the cases brought to court often include larger and larger amounts of illegal files, especially as the expansion of broadband and advances in technology make sharing a large number of files much easier than it was in previous years. Prosecutors often require analysts and investigators to look at each image and video saved on a suspect's computer or hard drive. Michael Sullivan, an assistant U.S. attorney in Cleveland who heads the unit that prosecutes federal child-pornography cases, encourages investigators to look at every image and video contained on a hard drive seized from a suspect in an investigation. That can range anywhere from a dozen to hundreds of thousands of files. The U.S. Probation Office considers the number of files found on a hard drive, along with the graphic nature of the abuse depicted in those files, when it calculates a recommended prison sentence for defendants in federal cases. Sullivan also encourages agents to look at all of the files because they may reveal previously-unknown victims. Investigators typically send that information to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Some computer programs that investigators use to scan hard drives can catalog files that were identified in other cases, but investigators must physically look at the rest. Beth Medina, executive director of the Innocent Justice Foundation, said investigators who view child pornography can suffer from what is known as "vicarious traumatization," an affliction that turns empathy for a victim into a form of suffering. The mental health community now recognizes that it can be a part of post-traumatic stress disorder. Allen said he has worked as a detective on other types of cases, from homicides on down. Child-pornography investigations are different. "There you heard about everything because your investigations were based on what the victims and everybody were telling you and where the evidence led you," he said of other cases. "But now, it's more like you see everything you heard about before." And the number of files for any one case can be overwhelming. Allen said he recently seized a five-terabyte hard drive for an ongoing investigation. He said he was able to copy 3.5 terabytes of the data before the hard drive crashed his computer. But even though he couldn't yet view the entire contents of the hard drive, that partial search turned up 2.25 million files, all of which he needed to look at. The work requires someone equipped to handle the stresses that come with repeated viewings of child sexual abuse. "A lot of people come in sometimes and say 'I'm ready for this, I can do this,' but then four or five months into the job, or even a few weeks in some cases, they may say, 'Hey, this isn't for me,'" said Dave Frattare, commander of the Ohio Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. "Obviously there's no shame in that." The same goes for prosecutors. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Cleveland has two prosecutors who almost solely handle child-pornography and exploitation cases. While they don't have to view the number of files that agents do, they must view some in order to prosecute a case. Other assistant U.S. attorneys split their time between child pornography and other types of cases. Those who work the cases do so voluntarily. "Other people get burned out just seeing the pain and suffering of kids on a daily basis," Sullivan said. "It wears on them and everybody's got a different composition. There's nothing wrong with that." Dave Frattare, commander of the Ohio Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, is seen here at the Justice Center in Cleveland in October. Music, TV, painting and therapy The investigators often do their work in isolation. Allen, who has worked out of the FBI's Canton office for six years, said he closes his office door "because nobody else really wants to see that stuff." The Ohio task force, which is chaired by Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O'Malley and has members in police departments across the state, operates in a cordoned-off office in the Justice Center in Cleveland. The investigators try to limit the amount of time the look at a file, but they're required to give it enough attention to determine whether the images or videos depict child exploitation. Every agent handles the delicate task in their own way. Before sitting in front of his computer, Allen turns on a television that serves as background noise. The show itself doesn't really matter. "It's not like you can sit and watch it," he said. "It's just, I can't do it and sit in silence and do it. It gets nerve-wracking." Frattare said he turns off his overhead lights and switches on a little lamp he has in his office. He turns on orchestral music. It's not too distracting, but it still helps. "You can still focus on what you're looking at, what you need to do, but it kind of puts you into a different mindset, at least for me," Frattare said. Task force investigator Miranda Helmick said she turns on music and often takes breaks. She also does undercover work by chatting with suspects online, either posing as a young girl or a parent, and often performs both tasks at the same time. She estimated that she can get through about 2,000 images in a half-hour. Frattare encourages the task force investigators not to begin and end their days by looking at the images, so they have time to unwind before they go home. As investigators work these cases, they find different outlets for support. To a lot of them, family is important, as are hobbies. Frattare said he has dabbled in digital graphic design and in photography. "It's mainly just going home and disengaging as much as possible from the job," he said. For Allen, who served in the Air Force before joining Canton police, he said his children are now adults and that he might not be able to handle this work if they were as young as the children in the videos. His wife is also very supportive of his work. "It's easy to talk to her," he said. "We've been married for over 25 years now. We met while we were in the service. It makes it easier, I think." Frattare and Helmick said they are able to talk to their fellow task members. In fact, Frattare said building a sense of camaraderie has been somewhat of a focus this year. Frattare recently brought in supplies for investigators to paint art. "Which sounds so simple, but it was probably the best thing we did as a group for wellness," Helmick said. The task force also enacted a "wellness policy" in June designed to give investigators the tools to cope with what they see. Under the policy, task force members who view child pornography must meet for group sessions with a mental health professional. Members must also do one-on-one sessions with a mental health professional to talk about their job and how it may be affecting their lives. The new policy also encourages investigators to hold wellness programs and trainings and create plans on how to handle the stresses of the job. Frattare said it was modeled after recommendations from the Innocent Justice Foundation, and Medina said she did a training with the Ohio task force in 2017. "The people who want to do it and can do it and are great at it," she said. "We want to make sure they can do it for the long haul." Putting the bad guy behind bars makes it worth it All the agents said that the convictions in the cases make it worth it. Helmick said completing an examination of a hard drive is always rewarding "because not only do you have the evidence to prosecute that person but you're also possibly identifying your victims." While many of the images and videos shared online are decades old, newly identified victims are entered into a database maintained by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Allen agreed and said all the cases he has investigated that were charged have led to federal convictions. He pointed out that penalties in the federal system are often much more severe than for those charged in state court. Allen didn't want to go into detail on the case that made him leave his computer to de-stress. Court records show it involved images of a 2-year-old tied up with rope and raped by a man. It was one of numerous videos and photos Allen found on a computer during an investigation into a New Philadelphia man now serving more than two decades in federal prison. "These cases at the state level, from what I've seen, end up with as little as probation, and to me, to me that would not be worth it," Allen said. "... For me, mentally, to go through what you have to go through and see a guy not even get jail time? That's why I like doing the cases federally." If you would like to comment on this story, please visit Tuesday's crime and courts comments section. CLEVELAND, Ohio -- U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman does not plan to change his approach to bringing criminal cases involving marijuana, even in light of guidance from the attorney general the has freed the ability of prosecutors to pursue such cases. Herdman, in speaking to the editorial board of cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer, said marijuana cases were prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Ohio during previous administrations, and that is not going to change. The cases tend to be bundled with other crimes, such as violent and firearms crimes, trafficking other types of drugs and money laundering, he said. "So we're going to still continue to be in a position to prosecute those cases, and marijuana's still illegal under federal law just like it was last week, so that doesn't change," Herdman said. Herdman was responding to questions about Attorney General Jeff Sessions' decision on Thursday to rescind the Cole memo and several other policies enacted during President Barack Obama's administration that together allowed regulated marijuana industries and state regulators to operate under state law. The 2013 Cole memo, which followed a 2009 medical-only policy, directed prosecutors to focus on certain violations, such as selling marijuana to minors or trafficking marijuana across state lines, and leave alone state law-abiding businesses and individuals. Sessions' new memo gives wide discretion to his U.S. attorneys. Herdman, appointed by President Donald Trump and sworn into office in August, noted that his office does not take every case involving heroin or cocaine. "My personal philosophy as a prosecutor is that we will enforce federal law," Herdman said. The Sessions memo has led to questions of how U.S. attorneys in states where marijuana is legal for recreational and medicinal purposes will handle such cases. The Ohio legislature approved marijuana for medicinal purposes last year, but criminal prosecutions against that industry is currently protected by a budget rider prohibiting the use of federal dollars for such actions. That rider, called the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer Amendment, expires Jan. 19. Herdman's statements appeared to be under the belief that the rider would continue for the foreseeable future. A measure to approve recreational marijuana in the state could appear on the November ballot. Herdman would not speculate on how his office would handle marijuana cases should it become fully legal in Ohio, or whether legalization has any benefits or drawbacks. "I've been a prosecutor for a long time, and what I have never done as a prosecutor, and what I'm not going to start doing now, is talking about what I think the law should be," Herdman said. "The law is what it is. It is what it is in Ohio." Benjamin Glassman, the U.S. attorney in southern Ohio, said last week that it would not change its approach to marijuana and other drug crimes in response to Sessions' memo. Thomas Rosenberger, executive director of the National Cannabis Industry Association of Ohio, said Tuesday that he found Herdman and Glassman's statements about enforcement encouraging. He said the current concern is to keep the the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer Amendment in place past this month, as that will ensure federal prosecutors don't target medical marijuana operations. "Making sure we keep that in place is our biggest focus as an industry," Rosenberger said. If you would like to comment on this story, please visit Tuesday's crime and courts comments section. Marine survey work is underway for a new Pakistan East Africa Cable Express (PEACE) submarine cable that will connect South Asia with East Africa, as well as offer the shortest route from western China to southern Europe when combined with terrestrial fiber between Pakistan and China. Huawei Marine is the lead vendor for the project. The PEACE subsea cable will have a total length of 13,000km and is targeted to enter service by the end of 2019. China Construction Bank is funding the project. Tropic Science Co. is a signatory partner. Amazon I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. Data center News Sources: Dell Tightening VMware Integration For Data Protection To Attack Veeam Mark Haranas Share this Dell EMC is strengthening its technology integration with VMware in new data protection products set to be launched later this year in a move aimed to take market share from competitor Veeam, according to sources. Sources said product releases expected from Dell in early 2018 will have a stronger connection between VMware and Dell EMC's data protection suite that will accelerate the closing of the gap between Dell and Veeam. "VMware, purposefully so, was built so it becomes an industry standard and therefore it has to be able to work with everybody. It's [Dell EMC's] job on the product side, to be better," said one source close to the matter. "The integration with VMware and Dell should be better than anyone else." [Related: Vulnerabilities Found In Dell EMC Data Protection Products That Can Lead To 'Full Compromise'] "It just so happens that Veeam CEO [Peter McKay] came from VMware. So he knows the individuals, knows the players, so they had good alignment. Now Dell EMC will do it better," said the source. Veeam, which develops data protection technology for cloud and virtualized environments, has a technology partnership with VMware around products like vShpere. Many of Veeam's top executives hail from VMware, such as its current co-CEO and President Peter McKay, as well as Kevin Rooney, vice president of channel sales. Sources said since Dell bought VMware as its part of the blockbuster $67 billion acquisition of EMC in 2016, Dell has been cautious of doubling down on integration improvements in order to not upset other vendors who have a relationship with VMware such as Veeam. In an interview with CRN, VMware's chief technology officer Ray O'Farrell said Dell and VMware's technology partnerships will "strengthen" in 2018. "You've already seen some good integration and partnership around things like vSAN, vSAN ReadyNodes, and VxRail. I think that, yes, it is likely we will continue to strengthen those cooperation's and maybe in some other areas as well. Specifically, around data protection, many of the existing Dell products will already work in those environments. To the degree that we will integrate them further," said O'Farrell. O'Farrell did emphasize that even as VMware integrates and work more closely with Dell Technologies, both organizations have a "very strong desire" to "maintain a good platform level ecosystem play across the industry." "It's an interesting balancing act there, but we think it's important to keep that ecosystem story very open," said O'Farrell. In a statement to CRN, Ruya Atac-Barrett, vice president of Product Marketing, Data Protection for Dell EMC, said while it can't comment on its product roadmap, "customers and partners should know that we understand their need for seamless integration between VMware technology and Dell EMC data protection offerings, and will continue to refine and strengthen it." "This approach sets up apart from the competition and enables us to deliver world-class technology across our data protection portfolio," said Atac-Barrett. Veeam did not respond for comment by press time. One top executive from a solution provider who is a Dell and VMware partner said he expects Dell to leverage VMware more in 2018 from a competitive standpoint. "[Dell CEO] Michael Dell and Dell Technologies are competitive. They lead in so many markets. So making Dell products and VMware technology work together better than anyone else, not only makes sense but will eventually happen," said the executive, who did not wish to be identified. "VMware is owned by Dell. They obviously need to leverage that more and more." Switzerland-based Veeam recently reported record bookings of $827 million in 2017, up 36 percent year over year, with a 62 percent increase in enterprise deals and 500 percent growth for deals over $1 million. Veeam now has an install base of 282,000 customers with more than $100 million of total booking revenues drive through alliance partnerships. Managed services News SolarWinds Expands Microservices Prowess With Acquisition Of Loggly Alec Shirkey Share this IT services management vendor SolarWinds upped its cloud software game on Monday by purchasing a log monitoring and analytics specialist that provides software-as-a-service to enterprise customers. Loggly, a privately-held vendor founded in 2009, allows businesses to proactively collect, organize and outline their log data for trend analysis and intelligent insights with its flagship logging solution. The San Francisco-based company is an AWS Advanced Technology Partner and a Docker Ecosystem Technology Partner that works with more than one-third of Fortune 500, according to its LinkedIn page. The deal also brings key cloud software and analytics engineering talent to SolarWinds with the addition of two Loggly executives, former CTO and vice president of engineering Manoj Chaudhary and vice president of product Vito Salvaggio. The two men will take up leadership roles within SolarWinds' engineering and product teams, respectively. [Related: SolarWinds MSP Buys Email Security Provider To Boost Its Threat Intelligence Muscle] SolarWinds plans to commit further investment to Loggly, with particular emphasis on technology development, and integrate its solution with the rest of the Austin, Texas-based vendor's cloud-based SaaS offerings. Those include Papertrail, another log management solution aimed at infrastructure and application troubleshooting, as well as app performance management solution AppOptics and web performance monitoring software Pingdom. "Rapidly visualizing vast amounts of data through log analytics is absolutely critical to solving many problems in today's diverse, complex cloud-application and microservices environments," Christoph Pfister, EVP of products at Solarwinds, said in a statement. "Adding Loggly to our industry-leading portfolio will empower customers to accelerate their time-to-insight and solve problems faster." Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. CRN could not immediately reach SolarWinds for comment. Considered an alternative to Splunk, Loggly has expertise working with Docker container environments, Amazon Elastic Container Service and Kubernetes, and the product itself features a number of DevOps integrations into tools like PagerDuty, Slack, GitHub, HipChat and Jira. Loggly's client list features several large and recognizable brands such as Dell, Lenovo, Logitech, Electronic Arts, Lululemon, Pizza Hut, Sony Pictures and MTV. Loggly marks the first major acquisition made by SolarWinds since the MSP platform provider was taken private by Silver Lake and Thoma Bravo in early 2016. That deal was valued at $4.5 billion. Mobility News Lenovo Channel Chief Sammy Kinlaw Is Stepping Down Kyle Alspach Share this Sammy Kinlaw is departing as vice president and channel chief for Lenovo's North America PC business as of Jan. 19, several months after making what he called a "drastic change" in Lenovo's channel program structure to make conditions more equitable for reseller partners. Kinlaw, a Lenovo veteran who took the North American channel helm in April 2015, is pursuing an unspecified opportunity outside Lenovo, the company said. He could not immediately be reached for comment. In a statement to CRN, Lenovo emphasized that the company is committed to the channel. "We have always considered our channel an integral part of our market value. Ninety percent of Lenovo's business is fulfilled through the channel. The success of our partners is our success. As a result, we will continue to put the channel first. We have aligned our business to better serve our mutual customers," the company said. [Related: Lenovo's Kinlaw On Resolving Issues Created By 'Drastic Change' In The Channel Program] Lenovo has appointed another veteran of the company -- Rob Cato, executive director for public sector, workstation and OEM -- to serve in Kinlaw's role on an interim basis as Lenovo looks for a permanent channel chief. "I'm sorry to see Sammy go. He put some great programs and energy back into Lenovo. He will be missed," said Michael Goldstein, president and CEO of LAN Infotech, a Lenovo partner in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "Rob has some big shoes to fill," Goldstein said. "But knowing Lenovo's background and choice and staff, I'm sure he'll be doing a great job for the channel." Kinlaw began his Lenovo career in 2005 as director of distribution sales. He was promoted four years later to executive director of channel sales, before moving up to channel chief in 2015. Prior to Lenovo, Kinlaw worked at IBM for 12 years as a business unit executive. This past October, Lenovo rolled out a host of changes to its channel program structure, affecting margins on PC products for some VAR partners. In an earlier interview with CRN, Kinlaw said the moves were "difficult" but necessary to make the pricing structure more equitable for all resellers. "I had really to make a drastic change," he said. The result, Kinlaw said, was that Lenovo "created an even playing field where every VAR can participate." Lenovo is in the midst of a tough battle with PC makers HP Inc. and Dell in the North American market, while facing pressure from the decline of traditional PCs as well as increasing costs for memory and other components. Lenovo slipped into fourth place in the third quarter of 2017 in terms of U.S. PC market sharebehind HP, Dell and Appleas shipments fell 25 percent for the company. Lenovo, however, is continuing to release new PCs at an aggressive pace, including refreshing its premium ThinkPad X1 lineup at CES 2018 this week. The company is also remaining focused on being partner-friendly, according to Goldstein. "We are seeing some new programs from Lenovo wrapped around Device-as-a-Service with security, which we do find interesting," Goldstein said. "Unique programs like this will definitely help drive Lenovo's popularity in the channel." Gina Narcisi Gina Narcisi is a senior editor covering the networking and telecom markets for CRN.com. Prior to joining CRN, she covered the networking, unified communications and cloud space for TechTarget. She can be reached at gnarcisi@thechannelcompany.com. Security News Spectre, Meltdown Update: NetApp, IBM, HPE, Lenovo, Dell EMC Weigh In On Storage System Vulnerability Joseph F. Kovar Share this NetApp and IBM said there are no issues concerning their systems and the Spectre and Meltdown processor vulnerabilities. Lenovo and HPE have said they have software patches coming soon. The mixed responses in the storage industry stand in contrast to the security and networking businesses, where top vendors have been in lockstep. One reason storage vendors have been measured in their responses seems to be tied to how storage software acts as a buffer between data in the memory. [Related: NetApp Says Its Storage Systems Not Impacted By Spectre, Meltdown Thanks To Its OnTap OS] One storage vendor told CRN that embedded systems, such as storage servers that do not support local users, or provide a means for arbitrary user code to run on the embedded system, are inherently vulnerable from side-channel analysis attack. This is because such attacks require that malicious code to be run locally on a system. Also, the storage vendor source said, many embedded systems do not support different privilege levels. IBM, in a support blog post, wrote that its POWER-based servers and System z mainframes will have patches available soon. However, IBM wrote, its storage systems are not impacted by the Spectre or Meltdown vulnerabilities. "The most immediate action clients can take to protect themselves is to prevent execution of unauthorized software on any system that handles sensitive data, including adjacent virtual machines," IBM wrote. Lenovo, in a statement to CRN, wrote, "Lenovo has assessed its storage portfolio for affected CPUs and will release UEFI firmware updates incorporating Intel CPU microcode fixes for affected CPUs as they are available from Intel. Lenovo is also evaluating Operating System updates for incorporation into supported storage products, where appropriate." NetApp told CRN via email that its OnTap storage operating system was designed in such a way that malicious code cannot run on its storage systems. Dell EMC said in an emailed statement to CRN that it is working with Intel and others to address the issue. Hewlett Packard Enterprise emailed CRN a statement that "the quality of HPE products is our top priority and we are proactively working with Intel to develop software and firmware updates to mitigate this issue." While patches are not yet universally ready, at least one review site, Tom's Hardware, said Friday that a Microsoft Meltdown patch it tested has little impact on storage application performance. Tom's Hardware tested the patch with a 480-GB Intel 900P Optane SSD because of its ability to provide consistent performance and found virtually identical performance across a wide range of real-world consumer and business applications before and after the Microsoft patch was applied. Michael Tanenhaus, CEO of Mavenspire, an Annapolis, Md.-based solution provider and Dell EMC channel partner, said that while multi-tenant cloud data centers are vulnerable, dedicated storage hardware is probably not. "If you're not in a shared environment, you're probably okay," Tanenhaus told CRN. "A storage array is dedicated hardware, and people don't log into the array or the processors. The bug [is a potential] way to get into other peoples' stuff, to get access to other people through the processor. It doesn't really affect equipment that does one thing." In a shared, software-defined infrastructure with virtual switching, there is the possibility of an unauthorized user accessing traffic as it went through, Tanenhaus said. "Everyone is [grappling with an issue that's] been out there for a decade and we're just hearing about it now," he said. "When multiple people are standing on the same processor is where it's going to be hottest. Wherever there's compliance or sharing is where you can mess with somebody else. MSPs are having to reassure their customers that regardless of how this turns out they have their back." Matt Brown contributed to this article. Mexican Governor says his State is being punished for corruption inquiry **Javier Corral, the governor of Chihuahua, at a news conference in Mexico City on Monday. Credit: Daniel Becerril/ Reuters La Cronica de Chihuahua Enero de 2018, 18:30 pm By Azam Ahmed and Paulina Villegas/ The New York Times Jan. 8, 2018 MEXICO CITY.- A Mexican governor said Monday that the government of President Enrique Pena Nieto was denying his state vital resources in order to squash a corruption investigation that reaches the highest ranks of the nations governing party. The governor, Javier Corral, was promised millions of dollars last December by the federal government to help fill budget shortfalls in his state, Chihuahua, which is in the midst of a financial crisis. But the federal Ministry of Finance has refused to deposit some of the funds, Mr. Corral said at a news conference on Monday in Mexico City. The governor described a 20-minute meeting he attended with the minister of finance and other officials on Jan. 4 at which the minister himself said Chihuahua would not get the agreed-upon money unless state officials told the minister more about the investigation. We were taken by surprise, Mr. Corral told a crowd of reporters gathered at a hotel. They could have sugarcoated it, but they said it clearly and outright. Another attendee at the meeting, Mr. Corrals state finance chief, backed up the governors version of events in an interview with The New York Times. In a written statement the minister of finance claimed that nearly $4 million dollars was not paid to the state partly because of an incorrect bank account and partly because of a lack of available funds. The ministry declined to comment on the accounts of the meeting. The case in question has the potential to be explosive: State prosecutors in Chihuahua are examining the alleged embezzlement of more than $10 million in public funds used to finance the campaigns of candidates from the presidents political party, according to hundreds of documents and testimony by former state officials reviewed by The Times. The case has already ensnared more than two dozen people, including an ally of the president and a high-ranking member of his party, Alejandro Gutierrez, who is accused of operating the embezzlement scheme nationwide. The arrest has rattled officials in Mexico City, where the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party, known as the PRI, presides over the federal government. Mr. Gutierrez was a top financial aide to the former president of the party, Manlio Fabio Beltrones, a major power broker who has also been described as the mastermind of the embezzlement scheme, according to the documents reviewed by The Times. The investigation has the potential to derail the partys ambitions to maintain power in this years presidential elections. Corruption and impunity have been stains on the legacy of Mr. Pena Nieto, who is suffering some of the worst approval ratings in a quarter century. As the nation hurtles toward elections this summer, analysts say the PRI is growing desperate to keep a lid on any potential corruption scandals. It is in this environment that Mr. Corral, a governor who hails from an opposition party, has set out on his crusade against corruption. Now, the governor appears to be gambling with his states finances to preserve his investigation. There is a clear intention to financially strangle the state, Mr. Corral said. On Monday, the governor cried foul publicly, claiming that the federal government had reneged on its commitment to Chihuahua. According to documents reviewed by The Times, the federal Ministry of Finance signed four agreements in December with officials in Chihuahua promising to transfer roughly $5 million to the state by the end of the month. As the years end drew near, Mr. Corral said, the money had not arrived. To date, only one of the agreed payments, for roughly $1 million, has been sent, state officials said. But when Mr. Corral called to inquire about the missing funds, he said, he was told a meeting in person was required to resolve the matter. Pressed for time, and with state salaries to pay, Mr. Corral said he had been forced to take a bank loan to cover the shortfall, a costly expenditure for a state with ailing finances. Several days passed before Mr. Corral said he was able to sit down with the minister of finance, Jose Antonio Gonzalez Anaya. In the meeting, the governor said, Mr. Anaya at first told Mr. Corral that there was an issue with the funds because they appeared to be similar to those associated with the investigation underway in his state. Given the conflict, and Mr. Corrals position that previous transfers were used to embezzle funds, the minister was not sure how he could transfer the money, Mr. Corral recalled being told. The governor said he had stood firm, saying he believed they were two separate issues. One was the abuse of public funds for political purposes, which took place under the last governor, who was a star member of the presidents party. The other involved the signed agreements from Dec. 14 promising nearly $5 million in federal funds to fill a state budget hole, according to the four agreements reviewed by The Times. Mr. Corral said that the finance minister then openly asked him about the investigation, and that he had told him the funds would not be transferred until there was more clarity about the case. Mr. Corral said he took the comment as direct pressure to halt the investigation in order to save his state. We are aware we struck at the modus operandi of political corruption in Mexico, but the difference is that we have accounted for it technically and legally, Mr. Corral said. We wont give up the fight to break the pact of impunity, regardless of the retaliation and punishment. A combination of factors continues to drive high-priced sales of apartment complexes in New Haven and Fairfield counties. Avalon Huntington, a 99-unit complex in Shelton, just sold for $33 million, according to officials with Institutional Property Advisors , a division of Marcus & Millichap. That equates to $333,333 per unit, which, according to Stephen Press of Press|Cuozzo Realtors in Hamden, must be some kind of record. Avalon Huntington, which is located at 100 Avalon Drive, has 86 townhouse-style homes, 67 units with direct entry garages and an overall average unit size of 1,413 square feet, according to Victor Nolletti, senior managing director leading Institutional Property Advisors Northeast team. Nolletti and Eric Pentore, first vice president of investments, represented the seller, Arlington, Va.-based AvalonBay Communities Inc., which developed the complex and opened it in 2008. They also found the buyer, Inland Real Estate Acquisitions, a suburban Chicago company that invests in commercial properties as well as apartment complexes and owns the Milford Marketplace retail center on Boston Post Road. AvalonBay Communities is a real estate investment trust, or REIT as they are known in the real estate business. REITs own, and in most cases operate, income-producing commercial real estate, ranging from office and apartment buildings to warehouses, hospitals, shopping centers and hotels Press said Avalon Bay Communities is regarded as a high quality, which, along with the fact that living in Shelton gives tenants a coveted Fairfield County address, helped raise the purchase price. Another factor in the high purchase price is that investors currently view apartment complexes as a strong investment with little downside, he said. They are viewed as more attractive than commercial or industrial properties in Connecticut because the risk is spread across how ever many units there are, Press said. You may have one or two tenants leave an apartment complex, but its not the same as having only couple of tenants and having one of them pull out. Press said there are more investors in the market for apartment complexes in Fairfield and New Haven counties then there are properties for sale. That has also driven up the selling price for older apartment complexes. A rising tide helps all boats, he said. Press and his firm recently were honored by the the New Haven Middlesex Association of Realtors for engineering the organizations deal of the year in the apartment complex category. Press/Cuozzo was part of $4.15 million deal in which a 52-unit complex near Southern Connecticut State University was sold. That complex was built in 1973 and originally was intended to be a condominium complex, but has been used for rentals since it opened, Press said. luther.turmelle@hearstmediact.com BRIDGEPORT Pressure is mounting on Mayor Joe Ganim to pay the city back for his use of a taxpayer funded police detective while campaigning for governor. The mayor should make a good faith effort to try and estimate the costs and reimburse taxpayers, said freshman Councilwoman Maria Zambrano Viggiano, co-chairman of the budget committee, in an interview following that groups meeting Monday. I think it would be a gesture of good faith to residents. Another committee member, Councilwoman Jeanette Herron, generally a Ganim supporter, agreed. She said the mayor needs protection, but there is a difference between having a security detail while out and about on city business and while campaigning for the states top office. My personal opinion? I think it should be reimbursed, Herron said. Hes running for another position. I definitely do not think taxpayer-funded police should be with the mayor during those times on the campaign trail, said a third budget committee member, freshman Councilwoman Christina Smith. Then, Tuesday, Smiths partner representing the highly-taxed Black Rock neighborhood, freshman Councilman Peter Spain, emailed a proposed resolution to the council requiring Ganim not only fully reimburse the city for campaign-related expenses, but provide monthly reports on the use of police drivers reflecting location, event and hours. All are Democrats like Ganim. The budget committee held its regular meeting Monday nearly a week after Ganim and his driver, Detective Ramon Garcia, were stopped by a state trooper last Wednesday in Southington. The trooper clocked Garcia, the mayors regular driver who was at the wheel of a sport utility vehicle rented by Ganims just-launched gubernatorial campaign, at 87 mph. A Hearst Connecticut Media reporter accompanying Ganim witnessed the vehicle traveling 100 mph. Anything over 85 mph is reckless driving, according to state statutes, but Garcia was only given a verbal warning by both the trooper and later by Bridgeport Police Chief Armando Perez. Re-elected in 2015 after first serving as mayor in the 1990s, Ganims frequent use of a security detail over the past two years, locally and more recently while campaigning, had already raised concerns back home. The police department is under pressure to cut overtime while operating with fewer officers than optimal. The weekend prior to Ganim and Garcia being pulled over, Hearst had reported that Garcia, a second detective and a police lieutenant earned nearly $70,000 total in overtime in 2017 chauffeuring the mayor around. Viggiano at the start of Mondays budget committee meeting told several council members present that she understood there were questions about police overtime in general and Ganims security detail in particular. She said those topics would be the focus of Februarys meeting and the appropriate city finance and police staff would be invited to attend. Council President Aidee Nieves, who also attended Mondays meeting, said afterward some of her constituents have questioned the mayors reliance on police drivers. She admitted the cost is a concern, particularly because overtime increases officers pensions, and is wondering if Ganims campaign could reimburse Bridgeport. But, Nieves noted, There was a ruling he can have an escort assigned him. She was referring to the explanation offered last year by Ganim when Hearst first reported that he was sometimes campaigning using a taxpayer-funded driver and his municipal vehicle. Ganim and City Attorney R. Christopher Meyer are relying on a nearly quarter-century old opinion from state ethics watchdogs that allowed Lieutenant Gov. Eunice Groark to use her state vehicle while campaigning for governor in 1994 if she paid for the mileage. Ganims gubernatorial exploratory committee last fall cut an initial mileage check to Bridgeport for $2,600.10. But the Groark decision also determined she deserved 24-hour security regardless of the particular activity she may be engaged in, including campaigning. And Perez, a longtime friend of Ganims and his driver when Ganim was first mayor in the 1990s, has argued Bridgeports chief executive similarly deserves round-the-clock security, regardless of whether his activities are related to his job. When Hearst in late December asked if Ganim would voluntarily pay the city back for using Garcia, who has co-hosted a gubernatorial campaign fundraiser for the mayor, and any other city drivers while campaigning, the mayors spokeswoman, Rowena White, said: Since the mayor is entitled by virtue of his office and position to the services of a security detail, it is not necessary or appropriate for him personally or his campaign to reimburse the city for such services. Viggiano admitted that, given the precedent set under Groark, I dont know how much control we have over Ganims use of drivers. But the political optics of the situation might just make the difference. Ganims security detail was mainly a local controversy until the reckless driving incident, at which point the mayor drew criticism from newspaper editorials and on state Sunday talk shows, often within the context of Ganims criminal past. He was convicted of corruption in 2003, but successfully asked Bridgeport voters for a second chance in 2015 and hopes statewide voters will similarly entrust him to run Connecticut. Driving at that speed is a risk not only to the passengers in the vehicle but to everyone else on the highway, read an editorial in The Hartford Courant. One might wonder if Mr. Ganim, who spent seven years in a federal prison for corruption, was thinking only of himself as the landscape blurred by. ... (And) why is a Bridgeport police detective driving a campaign car? That has to stop. The detective should be fighting crime, not working on a political campaign on the city's time and dime. And on Channel 8s CT Capitol Report political talk show, ex-Senate Minority Leader John McKinney, R-Fairfield, told moderator Tom Dudchik: How does he (Ganim) convince people hes changed? Driving around with a city police officer, when homicide rates are going up in Bridgeport, 100 miles per hour on the highway shows a level of entitlement that doesnt say, Hey, Im humbled and changed with my past. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate The leading GOP opponent of the governors chief justice pick is being accused of homophobia. Republican gubernatorial candidate Tim Herbst panned the nomination of Andrew J. McDonald to lead the seven-member court, saying that Stamford confidant of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy was chosen for political reasons and has a history of legislating from the bench. But Democratic State Rep. William Tong, who is from Stamford and is co-chairman of the Legislatures Judiciary Committee, said Herbsts criticism of the nominee is rooted in bigotry. McDonald could make history as the first openly gay jurist in the nation to preside over a state Supreme Court. No doubt that this is a dog whistle Trump-style attack on a justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court, Tong told Hearst Connecticut Media Tuesday. I think hes obviously trying to smear Justice McDonald and make a personal attack on him and his sexual orientation. Herbst, the former Trumbull first selectman, stood by his concerns over McDonalds appointment, which is subject to the approval of the Legislature. Tong is throwing a tantrum to avoid answering the serious questions that relate to McDonald's nomination as chief justice, Herbst said in a statement. My objection to the nomination of Justice McDonald as chief justice is very clear: he has a demonstrated track record of partisanship, had no experience on the bench when he was first appointed to the court and has a history of supporting unconstitutional measures. A former state senator, McDonald, 51, has been an associate justice since 2013. Five of the current seven justices are Malloy appointees, a number that could grow to six if McDonald is confirmed. A former general counsel to the governor and one-time corporation counsel for the city of Stamford when Malloy was mayor, McDonald declined to comment Tuesday. Malloys spokeswoman Kelly Donnelly lauded McDonald for his public service. Andrew is an insightful jurist who has earned the respect of his peers and the legal community, Donnelly said. He will make an exceptional chief justice. I am sure that the totality of his career, including his legal acumen and his achievements will be vetted during the confirmation process. A leading social conservative in the state, the Family Institute of Connecticuts Peter Wolfgang, joined the opposition Tuesday to McDonalds nomination. Look, I get what theyre doing. If you vote against the gay guy youre a bigot, Wolfgang posted on the organizations website. But McDonalds nomination should be rejected for reasons that have nothing to do with his homosexuality. McDonald has a record of putting his own politics ahead of the law. Both Wolfgang and Herbst criticized McDonald going back to his time as Judiciary Committee chairman, saying that the then-senator supported an unconstitutional bill in 2009 that would have stripped Catholic bishops and priests of financial authority over their own churches. They both knocked McDonald for siding with the majority when the state Supreme Court ruled Connecticuts death penalty law unconstitutional in 2015 by a 4 to 3 vote. The law had repealed capital punishment for those convicted of the most violent crimes after its passage in 2012, but did not apply to those already on death row. The courts majority ruled that there could not be two levels of justice. When McDonald was appointed by Malloy to the bench, there were just seven LGBT justices in the nation. In addition to holding office, McDonald is a former partner of the law firm of Pullman & Comley LLC and graduated from the University of Connecticut Law School. But McDonalds lack of experience as a judge prior to his 2013 appointment is a sticking point for Herbst, who drew the ire of Tong for his criticism of McDonalds resume. The truth is that to suggest that Justice McDonald is not qualified is just outrageous and meritless, said Tong, who is exploring a run for state attorney general. Hes held like every job. So I think its pretextual for what hes really trying to say, which is something much uglier. Herbst said McDonalds credentials are fair game. I'm not the slightest bit surprised that Hartford insiders are rushing to the defense of one of their own Herbst said. The politicians who are part of the problem under the gold dome dont like it when an outsider pulls back the curtain on their country club. http://twitter.com/gettinviggy; nvigdor@hearstmediact.com; 203-625-4436 Niagara Falls might be at its most spectacular in winter. Over the recent holidays, the icy cascade captured the public's imagination: numerous newspapers ran stories about the frozen wonderland, and social media posts about the falls were widely shared. But this is business as usual. Niagara Falls is replete with icicles and a glistening layer of ice every winter. As of now, the waterfall is still unfettered. Later in the winter, it will likely be fronted by a buildup of congealed ice. Even that, though, will be just a vestige of what used to occur before Niagara Falls was remade in the 20th century. Much of what seems natural at Niagara Falls - ice formation, and the actual waterfall itself - is manufactured. Put differently, one of North America's most celebrated natural wonders is, in many ways, unnatural, the product of decades of human intervention and manipulation. Now, Niagara Falls never actually freezes over completely (though ice jams upstream can temporarily still the waters). Ice does form or gather at the base of the waterfall, building upward and outward, creating what is called the "ice bridge." But water keeps flowing underneath the two main cataracts - the bigger Horseshoe Falls and the smaller American Falls - that make up the frozen facade. Now Playing: Parts of Niagara Falls in Canada and the United States were frozen amid frigid temperatures on Tuesday, January 2. Credit: Instagram/Thomas Bvrd via Storyful Video: Fox 13 Tampa Up until the early 20th century, the two eponymous communities of Niagara Falls, one Canadian, one American, would congregate on the ice bridge for transnational ice parties. Kids would climb the ice mountains and slide down. But these frozen festivities came to a tragic end on Feb. 4, 1912. The ice broke up and three people perished. Excursions onto the ice bridge were banned. The ice would continue to cause problems in the following years, taking out the famed Honeymoon Bridge in January 1938. How could such an unruly and unpredictable environment be tamed? By the time ice destroyed the bridge, experts were on the cusp of providing some answers. Since the late 19th century, there has been a tension between beauty and power at Niagara Falls. On the one hand, it was considered the epitome of the natural sublime. On the other, Niagara was also the cradle of large-scale hydroelectric production and distribution. Successively larger generating stations were built, several taking turns wearing the mantle of biggest in the world. Industries such as aluminum and electro-chemicals arrived to take advantage of the cheap electricity. As more power turbines came online, more water had to be diverted from the river. Various groups worried that siphoning off water harmed the scenic beauty of the cascades, along with the naturally occurring erosion that annually moved the Horseshoe Falls upstream some seven feet. Industrialists responded by disingenuously suggesting that diverting more water would protect the falls by slowing erosion. Agitation for the preservation of Niagara Falls led governments to pass legal limits on diversions during the first decades of the 20th century. The U.S. and Canada formed engineering boards to study how to best replumb Niagara Falls to maximize water abstraction while veiling the impact on the waterfall's appearance. They schemed to curtail the annoying spray and mist that left visitors soaking. The result of these diplomatic talks was the Niagara River Diversion Treaty in 1950, which determined that during tourist hours half of the river's volume would be diverted around the falls to the downstream generating stations. The rest of the time - that is, at night and in the winter - three-quarters of the water was diverted. But taking the majority of the water would have an unmistakable impact on the aesthetic appeal of the waterfall. This wouldn't be good for the local tourism industry, not to mention all those claims about Niagara as the sublime. The solution? Shrink and reshape Niagara Falls. The 1950 treaty called for the binational construction of the International Niagara Control Works. These consisted of various weirs, dams, excavations and fills meant to halt erosion and "beautify" the Horseshoe Falls by reapportioning the flow of water over the lip. In the words of the technocrats, the overarching goal was creating the "impression of volume" with an uninterrupted "curtain of water." The crest of the Horseshoe was reduced by several hundred feet, and the V-shaped notch in its riverbed was chiseled out. Islands and shoals were removed, while others were added. Above the waterfall, a control dam with movable gates was installed across the river. Reclaimed areas at the flanks of the cataract were landscaped, fenced and turned into the main public viewing points, while the face of the falls was riveted with cables and anchors. Niagara Falls was changed - but in order to look more like itself. In the process it was also transformed into a tap. Nowadays, the hydropower intakes at Niagara have the capability to completely turn off the falls. Seeing as how Canadian and American engineers had given this great - and powerful - natural icon such a facelift, dealing with ice might seem like small potatoes by comparison. Yet controlling ice in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence basin had long been marked by scientific uncertainty. Despite the use of the ice-deterring control dam aided by ice-cutter boats, ice still threatened to jam up the "organic machine" that Niagara had become. One of the biggest worries was that ice would interfere with the water intakes for the new hydroelectric generating stations. The solution: the Niagara River Ice Boom. First installed in 1964, the boom was initially made of timbers. Now it consists of several hundred 30-foot pontoons, usually put in place around mid-December. (A video feed of the boom is available online.) Despite the boom, and depending on winter conditions, Niagara Falls can still become encrusted in ice. But the large ice bridges of the past, as well as the full-throated flow of water over the falls, are no more. Like the waterfall, the ice regime of Niagara has become, in the parlance of academics working at the intersections of environmental and technological history, a hybrid infrastructure that blends the artificial and the natural. Arguably, the real waterfall now drops down the penstocks of the power generating stations, far from public view. Granted, drawing a stark distinction between the "artificial" and the "natural" is itself a problem. So is the hubris that leads to engineering enormous waterfalls. The history of manipulating Niagara Falls conveys powerful messages about our willingness to reorder nature. And one of those messages is this: Remaking one of the continent's premier natural symbols to fit our notions of progress gives license and encouragement to do the same to any other part of the nonhuman world. If we alter and commodify even those celebrated features of the natural world we claim to cherish, aren't we sure to undervalue and exploit the rest of it? --- Macfarlane is an assistant professor in the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at Western Michigan University who is completing a book on the history of modifying Niagara Falls. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate After 14 consecutive days of below-freezing temperatures (the last time we saw temperatures above 32 was on Christmas Day), the temps are finally set to rise in Connecticut. Over the past two weeks, Danbury and Meriden airports set new records with a low of minus 14 degrees. Another record was set at White Plains airport, near Greenwich, when the temperature bottomed out at minus 2 degrees. RELATED: The intense cold is turning East Coast sharks into 'sharkcicles' Tweed-New Haven Airport in East Haven saw zero degrees; another new record. Oxford airport had its lowest reading at minus 9 on Sunday. Jess Flarity, a 32-year-old visiting a friend in Concord, New Hampshire, told the Associated Press the deep chill reminded him of his time in Alaska. RELATED: How engineers created the icy wonderland at Niagara Falls "I've been in minus 60 before so minus 20 doesn't frighten me," he said as he waited for a bus back to Boston Friday. "But I did have to prepare, bring some extra cold weather gear gloves, boots and those kinds of things." Now Playing: Great Falls in Falls Village is nearly frozen solid after several weeks of cold temperatures. Video: Hartford Curant But this winter's temperatures are nothing compared to when Alaska dipped to -80F in 1971. In fact, the all-time record lows across the country throughout the years make this season's cold snap look wimpy. Connecticut hit its record low of -32F in 1943 and 1961. Click through the slideshow above to see the coldest temperature recorded in each state. The warming trend kicks off January 10 with a daytime high of 41 degrees. Toward the end of the week, daytime temperatures should hit the 50s. Ocalan ile alt saat ne konusuldu? Marvel creator Stan Lee, 95, accused of groping nurses and demanding oral sex from them as they cared for him at his home, DailyMail.com has exclusively learned. The comic book legend's rep says he 'categorically denies' the 'false and despicable' allegations. 'I would have had him killed,' Peter Fonda exclusively tells DailyMailTV about claims his friend Salma Hayek was sexually harassed by Harvey Weinstein. Fonda spoke with DailyMailTV from the red carpet and said he was furious when he learned her story. In royal news, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry had London in a frenzy today when visiting a youth radio station in their first engagement of the year. Long before she helmed the Kardashian clan, Kris Jenner wanted to be a model. DailyMailTV has exclusively obtained never-before-seen photos of a young Kris in bangs posing in high-waisted pants and a three-piece suit. Take a look. And, if you're struggling to stick to your New Year's resolutions, Dr. Phil is here to help! He pinpoints five reasons 92 percent of the people who try resolutions fail. And he's got foolproof tips to help make yours stick. Students of Katie Prices numerous autobiographies will no doubt remember an explosive moment in her second volume, A Whole New World (2006). It was Katies wedding day her first and somehow it had all gone wrong. Her wedding skirt had dug into her skin, leaving her scratched and bruised. Also, her corset top had been laced too tightly, causing her pain. Her neck, too, was really hurting from where Id had to keep bending it, with the weight of the crown, to double kiss all my guests. Furthermore, two guests had collapsed on the dance floor, so a couple of ambulances had to be summoned. She had also hated every single minute of being photographed in her finery for OK! Magazine. In Being Jordan (2004), Katie Price revealed that in the Fifties her Nan had worked on Hastings pier as a topless mermaid Feeling drained, Katie went and sat by her grandmother, who, sadly, was not in the best of moods. She moaned to me, saying she was appalled about where she had been sitting. For Katie, this was the last straw: Thanks a lot, Nan. Now youre ruining my day as well! I said. Yet Katies Nan should be remembered not only for her crotchety outburst. In her day, she had been almost as glamorous as her granddaughter. In Being Jordan (2004), Katie revealed that in the Fifties her Nan had worked on Hastings pier as a topless mermaid. Nan, it transpired had been hired to pose in a fishy tail behind two sheets of glass containing water and bubbles with only her long red hair to preserve her modesty. Alas, Nan was caught smoking. This destroyed the illusion of being underwater, so she was given her marching orders, if mermaids can be given marching orders. I was reminded of Katie Prices Nan while reading reports that being a mermaid is the latest craze to sweep the world. After a lull of 60-odd years, mermaids are back in fashion, with an International Mermaid Swimming Instructors Association, a Merfolk Convention and an annual Miss Mermaid pageant. Both Bournemouth and Manchester have mermaid academies. Meanwhile, the Hire-a-Mermaid agency has 20 semi-professional mermaids on its books, ready to grace parties for a fee of up to 400. Do they bring their own paddling pools, or do they simply sit in the kitchen sink? We are not told. Bournemouth and Manchester have mermaid academies while the Hire-a-Mermaid agency has 20 mermaids on its books. Pictured: Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen, Denmark Its all a far cry from Super-Balls, Krazy Foam and Gonks, which were all the rage when I was a child. Its hard to see why any of these crazes caught on, but harder still to fathom the attraction of mermaidism. For me its the sense of freedom and escapism capturing that essence of magic, says Jessica Pennington, 27, who learned how to be a mermaid in Cornwall last year. You dont have to face the stresses of everyday life while youre part of the mer-world. But what could be more stressful than having to live as half-a-fish? And its not even the right half. Given the choice, Id have a fishs head and torso, and two human legs, but I concede this is a matter open to debate. Inevitably, there is already talk of a merfolk community. For the time being, Jessica Pennington insists that it is one of the most loving and supporting communities Ive ever come across. After a lull of 60-odd years, mermaids are back in fashion, with an International Mermaid Swimming Instructors Association, a Merfolk Convention and a Miss Mermaid pageant But in no time the bossy-boots will take over. No doubt there will soon be strident merfolk representatives sounding off on BBC Question Time or flaunting their scales and complaining of backbiting on Celebrity Big Brother. She doesnt say what the merfolk do when they get together. I imagine they gather in shoals, look vacant and blow bubbles. Lets hope they take care to avoid stray worms or brightly-coloured flies dangling from tell-tale pieces of string. Nor does she make it clear how long it takes to transition to full mermaid status. Before you turn into a fully-fledged mermaid you presumably have to get the feel for life as a fish. This must involve spending hours hanging around in plastic bags at funfairs, or lying down in newspapers, soaked in vinegar and surrounded by chips. What starts off as a dream turns swiftly to a nightmare. Personally, Id be horrified to notice that my wife had started growing scales and making sucky noises. Small wonder that Katie Prices Nan was driven to cigarettes. Shes better off out of it. When it comes to the workplace, most of us remain pretty guarded when it comes to our personal life, and are therefore likely to respect a co-workers privacy. However, one office worker has sparked a fierce debate after questioning whether she should 'blow the lid' on her boss's infidelity, while remaining anonymous. Speaking on Mumsnet, she explained how the managing director at her company had begun an illicit relationship with a co-worker, who recently tied the knot. While some suggested she should let their respective spouses know, many argued that she should 'mind her own business' and stay quiet. A Mumsnet user has questioned whether she should tell her colleagues' respective spouses about their affair (file photo) The office worker explained how the married managing director had begun an affair with a co-worker, who recently got married Posting under the username Darnda, the original poster explained: 'I work in an office where the MD has had affairs with several staff and other women in our industry. 'He is married with children and most people are pretty disgusted with him but obviously no one says anything to him.' She continued: 'A member of staff got married last year, her husband seems like a nice guy, very sweet. Shes now having an affair with the MD. Theyve been married a matter of months. 'I want to tell her husband/his wife anonymously about whats happening. I know its not my business, I 100% understand that but would want someone to tell me rather than people laughing behind my back.' Some suggested that she should tell the spouses the truth, as they themselves would want to know in the same situation One person commented that the managing director's wife may already be aware, but the other woman's husband might not know Several Mumsnet users who had been cheated in on the past agreed, saying they'd wished that someone had told them the truth Members of the parenting forum were quick to react, with some suggesting that she should tell their respective spouses about the affair. One wrote: 'I would want to know. I've told people they've been cheated on and after the initial shock were glad I'd told them'. Several Mumsnet users who had been cheated on the past agreed, with one commenting: 'Lots of people I knew were aware and decided to "stay out of it" and I felt worse when I found out - I thought they were horrible'. Meanwhile, others suggested that while the managing director's wife may already know about his infidelities, the newlywed co-worker's husband may want to know the truth. The majority of Mumsnet users however suggested that she should keep quiet about the affair (file photo) Many said it was 'none of her business', with one suggesting that saying something would be 'out of order' Others suggested she should just 'remain professional', describing it as a 'personal matter' One commented: 'He has just married a cheat! He needs to know! Before he wastes anymore of his life on this b****!' However, many argued the office worker should 'mind [her] own business' and stay quiet about the affair. One wrote 'I'm not sure you should be meddling in other people's lives', while another commented 'Why even consider dragging yourself into all this drama? No good will come of it.' Another added: 'It's not your business, other people's morals are theirs to live with. Other people's marriages are not yours to interfere with'. Others admitted the situation sounded 'unpleasant', but said she should change jobs rather than get involved However, one person said it was 'ridiculous' to suggest it was 'more moral' to keep quiet The process of getting divorced is never a pleasant one, and the costs incurred one of the most daunting prospects with a final court hearing costing as much as 30,000. With the first working Monday of the year signifies 'National divorce day', with the number of married couples becoming disillusioned about their relationship at its peak. Recent divorce figures from the Office for National Statistics show nearly 107,000 heterosexual couples divorced last year, the highest figures since 2009 and an increase of 5.8 per cent compared with 2015. And while divorce figures rise, many women are still unsure of what they're entitled to or how to go about claiming it, while others remain unaware of their partner's financial assets. Russell Nathan, audit partner at accountancy firm HW Fisher & Company, has revealed his top ten tips on how to go about getting a divorce Here Russell Nathan, from London-based HW Fisher & Company, reveals his top ten tips on how to go about getting a divorce, including how to get your ex to foot the lawyer's bill and why you should avoid splitting in January. 1. Make sure you know about all your partners financial assets One of the most common problems many women face is that they do not necessarily know what assets their partner has, or what they are entitled to claim a share of. While a lawyer can help with much of this, it is fairly common for law firms to send their clients to an accountant to go through their financial affairs thoroughly to ensure nothing is missed. 2. Get your ex to fund the divorce One thing a lot of women may not realise is that they can get their husband to pay for the divorce. Depending on how acrimonious your break-up is it may be possible to get your ex to agree to fund your side of the divorce in order to get it done quickly. You dont have to ask your ex directly; you can get your solicitor to do so on your behalf. 3. Close all joint accounts / credit cards This would appear a no-brainer, but you dont want to operate joint credit cards if you are undergoing a divorce. You could still be liable for spending on a joint credit card even after your divorce has been finalised, regardless of the language of the agreement. If you can agree with your ex to close your joint account so each of you can open your own account, you should - it will make it easier to identify who is spending what. It is important to end all joint spending during a break up as you could still be liable for spending on a joint credit card 4. Apply to the court for costs If you dont have the money to divorce your partner but are desperate to end the relationship, you can apply for a court order requiring that your soon-to-be ex make a payment to cover your divorce costs. You would only be able to get this type of order if you were able to prove that you were not able to borrow money from anywhere else. 5. Pay from your divorce settlement It is worth investigating with the legal firm you appoint whether they will let you pay their legal fees after the divorce has been finalised and once they have reached a financial settlement. This can be useful as it means your lawyers have an obvious vested interest in securing you a rapid, and the best possible financial settlement they can. Most law firms will have third party funding to assist you with fees funding. Not all legal firms will offer this option, and most that do will not offer it unprompted, so you should ask. 6. Legal Aid Since 2014 the circumstances in which are able to apply for Legal Aid to divorce your ex have become a lot more restricted but there are still some. In England and Wales you will qualify for Legal Aid if youve been the victim of domestic violence or if your child has been abducted. Legal Aid is also available to help with mediation costs. In Scotland and Northern Ireland, Legal Aid is more widely available. If you dont have the money to divorce your partner but are desperate to end the relationship, you can apply for a court order requiring your ex to cover your divorce costs 7. DIY divorce Of course, divorce paperwork must go through the courts eventually but depending on how you break up with your partner this doesnt mean you have to appear in court or appoint barristers. If you can agree financial terms and custody of the children with your ex then you only need pay the court fee of 410. All the documents you need can be downloaded from www.justice.gov.uk. 8. Mediation Laws Introduced in 2014, this means divorcing couples must first try to agree the terms of their separation through a mediation process rather than automatically going to court. The costs of splitting through mediation should be lower as negotiators rather than lawyers attempt to guide couples through agreements over children and money. Couples can also seek lawyer-assisted mediation. This involves a lawyer who will help them reach agreement on one or two points where they may have come to an impasse. 9. Watch out for the taxman January isnt actually a great time to get divorced given the time frames involved. Few divorces can be achieved in a short enough space of time to beat the taxman and with the new tax year looming it can prove more expensive to get divorced in January than, say, in June. The reason for this is simple: married couples can transfer assets to one another under rules that are collectively known as inter-spouse transfer. HMRC says divorcing couples have until the end of the tax year in which they officially separate to sort out their financial affairs. So if you separate in January, you only have a few months to sort out your financial affairs. If your ex has stocks and shares, buy-to-let property or other investments that could be liable to Capital Gains Tax if he transferred them to you, its sensible to give yourself as much time as possible to sort out your finances, otherwise you might find you end up with a nasty tax bill. 10. Dont forget the pension Most couples think their home is their biggest asset but this isnt always the case. Stay at home mums, in particular, are unlikely to have a pension of their own and may not realise they are entitled to a share of their husbands pension, which can be particularly valuable if it is a final salary pension. The pension can be divided or shared - or its value can be offset against the value of the family home - meaning the wife may get a greater share of the equity in the property. Pension earmarking is an earnings attachment so if the husband receives 1000 pension per month the spouse will receive a percentage. A little-known fact is that you may be able to access a percentage of your spouses State Second Pension, so it is worth investigating whether you would be entitled to this too. Maxim has changed the life of one lucky budding model, who landed her very first cover, and a provocative nude shoot, for the publication after beating out 10,000 other women in a reader-voted contest. After a three-month-long voting process, Olivia Burns, 21, from Wellington, Florida, received the news that she would grace the cover of the January/February issue of the magazine - while also earning a check for $25,000. The aim of the contest was to find an undiscovered model worthy of being launched straight to the cover, with the help of millions of readers - with the winner getting the chance to make her mark on the industry by posing naked for one of fashion's most famous photographers. Scroll down for video Big winner: Olivia Burns, 21, from Wellington, Florida, has been crowned very first reader-voted Maxim Cover Girl Contest winner Out on top: The stunning blonde was voted for by readers over 10,000 other entries Posing: As a part of her prize, she was given a photo shoot with Maxim photographer Gilles Bensimon More and more: She was also interviewed for the magazine and received a $25,000 check Over the course of the voting process, the website received an average of 1,000 views per minute; more than 18 million had viewed the page by the end. Having claimed victory over the other thousands of women entered in the inaugural contest, Olivia, who - no doubt to the delight of her new-found fans - is thought to be single, was given the opportunity to pose for Maxim photographer Gilles Bensimon. In the shoot - which not only appeared on the cover, but as part of a multi-page spread in the magazine's January/February issue - Olivia can be seen showing off her winning good looks, striking a pose in a series of risque images both with and without clothing. The cover shot shows Olivia flaunting her pert derriere in a skimpy white thong, while also modeling a cropped sheer shirt that exposes plenty of under boob. One particularly provocative image even sees Olivia posing in nothing but body paint, showing off her incredible physique with just a thin layer of gold coloring to cover her. Another picture captures the blonde bombshell wearing nothing but a pair of sky-high heels, flashing a sultry stare at the camera while holding up a dress to her chest. Showing off: Gorgeous Olivia did some modelling at 16, but later focused on her realty career Dreamer: She hit a road block early on thanks to her height of 5'6, which falls short of many agencies' requirements Next steps: Following her win, Olivia has suggested she may go into modelling full-time Grabbing the gold: Following the success of the contest, Maxim have plans to repeat the vote in the future But while the shoot required her to model in a series of very provocative poses, Olivia couldn't have been happier with the experience - and her confidence in front of the camera is clear to see. Indeed, the blonde - who has been a keen horsewoman since the age of six and is known to be a talented show jumper - seems to be more than comfortable showing off her body, and frequently posts images of herself modeling skimpy swimwear on Instagram. Posing for such an established photographer, however, was an entirely new process. 'The Maxim Cover Girl Contest was such an incredible and empowering experience,' she said after her win. 'I am so honored to have gotten the experience of shooting with legendary photographer Gilles Bensimon. 'I used to dream of being a model and now my dream is a reality.' She added: 'I was actually in disbelief [when I found out I had won] because I wasnt checking the page the last day and I had a friend tell me, "Olivia, you won." It was so crazy, and I was so excited. Model in the making: Olivia grew up in Florida and regularly shares images of herself lounging on the beach in bikinis Strike a pose: The blonde bombshell admitted that she was stunned to have won the competition - despite being named as Wellington's Next Top Model in 2015 Beauty: She has said that she may now consider a move into full-time modeling, having won such a prestigious competition Proud parent: Olivia is seen in May with dad Daniel while attending sister Katie's graduation from the University of San Francisco. Olivia herself attended Keiser University Family ties: Olivia's sister now lives and works in San Francisco 'I was almost crying.' As well as earning the honor of becoming the first-ever cover girl selected by a leading national mens magazine via democratic vote, Olivia was also interviewed for an inside feature in the publication. She revealed in the article how she tried to give modelling a go when she was 16, and almost had her dreams dashed upon learning that she fell short of many agencies' height requirements because she only measures at 5'6. However, print media was still an option for her so she performed some work for apparel brands before another career in real estate began to overshadow her modelling jobs. But that may change now after her win, and Olivia, who won her local Wellingtons Next Top Model competition in 2015, has even expressed an interest in transitioning to full-time modelling. She has previously been pursuing the career part-time, while also continuing her passion for show jumping, and studying business management at Kaiser University. Passion: The blonde bombshell is a keen horsewoman and has been riding since the age of six Family affair: Both Olivia's sister Katie and her mother Melissa are incredibly passionate about horses, and her mom owns and trains several show jumpers Dedicated: In 2015, a then-18-year-old Olivia told a local magazine that she hoped to one day own her own equine or fashion business Beauty: Olivia nearly gave up her dreams of becoming a model because - at 5'6 - she was told she was too short for the catwalk Back in 2015, when she won her local Next Top Model competition, Olivia told Sidelines magazine of her love of horse riding: 'My favorite thing about riding is showing and of course getting top ribbons, but I love being around the horses regardless.' Olivia is not the only keen horsewoman in her family, however; both her mother Melissa and her sister Katie are show jumpers, and the family actually trains and owns several horses. Her father Daniel, meanwhile, is a former pilot for DHL and now owns a Dunkin' Donuts franchise in Florida. And although her parents are no longer together, Olivia clearly inherited some of her dad's business acumen, having studied business at university, and revealing back in 2015 that she hoped to one day own her own equine or fashion business. These goals may now be put on the back-burner, however, while the model focuses on her future in front of the camera. The Maxim Cover Girl Contest also raised more than $500,000 for charity and so, given its success, the publication is already making plans for future contests. In addition to Olivia, the other women who made the top ten in the vote will also be featured in a future issue of the magazine. Tessa Dahl's life has been scarred by tragedy, alcoholism and drug addiction. She is seen here in a police mugshot Once named one of the five most beautiful women in the world, but plagued by scandal, tragedy and increasing vulnerability, perhaps the greatest surprise about Tessa Dahl is just what fun she is in person. The 60-year-old daughter of literary giant Roald, and mother of supermodel Sophie, Tessa has spent the decade or so that I have known her in and out of treatment for psychiatric issues which have proved a lifelong struggle. Her spirited response to it all is generally to make mordant jokes about lock-up loony bins and to describe her own situation with pitiless clarity and a distinctive barking laugh. Our conversations were always private and must remain so, but to give a taste she once described the famous Dahl family as a club sandwich packed with diverse substance and flavour. In this meal, Tessa told me, she stands duty as the spiky toothpick. But even when she is spiky, she is also very sweet. During a breakdown in 1997 her lowest point, where she was addicted to Valium, cocaine and alcohol and ended up in a wheelchair for a time she said her family described her as totally insane, incontinent but funny and sweet. Tessa has lived in the U.S. since 2005, where she was a popular member of the well-heeled community on Marthas Vineyard in Massachusetts and kept a huge menagerie of parrots, pigs and numerous rescue cats and dogs. Then around seven years ago she moved to Lincoln, Connecticut, to be within striking distance of the renowned McLean Psychiatric Hospital, made famous in the film Girl, Interrupted. Tessa Dahl has spent the decade of her life in and out of treatment for psychiatric issues pictured right with her stepmother Felicity 'Liccy' Dahl in 1992 and left in 1979 Flirting with Catholicism at the time, she enrolled in a nearby enclosed order of Benedictine nuns at the Abbey of Regina Laudis until the Abbess took exception to some attendant publicity. Diagnosed belatedly with bipolar disorder, in an interview in 2012, Tessa said: I have a team [at McLean} . . . I have been going three times a week to see an addiction psychiatrist, a top psychiatrist, a psychopharmacologist, a social worker and I do dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) to help me communicate with modified emotions. Her life is quiet and she lives modestly. She is believed to rely on a trust fund said to be administered by her two sisters, Ophelia and Lucy. There is, of course, an enormous fortune from the Roald Dahl Literary Estate money continues to pour in from books, which have sold over 250 million copies globally, and from stage and screen adaptations such as the hit show Matilda! and recent film of The BFG. Tessa with her father, the legendary writer Roald Dahl (left) and with her supermodel daughter Sophie, pictured in 2001 (right) A cash flow problem might, in part, explain the latest headline-making event in Tessas life. As the Mail reported in Sebastian Shakespeares diary on Saturday, Tessa has been arrested in Connecticut and is set to appear in court this week on a charge of larceny (theft). The charges arise from a stay at the Interlaken Inn in the town of Lakeville from October 27 to November 3 last year. She allegedly left without paying the bill of 3,970 she had run up. Her lawyer says that the case was due to a misunderstanding, that the full amount has now been paid and he is expecting a speedy resolution. Once again, Tessas family will have been called on to support her. She has had difficult relations with all of them when her addictions were at their height they were advised to detach with love rather than try to help her any more. Her four children Sophie, Clover, Luke and Ned were largely raised by a nanny. Indeed, her youngest son barely saw his mother during his early years. I have been a lousy mother, Tessa once said, bleakly. And relations with her oldest child, Sophie, now 40, have been complicated by Sophies success first as a model, then as an author and TV cook and difficult in recent years. Once they were very close, with Sophie paying bills for her mothers rehab in 2003 and Tessa attending Sophies wedding to jazz musician Jamie Cullum in 2010. But they fell out badly soon afterwards. Tessa said in 2012 that she was trying to rebuild relations with her family, however she would be the first to acknowledge that they have been driven to despair by her. Highly intelligent and unnervingly perceptive, Tessa knows that hers should have been an enchanted life. Her late father Roald, author of such beloved classics as Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, is hailed as the greatest childrens writer in history. Her mother, to whom she bears a striking resemblance, was Oscar-winning actress Patricia Neal. Tessa Dahl pictured with actor David Hemmings, who she had a long standing relationship with. The pair met when she was 16 and they began an affair aged 18 However, their family life was blighted by a series of tragedies. Tessa was just three when in 1960 she saw her baby brother Theos pram struck by a New York taxi, leaving him brain damaged. Two years later, the Dahls eldest daughter, Olivia, seven, died of measles which shed caught from Tessa. I was like a poor substitute, because I had measles, too, but I lived on, Tessa told me. I think what happened was that I spent the whole of the rest of my life trying to prove to my father that I was good. Everything I did, I did to please him but in our family you got attention only if you were brain damaged or dead, or terribly ill. There was no reward for being normal. In 1965, her mother, 39 and pregnant, suffered a series of devastating strokes. Tessa believes her childhood has left her with post-traumatic stress disorder because her father declined therapy for her, instead having sedatives prescribed. Tessa left school at 15 and embarked on some wild years of partying and affairs with actors David Hemmings and Peter Sellers. She was the toast of London in the Seventies and a staple of the gossip columns. Tessa Dahl left school at 15 and embarked on wild years of partying and affairs with actors David Hemmings and Peter Sellers throughout the seventies When she was 19, she had Sophie by actor Julian Holloway, but they split soon after. There followed a long manic period, with more parties and spending sprees. She moved house 17 times, lived on an ashram in India and wrote a well-received novel, Working For Love, published in 1988. She married twice, to businessman James Kelly, by whom she had Clover and Luke, and then to Australian Patrick Donovan. They separated when she was three months pregnant with son Ned. In 1990, Roald died the day after telling Tessa for the first time that he loved her and it was then she began to self-medicate with drugs and booze, leaving her children to be largely raised by nanny Maureen Noble. Tessa wrote: My father was a huge man, a giant. I craved his attention, his conversation, his love. We spoke every day. I didnt realise that he had been my motivation. After he died, I couldnt get on with things any more. A hungry canyon opened inside me, which split my core. What emerged was dark and destructive. She added: I was prescribed pain-killing pills, then injections. These short-term palliatives caused a metaphorical skid, and the more I tried to turn myself away from crashing, the more out of control I became. I became involved in pointless, momentarily euphoric love affairs and spiralled towards madness . . . Nothing could compensate for the void my challenging father left. In 1997, after being declared bankrupt, Tessa attempted suicide with alcohol and drugs, saying: I felt, rather over-romantically, as if I were a beautiful piece of porcelain that had been broken and mended too many times. Instead, she fell into a coma that left her paralysed for two years. Over the two decades that have followed, Tessas recovery has been long and slow, but she has never lost her spirirt. She recently wrote a novella, The Graveyard Circus, which movingly alludes to her grief over her late mother, who died in 2010, and has a second novel titled, An Apology To Myself, she hopes to publish. Her great hope has always been to find redemption with her family. I am proud of my recovery. I am not proud of my near demise, she has said. Manic depression is surmountable. I sometimes miss the highs but I dont miss the lows. I live with three lovely rescue dogs and four cats. I get huge satisfaction from having a four-legged family to welcome me when I get home and snuggle up with at night. I dont mind being that crazy cat woman. If I never fall in love again, it does not bother me. It has taken me so long to love myself. She only revealed her pregnancy on Friday, but that's not stopping Zara Tindall from enjoying a family day out, baby bump included. Zara, 36, joined her husband, the former England rugby captain, Mike Tindall, 39, and their three-year-old daughter, Mia, at the Magic Millions barrier draw event on the Gold Coast. The Queen's granddaughter seemed happy and at-ease as she opted for a loose fitting white shirt and matching white jeans on Tuesday at the beach. The relaxed style of her top obscured her bump from onlookers, although the navy dress she wore on Saturday accentuated it for all to see. Zara, 36, joined husband former England rugby captain, Mike Tindall, 39, and thir three-year-old daughter Mia (all pictured) at the Magic Millions barrier draw event on the Gold Coast She revealed her pregnancy on Friday - but that's not stopping Zara from enjoying a family day The Queen's granddaughter seemed happy and at-ease as she opted for a loose fitting white shirt and matching white jeans on Tuesday Zara accessorised with a straw white hat with black detailing, black sunglasses and white Converse sneakers. She also wore her hair tied back to keep herself cool. Mike Tindall also kept it simple in blue shorts, a grey striped T-shirt and a blue cap and a pair of sunnies. Mia looked less than impressed in some of the photos, with the Australian heat adding a pink flush to her cheeks. The weather forecast this week around Australia has been even hotter than usual - with temperatures reaching 40 degrees in various parts of the country. Mia was also dressed casually in turquoise shorts, a grey singlet, a pink cap and no shoes so she could easily traipse through the sand. Zara accessorised with a straw white hat with black detailing, black sunglasses and white Converse sneakers - she also wore her hair tied back to keep herself cool The relaxed style of her top obscured her bump from onlookers, although the navy dress she wore on Friday accentuated it for all to see Mia was dressed casually in turquoise shorts, a grey singlet, a pink cap and no shoes so she could easily traipse through the sand As the day went on, little Mia's mood seemed to worsen as her parents had to comfort the three-year-old who seemed to not be handling the day's heat. Mia was seen in tears with her cheeks having become even more pink as Mike held her in his arms and Zara soothed her while tucking her hair behind her ear. Of course, Zara is no stranger to the Magic Millions polo match on the Gold Coast, which is held each January. Mia looked less than impressed in some of the photos, with the Australian heat adding a pink flush to her cheeks Mike held her in his arms and Zara soothed her and tucked her hair behind her ear Mia was seen in tears with her cheeks having become even more pink Zara is patron of the events Racing Women, an initiative promoting racehorse ownership among women. Last year, the equestrian champion took a tumble while playing in the match herself. And while the equestrian champion has made her return, there is no danger of pregnant Zara getting into the saddle in 2018. Zara is patron of the events Racing Women, an initiative promoting racehorse ownership among women Zara is no stranger to the Magic Millions polo match on the Gold Coast, which is held each January Days before the barrier draw, Zara and Mike Tindall watched the Magic Millions polo match while on the Gold Coast. This time, Zara plumped for a loose fitting navy dress which appeared to showcase her growing bump on Saturday. Zara accessorised with a straw boater hat, sunglasses and flat gladiator sandals, while Mike Tindall looked dapper in a light tartan blazer, chinos and shades. Zara and Mike were seen taking part in the barrier draw event on the Gold Coast Last year, the equestrian champion took a tumble while playing in the match herself but there is no danger of her playing this year This means that the Queen will become a great-grandmother twice this year, with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge also expecting their third child News of Zara's pregnancy came just over a year after the royal couple suffered the heartache of a miscarriage on Christmas Eve 2016. This means that the Queen will become a great-grandmother twice this year, with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge also expecting their third child. The Tindall baby will be born in the summer, about three months after the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's third child is due, sources claim. With Prince Harry due to marry fiancee Meghan Markle on May 19 at Windsor Castle, it will be a joyous year for the 91-year-old monarch and her family. Zara and Mike Tindall (both pictured) attended the Magic Millions polo event on the Gold Coast over the weekend For the occasion the Queen's granddaughter (left) opted for a navy blue silky dress, sunglasses and a straw boater hat - meanwhile Mike Tindall (right) wore a tartan jacket and chinos A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: 'The Queen and members of the royal family were very pleased.' The new arrival will provide a sibling for three-year-old Mia, who was born in an NHS hospital in the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire - where it is expected Zara will also give birth to her second child. Zara, Mike and Mia Grace have recently spent Christmas in Sydney, before they descended on the Gold Coast this weekend for the Magic Millions horse racing carnival. Of course, Zara is no stranger to the Magic Millions polo match on the Gold Coast, held each January (pictured this year) - last year, she took part News of Zara's pregnancy came just over a year after the royal couple suffered the heartache of a miscarriage on Christmas Eve 2016 The 2018 Magic Millions Carnival is a week-long celebration of all things equine, kicking off with the Pacific Fair Magic Millions Polo featuring world famous polo player Nacho Figueras. The event brings in millions around the world, and is watched by many. For a number of years Zara a former world eventing champion and Olympic silver medallist has been involved with the event which features thoroughbred sales, racing and polo matches. Advertisement Stripping off for a daring photoshoot, Ben Brooksby posed in the buff as he laid in a truck full of lentils. The 24-year-old farmer, from Victoria, was not afraid to bare all when his photographer friend Emma Cross dared him to take off his kit during the harvest season in 2016. 'My good friend came out to my property at St Helens Plains to take photos of us harvesting,' Mr Brooksby told Daily Mail Australia. 'We were harvesting lentils at the time and the truck was near full. As she got up on the truck to take a photo of the lentils, she said "jump in and take ya kit off". 'I laughed and of course, I'm up for any challenge so I stripped off and jumped right in.... I popped that photo up on social media and it gathered lots of laughs.' From there, the young man started The Naked Farmer on Instagram after he failed to find a playful social media account dedicated to farmers who want to celebrate country living in all its glory. Farmers from all around Australia pose in the buff The Naked Farmer - a social media page dedicated to farmers What started as a humble joke has now encouraged hundreds of farmers of all walks of life to snap their cheeky rural photos The photograph that started it all: Victorian farmer Brooksby (pictured) posing in the buff as he laid in a truck full of lentils 'I was planting those lentils back into the ground and it made me think of that photo we took and the laughs and enjoyment people got from it,' he recalled. 'I wondered if anyone had a Instagram page dedicated to that. After some research there was nothing so I thought "why not?". I'll start a page just for a giggle. I did it all for the fun and I just love making people laugh and smile.' And what started as a humble joke has now encouraged hundreds of farmers of all walks of life to snap their very own cheeky rural photographs, from posing on horses to lying naked in a pile of sheep wool. 'I think it's great getting everyone involved with sending photos in,' he said. 'You notice all the farmers have a beaming smile, such an incredible thing seeing people get amongst it and feeling happy.' A group of four women share a cheeky moment by stripping off, and strategically covering up their modesty on the farm The lighthearted trend encourages farmers from all walks of life to share a laugh by taking off their kit for a photograph What started as a humble joke has now seen farmers around the world share their cheeky snaps all for a laugh The 24-year-old farmer said he has since used the platform to raise awareness of mental illness in the farming community And fast forward, the page has since attracted more than 28,000 followers. 'With this many followers I began to think, wondering ways I could make a difference in the agriculture community,' he said. 'That's where the idea of raising money to help people with mental health in rural areas came to mind. It's a huge issue that doesn't get talked about enough.' Mr Brooksby said he decided to turn the platform into a good cause by raising awareness about mental illness in the farming community. 'The suicide rate in the agriculture industry is almost double any other industry - that's a scary figure,' he said. 'My message is to get people to talk about this issue, ensure that we talk to one another. There are other farmers in the same boat going through similar issues.' Mr Brooksby has raised $5,000 for the Royal Flying Doctors Service after selling 2018 calendars, featuring the best saucy farmers, who strategically cover up their modesty The Naked Farmer has since attracted 28,000 followers - where farmers all over the world send their snaps to the account The photos show farmers posing strategically (pictured left of two men in the bush and right of a men lying in sheep wool) Two young women smile at the camera as they pose on a table full of sheep wool as part of a lighthearted farmers campaign Since then, Mr Brooksby has raised $5,000 for the Royal Flying Doctors Service after selling 2018 calendars, featuring the best saucy nude farmers, who strategically cover up their modesty. His next plans are to hit the road this year to raise more money. 'This year in June and July, Emma and I plan on travelling around Australia to take photos of farmers in all agriculture industries to go into the 2019 calendar,' he said. 'For the next calendar, I plan on making two - one of all males in agriculture and one of all females in agriculture. I want to use the platform that I have at my finger tips on making a difference any way I can. 'I am also currently designing some male and female underwear to go on sale sometime this year.' Mr Brooksby said he has even used the platform raise awareness about mental illness in the farming community Two young cheeky women share an alcoholic beverage after a long day working on the farm What started as a humble joke has now encouraged hundreds of farmers of all walks of life to snap their cheeky rural snaps And the support he received from everyone so far has been overwhelming. 'My family and friends have been a huge support over the project. I only just recently told them about it over the past month and some are still only finding out today,' he said. 'I'm happy to say my grandma is my number one fan, she's always liking the photos on the page.' Princess Charlotte's resemblance to her grandmother the Queen has often been noted by fans, but following the release of her latest photos royal watchers have spotted a rather more unusual doppelganger. Yesterday, Kensington Palace released two new portraits of the two-year-old on her first day of nursery and Twitter users were convinced the youngster's attitude in the snaps was rather like a young Kirsty Allsopp. Apparently, some who looked at the pictures couldn't help drawing comparisons with the presenter who is known for her love of crafting and no-nonsense attitude. 'Why does Princess Charlotte look like she's about to ride her Pashley bike to a craft fair where she'll handmake vintage-style bunting?'' one asked. 'She's being groomed to be the next Kirstie Allsopp.' Another even described the resemblance between the two as 'uncanny'. Royal watchers claimed that Princess Charlotte, two, was a doppelganger for Kirstie Allsopp in photos taken on her first day at nursery yesterday The Location, Location, Location presenter is known for her love of crafting and no-nonsense attitude The princess will be a full-time pupil at the Willcocks Nursery School near Kensington Palace, which charges fees of just over 3,000 a term for pupils attending its Monday to Friday morning school, and employs lots of play as children learn. At her nursery school, the little Princess will enjoy pottery and poetry classes at the sought-after nursery, which is rated 'outstanding' by Ofsted and located next to the Royal Albert Hall. Before starting officially, she would have been invited with her parents for a short 'stay and play'. Kate and William would then have been asked to leave to see if Charlotte was happy to be left alone. Twitter users claimed there was an 'uncanny' resemblance between the young royal and the TV star The school recommends in its guidance to parents that pupils bring a toy or photo from home, and take a picture of their teacher back to their house. It says: 'As your child builds a rapport with the teachers, we will ask you to stay in the vicinity for the first few sessions so that you can return if needed.' Fees are 9,150 a year for morning sessions and 5,400 for afternoons. Palace sources said Charlotte would attend the school 'full time' but declined to elaborate on whether that was for either morning or afternoon sessions - or both. When it was announced that Charlotte would be attending Wilcocks, a spokesman said: 'We are delighted that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have chosen the Willcocks Nursery School for Princess Charlotte. We look forward to welcoming Charlotte to our nursery in January.' She recently confirmed she's pregnant again after suffering a heartbreaking miscarriage last year. And Zara Tindall, 36, certainly looked glowing as she attended the launch party of the Magic Millions event in Australia in a vibrant orange dress, with a drop waist and frilled detail. The mother-to-be, who was accompanied by her retired rugby player husband Mike, teamed the colourful frock with a pair of towering black strappy sandals. She accessorised with a small box clutch and diamond cuff earrings, as well as a glittering cuff bracelet. Zara Tindall certainly looked glowing as she attended the launch party of the Magic Millions event in Australia in a vibrant orange dress Zara and Miked Tindall at the Moet Magic Millions launch party at Surfers Paradise Beach on the Gold Coast in Australia The glamorous mother-of-one styled her short hair in soft waves for the event, and kept her make-up fresh and minimal, allowing the tan she's picked up Down Under to shine through. She completed the look with a fresh manicure, opting for on-trend grey on her fingernails and toes. Zara is no stranger to the Magic Millions polo match on the Gold Coast, which is held each January. She is patron of the events Racing Women, an initiative promoting racehorse ownership among women. Zara accessorised with a range of glittering jewels, including elaborate drop earrings and a statement cuff bracelet The Queen's granddaughter was accompnied by her husband Mike who looked dapper in a black shirt and grey trousers The mother-to-be looked in fantastic spirits as she prepared to enjoy the Magic Millions launch party Last year, the equestrian champion took a tumble while playing in the match herself. And while the equestrian champion has made her return, there is no question of pregnant Zara getting into the saddle in 2018. News of Zara's pregnancy came just over a year after the royal couple suffered the heartache of a miscarriage on Christmas Eve 2016. This means that the Queen will become a great-grandmother twice this year, with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge also expecting their third child. The Tindall baby will be born in the summer, about three months after the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's third child is due, sources claim. The proud parents are expecting a sibling for their daughter Mia, due in the summer The photogenic couple are regulars at the Magic Millions event, as Zara is patron of Racing Women, an initiative promoting racehorse ownership among women. A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: The Queen and members of the royal family were very pleased. With Prince Harry due to marry fiancee Meghan Markle on May 19 at Windsor Castle, it will be a joyous year for the 91-year-old monarch and her family. The new arrival will provide a sibling for three-year-old Mia, who was born in an NHS hospital in the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire - where it is expected Zara will also give birth to her second child. Zara, Mike and Mia Grace have recently spent Christmas in Sydney, before they descended on the Gold Coast this weekend for the Magic Millions horse racing carnival. Deaths in Detention: Improper, inadequate treatment results in deaths of sick prisoners This story was originally published Feb. 4, 2014. In the middle of the night, locked in the Milwaukee Secure Detention Facility, Jeremy Cunningham started to shake. The violent tremors woke Ishmeil Washington, who was sleeping in the bunk below his. Keith Bowman, lying on a mattress on the floor, saw the convulsions, too. The two men also heard Cunningham gasping for air, gurgling and wheezing. Here's what happened next, the two men later told investigators: Washington pressed the emergency button to call a guard. "What is your medical emergency?" Department of Corrections Sgt. Jay Suttle asked over the intercom. Washington told Suttle his cellmate was having a seizure. Instead of sending help, Suttle told Washington to go back to bed. The next morning, Cunningham was dead. Cunningham, 34, was one of 10 people over a five-year period to die in the custody of law enforcement throughout Milwaukee County after their medical or psychiatric conditions were improperly monitored or left untreated, a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation found. The 10 deaths among 18 in custody between 2008 and 2012 show that Milwaukee-area detention facilities run by the city, county and state all fall short when it comes to dealing with medical emergencies, sometimes with fatal consequences. The city lockup, where prisoners may be held for up to three days, doesn't employ medical practitioners. At the county jail and House of Correction, inadequate staffing levels and substandard care have persisted for more than a decade despite a judge's order to solve the problems. And at the state-run Milwaukee Secure Detention Facility, corrections officers went years without rules for what to do when inmates reported medical emergencies over the intercom. Jailers have a constitutional obligation to protect prisoners, which includes addressing medical and mental health conditions, said Ronald Shansky, a physician who has spent more than 12 years conducting court-ordered monitoring of conditions at the Milwaukee County Jail and House of Correction. "The inmate is completely dependent," he said. "Unless the system creates the opportunity for the medical tests to be done, the medications to be provided, it's not going to happen." Rules Called For Monitoring Wanted for parole violations, Cunningham turned himself in on June 21, 2011, knowing he would likely be arrested because he had skipped several appointments with his parole officer. His mother, Cynthia Telford, gave him a ride to the parole office. From there, he was sent to the Milwaukee Secure Detention Facility, a holding site for people who have violated probation or parole. It is run by the Wisconsin Department of Corrections. Telford hoped that while her son was in custody, he could get treatment for the drug and alcohol addiction that had plagued him since he was a teenager. "He was crying in the car, saying, 'Mom, I'm so sorry,'" she recalled. When Cunningham arrived at the secure detention facility, he told nurses he had used both alcohol and narcotics within the past eight hours, records show. Cunningham also suffered from a heart condition known as Wolff-Parkinson White syndrome something that should have been in his Department of Corrections medical file, considering that it was diagnosed while he served prison time for his underlying felony gun charge just a couple of years earlier. The nurses decided Cunningham should be monitored for 72 hours to be sure he did not show signs of drug or alcohol withdrawal, according to an internal memo of the district attorney's investigation obtained by the Journal Sentinel. For those who have used drugs, monitoring consists of checking vital signs every four hours. One of the instructions for alcohol monitoring states: "Send to ER via ambulance if convulsions/seizures occur." But no one checked on Cunningham, even after his cellmate pressed the emergency button, according to records released by the Department of Corrections in response to an open recordsrequest. The records, which focus on the actions of jailers, do not say whether Cunningham was evaluated by a doctor or nurse earlier in the night. The records also do not say whether nurses or jailers were aware of Cunningham's heart condition, which can cause irregular heartbeat. Department of Corrections spokeswoman Joy Staab said medical records from past prison stays, which are stored at Dodge Correctional Institute in Waupun, generally are transferred to the secure detention facility within 24 to 48 hours. Cunningham died within 20 hours of arriving at the institution. Citing medical confidentiality laws, the department would not release Cunningham's medical records or documents that would show whether nurses checked his vital signs between his arrival at the secure detention facility and his death. Staab would not say whether the checks were done. Christopher Poulos, an assistant medical examiner who resigned in 2012 amid controversy in another custody death case, ruled Cunningham's death an accidental cocaine overdose, and the case was closed. But an autopsy showed that all the drugs in Cunningham's system were "residual leftovers, almost in trace amounts," said Werner Spitz, a pathologist who reviewed it at the request of the Journal Sentinel. Alcohol withdrawal is a much more likely cause, said Spitz, co-author of "Medicolegal Investigation of Death," considered the "medical examiners' bible." There is a possibility Cunningham could have been saved if he would have gotten to the hospital quickly, Spitz said. Cunningham's mother still can't comprehend what happened. "I brought my son to his death, thinking they would help him, and they didn't. I have to live with that for the rest of my life," she said. "I can't wrap my brain around it that there's no accountability." Dementia And Repeated Falls In the Milwaukee County Jail, 75-year-old Valentin Vazquez-Torres fell or was found on the floor eight times in less than four months, one of them following a confrontation with a guard. After the last fall, jail staff decided to restrain Vazquez-Torres, who suffered from dementia stemming from Parkinson's disease, for his own safety. They didn't know it, but by then, he already had sustained the brain injury that would later kill him. After his arrest in late 2009, Vazquez-Torres was housed in the infirmary at Dodge Correctional Institution in Waupun for more than five months, according to court records. He was transferred to the jail in February 2010. Between then and May 23, 2010, he fell five times. Then, on May 26, Vazquez-Torres and correctional officer Theodore D. Robinson got into a tug-of-war with a linen cart. At first, Robinson pulled on the cart as Vazquez-Torres tried to drag it into his cell. When the prisoner made a fist, the officer backed off and the prisoner brought the cart into the cell, according to Robinson's report. "After Vazquez-Torres was in his cell, I went to the cell to retrieve the container but Vazquez-Torres grabbed it and wouldn't let go, so I began backing out of the cell with the container," the officer's report says. "As I was backing out of the cell, I briefly looked behind me so I wouldn't trip over the chair Vazquez-Torres had put by the door and when I turned back to face Vazquez-Torres, he was laying on the floor moaning as if he was in pain." No one questioned Robinson's account, records show, and his behavior was not the subject of an internal affairs investigation, he confirmed in a brief interview with the Journal Sentinel. Medical staff at the jail thought the prisoner was fine, but an X-ray revealed he had a broken hip, so he was hospitalized for surgery. Vazquez-Torres, on parole for a homicide in Puerto Rico and awaiting trial on charges of first-degree child sexual assault and kidnapping, was back in the jail infirmary within 10 days of his operation, records show. His first day there, June 5, 2010, a corrections officer found him on the floor. Because of his mental condition and the fact that he was not fluent in English, Vazquez-Torres could not explain what had happened. Again, medical staffers concluded he was OK. Two days later, he fell again. This time, he hit his head on the wall. Officials put him back in his bunk, using soft restraints to keep him there. The next morning, Vazquez-Torres was scheduled to appear in court, where prosecutors planned to dismiss the case because his dementia rendered him unable to understand the charges or assist in his defense. Before the hearing, a nurse checked Vazquez-Torres' vital signs. Instead of sending him to court, she called an ambulance. Doctors found a subdural hematoma, a serious injury that occurred when his head struck the wall the day before. On June 10, his family removed him from life support, and Vazquez-Torres died. "The question it raises is: Why do you have these people in prison in the first place?" asked Ronald H. Aday, author of "Aging Prisoners: Crisis in American Corrections." "He needed to be in a more sheltered type of environment," Aday said of Vazquez-Torres. "What he needed to be in is a dementia unit somewhere." His case could have been an opportunity to improve training or to change policies to better protect people suffering from dementia in the future, considering that there will be more of them in custody as baby boomers age, according to Aday, a gerontology professor at Middle Tennessee State University. "Some of them have done things they deserve to be there," he said. "But we still have to provide health care for them and keep them safe, because that's the law, too. There's a mandate to provide a safe environment." The sheriff's office conducted an investigation and concluded Vazquez-Torres' death "does not appear to be criminal in nature." After the medical examiner ruled the death an accident, Detective Todd A. Rosenstein ended his investigation. He sent his reports to an investigator in the district attorney's office "for review." No charges were issued, and the prosecutor did not write a letter to Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke, Jr. explaining that decision, according to Deputy District Attorney James J. Martin. Clarke's spokeswoman, Fran McLaughlin, said officials at the Sheriff's Department do not evaluate medical decision-making as part of their death investigations. The state Department of Corrections, via the office of the state jail inspector, looks into every death at the jail and House of Correction, McLaughlin said. She did not provide a copy of the inspection completed after Vazquez-Torres' death. Chief Proposes New Procedures Of the 10 people who died after their medical or psychiatric conditions were improperly monitored or left untreated, Vazquez-Torres and four others were held under the jurisdiction of the Milwaukee County sheriff's office. Another person, James Perry, died on the floor of the county jail as Milwaukee police attempted to transfer him to the sheriff's custody. Perry, an epileptic, died six hours after suffering a seizure in the Milwaukee police lockup on Sept. 13, 2010. Police brought Perry to Aurora Sinai Medical Center. Doctors and nurses gave him medicine and told police to bring him back to the station even though he could not walk or sit up on his own. Officers disagreed with the medical staff, but a lieutenant said they had no choice but to comply. After returning to the lockup, officers held Perry down for 15 minutes while they searched for paperwork, put a spit hood over his head and left him in a cell for more than an hour. They then escorted him to the county jail. His death was ruled a heart attack, and no one was disciplined. The sheriff's office didn't do an investigation, saying Perry was never in their custody. In response to a civil suit filed by Perry's family, attorneys for the sheriff's office said nurses at the jail did everything they were supposed to do, evaluating Perry's condition and calling for help because he was too sick to be taken to a cell, documents say. Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn, as a result of a Journal Sentinel investigation into Perry's death, proposed new procedures regarding medical care for prisoners. Under the new rules, if officers disagree with a doctor's decision to discharge a prisoner, a supervisor is required to go to the hospital and discuss the situation with medical staff. If the disagreement persists, higher ranking police officials join the conversation. Also under the new rules, officers no longer bring sick prisoners back to the city lockup after a hospital visit, since the city facility is not required by state law to have medical personnel on staff. Instead, they go directly to the county jail, which employs doctors and nurses. But medical staffing shortages and lack of supervision for inmate health care have plagued the jail for years. Medical Request System 'Broken' In 2001, Milwaukee County settled a lawsuit with inmates who alleged that overcrowding and poor health care in the county jail violated their civil rights. As a result, the jail and House of Correction were placed under court supervision with the goal of complying with national standards. More than a decade later, it hasn't happened. In May, after years of bickering between Clarke and the County Board, Milwaukee County Circuit Judge William Brash III ordered the county to enter into an emergency $8.9 million contract with Armor Correctional Health Services. The agency has been given one year to try to fix long-term problems with virtually all areas of medical care and mental health care at the two facilities, as well as staffing shortages and poor record keeping. An August report from Shansky, the court-appointed monitor for the facilities, said the system for inmates to request medical assistance was "by and large broken." Inmates who wanted to see a doctor were supposed to fill out a slip and drop it in a box, but the boxes were not labeled and no one regularly picked up all the slips. When Shansky visited the jail in summer 2013, one of the boxes "was predominantly filled with trash and at the bottom was a grievance submission from April 2012," he wrote. No one kept track of how long it took sick prisoners to see a doctor, Shansky's report says. Prisoners who had medical problems when they got to the jail were supposed to see a doctor or nurse practitioner within three days, but often did not. Up to 80% of inmates with dental appointments were not brought to on-site clinics. The prisoners who did get there tended to have their teeth pulled rather than fixed. Nurses performed exams that should have been done by doctors. Shansky's review also found numerous problems with managing chronic health problems. For example, an inmate with epilepsy went without monitoring for more than three months. He was finally seen by a medical practitioner after he had a seizure in custody. Health care providers at the jail and House of Correction did not have access to medical records from other facilities a problem that came to the county's attention almost 15 years ago after attorney Paul Schilling died in the jail after being transferred from Dane County without his medical records or prescription medication. In his report, Shansky noted that Armor already had filled many key positions that had been vacant for months or years, including medical director and chief psychiatrist. The county finally seems to be on the right track, Shansky wrote, but still has "a long way to go." Wade Daley, the health services administrator hired by Armor to oversee the two facilities, would not answer questions about whether conditions have improved in the months since Shansky's report was issued. A representative from the Miami-based public relations firm Everett Clay Associates, which represents Armor, also did not answer questions. In a high-profile case that was settled last year, Armor which has contracts at jails and prisons in at least five other states paid $800,000 to the family of a dead Florida inmate whose family claimed its employees missed the signs of a fatal stroke. Appearance Of Bias Both the sheriff's office and the Police Department investigate their own employees when inmates die. That can pose a conflict of interest or create an appearance of bias in favor of the officers, experts said. "There's no outside oversight of many police departments around the country," said Lindsay M. Hayes, a project director at the nonprofit National Center on Institutions and Alternatives. "If there's a death in police custody, there is nobody saying, 'We need to come in and investigate.'" Some departments, which Hayes considers "very proactive," ask an outside agency to review custody deaths. At the state Department of Corrections, that's standard procedure, according to Staab. In Cunningham's case, officials at the secure detention facility called in the Milwaukee police. But the Corrections Department also did its own review, and then deemed Cunningham's cellmate a liar because he didn't use the exact same words with police as he did with corrections officials. Further, the Milwaukee police did not question Suttle, the sergeant who answered the emergency button, according to police reports. Only the Corrections Department did. In his written reports, Suttle did not mention the exchange with Washington over the intercom. When internal investigators asked him about it, Suttle said Washington gave him no reason to summon help. "One of the inmates in the cell called and said that something was wrong with his cellie. He said that his cellmate was snoring loud," Suttle told the investigators. "I said, 'He's snoring?' He said, 'Yeah, he's been snoring for a while.' I asked if he had woken him up. He said that he had been snoring for a while. Something to that effect." He added that inmates at the Secure Detention Facility press the button for myriad reasons that have nothing to do with medical emergencies. "To ask what time it is," he said. "To ask when the lights can be turned off. To ask if they are going to court the next day. To ask if they can get water. Every once in a while to say that something is wrong." Washington, meanwhile, was questioned by both police and corrections. First, he spoke with police, telling them about Cunningham's seizure and Suttle's failure to send help, records say. By the time Suttle told Washington to go back to bed, Cunningham had stopped shaking "but continued to make a gurgling noise," which Washington thought was snoring, he told Milwaukee police detective Shannon Lewandowski. After talking with Lewandowski, Washington was placed in "the hole," a solitary cell used to punish disruptive prisoners, and left there for two or three days, he told the Journal Sentinel. "That really messed everything up. It was terrible," recalled Washington, who has since been released from custody and lives in Milwaukee. "That's somewhere you don't want to be, especially in circumstances like that: Being in a room with a man that died, then being in a room by yourself where you've got nothing to do but think about it." After Washington was released from solitary, corrections officials questioned him, he said. "They were trying to make it seem like I was lying about what I told the (Milwaukee police) detectives," Washington said. According to reports, Washington told both agencies Cunningham had a seizure. But during a second interview, corrections Capt. Robert Miller accused Washington of being "untruthful" because he had used different words to describe the symptoms, according to a transcript. "How do you explain the inconsistencies with what you told me and what you told MPD?" Miller asked. "I am sorry man," Washington said. "I am not trying to lie or get in trouble or anything. He was gasping for air. I was looking for the right words to use. I don't know the difference between gasping and wheezing. I am sorry." Based on that, Miller concluded Washington had changed his story despite the fact that Bowman, the third cellmate, backed him up. "Washington is not a credible person and his statements involving the entire incident should be viewed as such," Miller concluded. He deemed the personnel investigation "inconclusive." Miller could not be reached directly and did not respond to a telephone message left with his mother. Suttle, who was not disciplined, did not respond to a certified letter sent to his home. He retired in July 2012, according to the Corrections Department. Policy On Emergency Button At the time of Cunningham's death, the Department of Corrections did not have a policy regarding what to do when a prisoner pressed the emergency button, according to the district attorney's internal memo. "That's a problem," said Hayes, who helps jail and prison administrators train staff and develop policies for preventing inmate deaths. "In most jails, inmates are instructed not to push those buttons unless there is a reason to do so. If an inmate calls on the button and says my cellmate is having a seizure, there should be a policy about what to do about that. They should go and respond to the emergency call button. Or they could simply make a call to the medical staff and say, 'There's a seizure, please investigate.'" After Cunningham's death, Donna Goelz, supervisor of the health services unit, told the district attorney's office nurses would begin screening arriving prisoners with breathalyzers. In addition, she planned to post notices on the cell doors of inmates who needed extra medical attention, she said. Department of Corrections officials said the breathalyzers are currently in use, but the plan for cell door postings was not implemented. Staff at the detention facility also planned to institute a policy on how to properly respond to inmates who pressed the emergency button, Security Director Steven Johnson told the district attorney's office. Asked for a copy of the new policy, corrections spokeswoman Staab provided a memo Johnson issued to his security staff six weeks after Cunningham's death. "While many times inmates use the intercom buttons for non-emergencies we must answer each one like it is an emergency," Johnson wrote. "When it does appear there may be an emergency situation, remember time is critical." According to the one-page memo, an officer must go to the cell every time an inmate presses the button. The officer then evaluates whether to call a health care worker or an emergency response team. The memo goes on to say that the initial officer should stay with the inmate until additional help arrives. Lastly, it reminds officers of the importance of documentation. Not responding to a medical crisis is a clear violation of civil rights, according to Fred Cohen, a retired law professor who has served as a federal monitor in prisoner civil rights cases. "They're helpless," he said of sick prisoners. "They can't get their own medical care. They can't fend for themselves. You're their guardian. You have to protect them from others and from themselves and provide medical care." Advertisement Professor Green was subjected to a tirade of vile abuse from Britain First supporters in Rochdale after he accused the controversial far-right group of 'inciting hatred' over the town's grooming scandal. The award-winning rapper, 34, faced off against Britain First deputy leader Jayda Fransen in a fiery argument as the 31-year-old led supporters chanting 'no surrender to the P*** scum' in shocking scenes filmed as part of a Channel 4 documentary, White Working Class Men. Professor Green, who grew up on a council estate before finding fame at 21, was targeted by demonstrators who shouted: 'Why are you defending rapists?,' prompting him to shout back that he would 'never defend rapists'. In the explosive scene in last night's show, Professor Green approaches Fransen questioning whether she thinks their controversial display 'incites hatred'. 'It makes sense to us to say don't build a mosque on every corner of our Christian country,' she tells the presenter, before adding: 'I am here because I want these Pakistani Muslims to get their filthy hands off of our kids.' Tension: When Professor Green accuses Britain First Deputy Leader Jayda Fransen of 'inciting hatred', the 31-year-old campaigner passionately defends her right to march through the streets of Rochdale - and her supporters begin to jeer the 34-year-old rapper Britain First supporters in Rochdale, filmed by Professor Green for his Channel 4 documentary White Working Class Men last July. The rap star was verbally attacked by those who heard his confrontation with Ms Fransen JAYDA FRANSEN: WHO IS BRITAIN FIRST'S DEPUTY LEADER Britain First Deputy Leader Jayda Fransen The 31-year-old German-born Deputy Leader of Britain First has been an integral part of the controversial far-right organisation since it was formed in 2011. Residing in London, Fransen describes herself as a full-time activist and, in November 2017, stepped in to cover leader Paul Golding's role while he addresses 'family issues'. Fransen made headlines when Donald Trump re-tweeted a video posted by her alongside other messages, something which was condemned by Prime Minister Theresa May. Advertisement Last night saw the first episode in the two-part series examine how white working class men in underprivileged areas have been failed by society. Professor Green followed six young men from across the country for six months in the examination of a social class that often feels 'alienated', 'abandoned' and 'disaffected'. After the dramatic exchange with Fransen, he said the people attending the rally were looking to blame migrants for a wider class issue: 'The country has not been very kind to you and that's not the fault of anyone Muslim or foreign person. It's a class problem it's not a race problem.' When Green challenges Fransen's offending statements he is targeted by the increasingly angry surrounding group who accuse him of 'defending rapists'. He is seen firing back: 'I would never defend a rapist. I am white working class. I haven't come here to call names, so don't tell me what I am.' Professor Green real name Stephen Manderson - who was raised by his grandmother on a London council estate before making his fortune in music shed light on the struggles they faced, admitting the future is 'bleak'. Figures reveal just 10 per cent of white boys from disadvantaged backgrounds in the UK go on to higher education compared to 40 per cent for the rest of the country. Funds needed to study are thought to be behind the shocking statistic, with the average graduate currently leaving university around 50,000 poorer. The controversial topic divided viewers on Twitter however, the majority agreed rappers' coverage of the controversial topic had been 'articulate' and applauded his efforts. One wrote: 'What a really well articulated, balanced and compassionate documentary'. Another agreed adding: 'Very interesting insight, good work here #professorgreen'. An angry far right-wing supporter heckles the rap star as he asks why the group condemns all Muslims for the crimes of a small group of men Professor Green confronted far right group Britain First in a new documentary about white working class men As an outnumbered Professor Green is shouted at more of the protesters in Rochdale, his team decide to deescalate the situation by leaving the march Hundreds of people took to the streets of Rochdale for the rally in July 2017, which Professor Green's crew filmed after one of the stars of his new Channe 4 documentary, David, expressed an interest in far-right politics The documentary divided opinion among viewers with some classing it a difficult watch while others said it was an important subject When the rapper tells the men and women gathered that he's filming a programme about white working class men, he is accused of being 'a bit racist' The rap artist approached the group leader Jayda Fransen to ask if she believed she was inciting hate during a demonstration in Rochdale THE ROCHDALE GROOMING CASE: HOW 12 MEN TERRORISED TEENAGE GIRLS Twelve men were prosecuted for sex trafficking, rape, trafficking and engaging in sexual activity with a child. The abuse occurred between 2004 and 2009 and the men were sent to trial in 2012. Nine were convicted, of them eight were of British-Pakistani origin and one an Afghan asylum seeker. Three were not convicted. Shabir Ahmed, 63, was the ringleader of a child sex exploitation ring, grooming girls as young as 13 for sex in Rochdale and Bolton. He was given a 19-year sentence for conspiracy, two rapes, aiding and abetting rape, sexual assault and sex trafficking. Taxi driver Abdul Aziz, 41, was sentenced to nine years for conspiracy and nine years, concurrently, for trafficking for sexual exploitation. Kabeer Hassan, 25, was sentenced to nine years for rape and conspiracy. Taxi driver Abdul Huk was found guilty of sexual activity with a child and was jailed for four years. Freddy Kendukumana, was convicted of rape and sexual activity with a minor and jailed for eight and a half years. Roheez Khan was convicted of sexual activity with a minor and witness intimidation and jailed for 6 and a half years. Greater Manchester Police and the Crown Prosecution Service came under fire for how they handled reported claims of rape and abuse and have since apologised. Advertisement Viewers were quick to congratulate the rapper on his 'articulate' coverage of the subject 'They feel abandoned': Professor Green exposes how society FAILS white working class men in the UK including a 20-year-old whos jobless, illiterate and living in a hostel For the documentary Green spent six months in different parts on the country, in an attempt to understand the challenges young men in poor working class backgrounds face in life including education and work. Green, who was married to socialite Millie Mackintosh, said he decided to make the two-part series after learning that working class men are the least likely social group to achieve five GCSEs or go to university. Figures reveal just 10 per cent of white boys from disadvantaged backgrounds in the UK go on to higher education compared to 40 per cent for the rest of the country. Funds needed to study are thought to be behind the shocking statistic, with the average graduate currently leaving university around 50,000 poorer. Rap artist Professor Green, aka Stephen Manderson, followed six white men from underprivileged backgrounds living in the UK for his new Channel 4 documentary The 34-year-old rap star, who was discovered aged 21, grew up in Hackney on a council estate with his nan, after his mother walked out on him at 16 People have fewer aspirations, Green told Sally Weale at The Guardian. From the areas I went to for the documentary, there seems to be a real lack of drive and belief in them being able to achieve anything, and theres an acceptance of that. The first episode sees him spending time learning about the lives of three young men, including self-styled Essex boy Denzil, right-wing sympathiser David, and Lewis, a smartly-suited teenager hoping to defy his upbringing and make it to Cambridge University. Green says it wasn't easy coming face-to-face with the realities of life for many young men in the UK. He explains: 'There was nothing that really surprised me. There were things that I thought were unfortunate, there were things that I thought were really sad.' The rapper followed the six men featured in the two-part documentary for Channel 4 for six months and was privy to how they perceived both their backgrounds and their futures David, 20, from Bolton: Orphaned at 15, illiterate, and living in a hostel David, from Bolton, can't read or write and was orphaned at just 15 when his parents died of health conditions within weeks of each other Unable to read or write, David from Bolton admits his prospects are bleak. He lost his father and his mother just weeks apart when he was 15 and is seen in the documentary going to his father's graveside to plant flowers. Left in the hands of the care system, he now lives in a hostel, can't find work because he can't read or writer and has little ambition for the future - although he hopes to 'meet someone and settle down and have children'. David takes Professor Green to visit his father's grave; later in the show he reveals how he sympathises with right-wing organisations because he struggles to get work Hopes and dreams: David says he'd love to settle down and have a family of his own Green said hearing David's story was 'hard' particularly because he couldn't read and write When Professor Green attends a Britain First rally with David and his friends, he faces animosity from a baying crowd after he questions their views. The star said of the rally: 'It was horrible, I hated every minute of it. I was really reluctant to go. But I felt as though I wouldnt be doing my job properly if I didnt. 'I suppose when people dont have anything, the only thing they feel they have is their whiteness. Theyre angry, their lives arent great, and theres someone they can blame for it.' Professor Green says: 'Finding out that David had missed out on two housing opportunities because he was illiterate, and he had no-one to read the letters to him, because hed lost his mum and his dad. That was hard.' Advertisement Professor Green, who himself grew up on a Hackney Council estate and didn't pass any of his GCSEs, hopes the programme will spark more debate about the underachieving of white, working class males in the UK. Living with his nan after his mother left at the age of 16, Professor Green describes in the documentary how he was the only white boy in his East London class. The star says that he feels 'lucky' to have experienced a working class upbringing despite the riches that have come his way since he shot to fame at 21 after being discovered by a record label. In an interview to accompany the series, Professor Green admits that money has changed his life but says he remains working class at the core. He says: 'My lifes changed substantially because of the money that Ive made, but Im not from money, Im not wealthy. Wealth isnt in my family, thats not going to change. Im still working class. 'My children? I dont know. I hope theyll have the same values as me, but do I want them to be working class? I dont know.' 'All they have is their whiteness': The star attended the beginning of a Britain First rally and 'hated every minute of it' after he clashed with members of the controversial group Denzil: Self-styled Canvey Island wide boy who dreams of big money - by almost any means A modern-day Del Boy, Denzil wants to get rich quick and will try anything to make money, including working as a male escort and selling sex aids. Denzil, from Canvey Island, has tried working as an escort and selling sex aids to make money - and Professor Green joins him as he tries to get his latest venture off the ground - a pop-up rave The star has revealed that he found himself dealing drugs after he'd sell cannabis on to friends to pay for his share - only for the money-making scheme to escalate Professor Green follows him on his latest venture, as he attempts to put on a rave, encouraging people from London to travel east for a night of fun. He admits that there will be people in the building selling drugs but says he 'leaves all that alone'. The Essex boy turned entrepreneur will stop at nothing to bring in the bacon, but Professor Green wonders how responsible he's being, with a young daughter to provide for. Advertisement Working Class White Men, a two-part documentary, starts on Channel 4 on Tuesday 9 January at 10pm She has just waved Princess Charlotte off for her first day at nursery, marked with an adorable portrait on the steps of Kensington Palace. And the Duchess of Cambridge had more reason to celebrate today as she marked her 36th birthday at home in London. Kate, who is pregnant with her third child, turns 36 today and is understood to be celebrating 'privately' at home with her family. The mother-of-two, whose third child with William is due in April, is reportedly spending her special day with a party of eight before she officially resumes her royal duties tomorrow. This is likely to include Prince Harry and Meghan, who has just moved into his Nottingham Cottage home on the palace grounds. Scroll down for video Family time: Kate, who is pregnant with her third child, turns 36 today and is understood to be celebrating 'privately' at home with her family at Kensington Palace Home comforts: The mother-of-two, whose third child with William is due in April, is reportedly spending her special day with a party of eight before she officially resumes royal duties A Kensington Palace spokesperson confirmed Kate was celebrating 'privately', while a source told the Daily Star Online: 'Catherine has got a small birthday party of eight today. 'But she is not drinking any alcohol and she is being careful with her food too. It will be quite a low key party.' Kate has just returned from Sandringham where the Royal family, who were enjoying an extended Christmas break, attended a church service with the Queen over the weekend. The glowing Duchess, who spent her 35th birthday at Amner Hall in Norfolk, showcased her bump in a longline brown tweed coat paired with leather gloves and a furry hat. Her sister Pippa Matthews and brother-in-law James, who also joined at Sandringham, are likely to drop by today as they live just a stone's throw away in Chelsea. Kate has just returned from Sandringham where the Royal family, who were enjoying an extended Christmas break, attended a church service with the Queen over the weekend (Kate pictured at church on Christmas Day) Like brother, like sister! This week saw Charlotte (left) start at Willcocks Nursery School, two years after her brother George started at Westacre Montessori nursery (right) On Monday, Princess Charlotte's first day at nursery school was marked by the release of two pictures taken by her proud mother. The two-year-old, who is fourth in line to the throne, was photographed at Kensington Palace before travelling to 3,000-a-term Willcocks Nursery School. Kate is a keen and accomplished amateur photographer who last year accepted a lifetime honorary membership of the Royal Photographic Society which recognised her "talent and enthusiasm". Her older brother Prince George attended the Westacre Montessori School in Norfolk, starting in January 2016, as it was close to Anmer Hall where the family was then based. Paris Hilton is getting called out on Twitter after sending a message of support for Time's Up, which many have deemed hypocritical. The heiress, 36, took to the platform on Monday to share a glamorous photo of herself in a black dress, with the hashtags '#LadyinBlack' and '#TimesUp'. On Sunday, attendees at the Golden Globes donned the same color in order to side with victims of sexual harassment and back the Time's Up initiative, which sets up a legal defense fund and advocates for safer workplaces as well as gender parity. Message: Paris Hilton took to Twitter on Monday to share a glamorous photo of herself in a black dress, with the hashtags '#LadyinBlack' and '#TimesUp' Backlash: The heiress, 36, is getting called out on Twitter for her message, which many have deemed hypocritical due to an interview she gave in August Many people were left unconvinced by Paris' attempt to back the movement due to an interview she gave in August, in which she claimed the women who have accused Donald Trump of sexual misconduct have done so only to gain celebrity and attention. Paris once worked as a model as part of Trump's agency, T Management. This summer, she defended the commander-in-chief against allegations of sexual assault, and brushed off his 'grab them by the p***y' tape. 'I've heard guys say the craziest things ever, because I'm always around guys, and I listen to them speak,' she told Marie Claire about the Access Hollywood tape. Not convinced: Many Twitter users brought up the interview in which Paris told Marie Claire the women who have accused Donald Trump of sexual misconduct are doing it for fame They remember: People were prompt to point out Paris' support of Time's Up seemed contradictory in light of her previous comments Called out: One person deemed Paris' message an 'attempt to fit on' and told the heiress she wasn't believable In the same interview, Paris commented on the women who have come forward against Trump. Their number had grown to 21 by December 2017. The White House has denied any wrongdoing on Trump's part. 'I think that they are just trying to get attention and get fame,' she said of the accusers. Twitter users were prompt to bring up the Marie Claire interview in response to Paris' Time's Up tweet. 'Didn't you say that the women that accused trump of harassment just did it for attention? But now you support #metoo? Go away,' one person told the heiress. Others called her a 'hypocrite', while someone else added: 'Why did you call all of Trumps accusers liars? Please go away forever.' 'People remember the things you've said and aren't believing your attempt to fit in,' another person wrote. 'You said Trump accusers were in it for fame. Own your errors or take several seats,' one Twitter user chimed in. While many people claimed Paris had voted for Trump, the socialite told Marie Claire in August she didn't vote at all during the last presidential election. Sofia Richie really took the plunge into her new role as a beauty brand spokesmodel. In November, the 19-year-old was named as the new face of Nip + Fab, replacing former campaign star Kylie Jenner, and the skincare company has just debuted her first campaign, sharing the images exclusively with DailyMail.com. In the images, Sofia wears a very low-cut suit jacket with nothing underneath and holds a variety of Nip+Fab products. Scroll down for video Plunging in: Sofia Richie stars in her first campaign for skincare brand Nip + Fab Faves: he 19-year-old shows off a few choice products in the images How low can you go? Sofia wore a very revealing Elizabeth and James jacket, closing the zipper at a single point just below her chest Sofia kept it simple but skin-baring for the shoot, wearing black Elizabeth and James slacks and a matching calf -length suit jacket, also by the brand. The $475 coat features a long zipper up the front, which Sofia wore fastened only at one point, just below her chest. Her hair was worn back with a few wispy pieces hanging around her face, and she was accessorized with only cold earrings and two necklaces, which feature her first and last names. Her make-up was understated, too that is, except for one shot, in which she sported a dark purple lip. The shoot took place at the Bulgari Hotel in London in mid-November, just as her partnership with the brand was announced. At the time, she was spotted leaving the launch and photoshoot, carrying a small black bag. She also took time to pose for pictures with Maria Hatzistefanis, founder of Nip + Fab's parent company Rodial. Lady: Her makeup was mostly understated for the shoot, with nude lipstick, mascara, and highligher Pumped: 'It was really exciting for me that they wanted to work with me,' she said of her partnership with the brand Hello: Maria Hatzistefanis, founder of Nip + Fab's parent company Rodial, said she first saw Sofia at New York Fashion Week last year and thought she was cool Fan: 'She has an edge and great confidence for her age. I love the way that she is so natural with her skin,' Hatzistefanis said of Sofia 'I'm loving her style,' Hatzistefanis said, according to WWD. 'She has an edge and great confidence for her age. 'I love the way that she is so natural with her skin. She has beautiful skin and her makeup is dewy, but very natural. I feel this embodies the Nip + Fab's philosophy.' The pair met at New York Fashion Week last February, and Hatzistefanis was struck by Sofia. 'I looked at her like, "Oh my god who is this girl? She's so cool,"' she said. 'She had this kind of air of being someone special. That evening, I saw her again at the Alexander Wang show sitting front row. I found her from stalking her Instagram.' Sofia told the Daily Front Row that she'd been a fan of the brand for years when she was approached. 'It was really exciting for me that they wanted to work with me,' she said. 'I haven't always been into makeup, but over the years, from working, I kind of got into it. I've been in clothes-driven campaigns this was all about my face, skin, and hair. Moving on: Sofia replaced Kylie Jenner as the spokesmodel for the brand Something special: The model is also currently dating Scott Disick, the ex-boyfriend of Kylie's older sister Kourtney, with whom he has three children The simple life: Sofia has also taken to promoting skincare products on Instagram Flashback: The shoot took place in London in November, after which she attended a launch party for the collaboration 'Usually, I'm having to show off the clothes on my body rather than what's on my face.' Surprisingly, Sofia also admitted that it was her dad Lionel Richie, not her mom, that got her into skincare. '[At 13], I got my first pimple and my dad pulled me aside and was like, "I think it's that time in your life when you're going to need to take care of your skin,"' she said. 'My dad's a complete skin freak. He probably masks and goes to the dermatologist more than I do. 'Considering I wear make-up and he's always around my sisters who work in the same industry and always wearing make-up, he's always told us to clean our skin as much as we can and definitely don't sleep in your make-up! He would literally disown me if I did that,' she went on. The launch of the campaign kicks off what looks set to be a busy 2018 for Sofia, who rang in the New Year alongside her boyfriend Scott Disick, the ex of former Nip + Fab spokesmodel Kylie's sister Kourtney, with whom he has three children. A former Marine turned model has revealed men have offered to pay her for 'private photos' and have even proposed to her after seeing her sultry snapsbut her policy is to ignore such inquiries. Shannon Ihrke, 29, from Minnesota, went viral when her bikini and modelling pictures started trending online. The gorgeous blonde joined the military aged 19 and served on active duty for four years but has since formed a career as a full-time model. Scroll down for video Posing: Shannon Ihrke, 29, from Minnesota, is a former Marine who enlisted aged 19 years old and served on active duty for four years. She has since formed a career as a full-time model Sultry: The model, who worked as an administrative specialist in the forces, sizzled in a new photo shoot, which shows her posing in a black lace lingerie ensemble Audience: Shannon now has 73,000 followers on Instagram and shares with them pictures from her bikini and lingerie shoots as well as candid photos of her life at home Reactions: Her newfound online fame means Shannon (pictured center in her Marine uniform) sometimes receives attention in unexpected ways She now has 73,000 followers on Instagram and shares with them pictures from her bikini and lingerie shoots as well as candid photos of her life at home. Her newfound online fame means Shannon sometimes receives attention in unexpected ways. 'You get those guys who will offer you money for their own "private photos" or marriage proposals, but I just ignore them and sometimes just laugh them off,' she said. 'I model because it's something I love to do, it's not to get money or marriage proposals from men. I've even had people I've never met say they want to fly me places. That's never going to happen, I've seen the movie Taken before. 'I simply enjoy exploring my modelling range and working with some incredibly talented artists and trying to help others along the way. ' Not her thing: 'You get those guys who will offer you money for their own "private photos" or marriage proposals, but I just ignore them and sometimes just laugh them off,' Shannon said Making her motives clear: Shannon said she models because she loves doing it, 'not to get money or marriage proposals from men' Approach: 'I simply enjoy exploring my modelling range and working with some incredibly talented artists and trying to help others along the way,' she added Goal: The former Marine (pictured left in her uniform and right in an archive shot) now wants to 'show girls that they can do and be whoever they want to be if they work at it hard enough' The former Marine has in the past detailed how she had to prove herself after joining the forces, because some people thought she wouldn't be able to keep up with the rigorous regimen. Now, she wants to show others that they shouldn't let outside opinions define them. Her greatest pleasure is receiving messages from people who deem her an inspiration. 'I want to show girls that they can do and be whoever they want to be if they work at it hard enough,' she said. The model, who worked as an administrative specialist in the forces, sizzled in a new photo shoot, which shows her posing in a variety of outfits, including a burgundy bodysuit with a plunging neckline, and a black lace lingerie ensemble. She relishes the process of getting ready for a photo session, and to showcase the more sensual aspect of her persona. 'I love getting my hair and make-up done! What girls doesn't want to be pampered once in a while? Doing shoots like these give me an opportunity to let another side of me come out,' she added. 'Being able to explore that sexy side of me is fun to do once in a while, and I think every woman deserves to have an opportunity to get all done up and treated like a queen. 'When the shoots are done by professionals and there's a great team of creative energy, it allows you to comfortably enjoy bringing out that inner sultry side.' Multi-faceted: Shannon relishes the process of getting ready for a photo session, and to showcase the more sensual aspect of her persona Process: 'When the shoots are done by professionals and there's a great team of creative energy, it allows you to comfortably enjoy bringing out that inner sultry side,' she said Revealing: Shannon explained that doing photo shoots such as this one gives her a chance to let 'another side' of her personality come out Past: Shannon previously deemed joining the Marine Corps the best decision of her life, and said it made her smarter, faster, and stronger Life: After joining the forces, Shannon became a Sergeant, and thanks to the G.I. Bill, which provides educational help to veterans, she earned a Bachelor's degree in Science Journey: 'I owe the Marine Corps my life, hands down,' she said. 'It gave me a reason to wake up, push myself, set goals, and to push myself even harder when things got tough' Shannon previously deemed joining the Marine Corps the best decision of her life, and said it made her smarter, faster, and stronger. 'I pushed my body harder than I could have ever imagined and I learned to remain calm and collected in the mist of chaos. I became part of something that was bigger than myself and I loved it,' she said. The former Marine further detailed what motivated her to join the forces, adding: 'Some Marines fight for our politicians, but most, do not. We fight for our families, our friends, and most of allfor our brothers and sisters to the left and right of us in uniform. We join for the people that fought before us, the people that will fight after us, and even the ignorant people that dont know how to be quiet when our National Anthem plays.' Shannon added that she believes the Marines are 'the president's own' and said: 'That's something that no one can ever take away from us.' After joining the forces, Shannon became a Sergeant, traveled, and thanks to the G.I. Bill, which provides educational help to veterans, she earned a Bachelor's degree in Science from Elmhurst College. 'I owe the Marine Corps my life, hands down,' she said. 'It gave me a reason to wake up, push myself, set goals, and to push myself even harder when things got tough. 'Had I not had other dreams I still wanted to accomplish in my life I would have re-enlisted without hesitation... And although I am no longer on active duty, I will always bleed green.' Looking back: Shannon also previously explained how as a female Marine, she had to 'work twice as hard' in order for men to treat her like their equal Memories: 'A lot of the Marines initially thought that I might not be able to keep up physically, or that I somehow wasn't "as strong" as them,' the model said Message: Shannon detailed how she established her reputation, adding: 'I came in guns blazing in order to show that I wasn't someone that could be pushed around' Satisfied: The hard work paid off, and Shannon said the camaraderie between her fellow marines was one of the greatest rewards Community: 'You gain a new family when you become a Marine,' Shannon added. You live together, eat together, workout together, hang out in your spare time together' Recognition: Shannon said she ending up feeling 'like one of the guys' and wanted to stand out because she was a 'stellar Marine' Shannon also explained how as a female Marine, she had to 'work twice as hard' in order for men to treat her like their equal. 'A lot of the Marines initially thought that I might not be able to keep up physically, or that I somehow wasn't "as strong" as them so I made it my mission to prove them wrong,' she said. She detailed how she established her reputation, adding: 'I came in guns blazing in order to show that I wasn't someone that could be pushed around, brushed off, or not taken seriously. It was hard but it was also completely necessary.' The hard work paid off, and Shannon said the camaraderie between her fellow marines was one of the greatest rewards. 'You gain a new family when you become a Marine. You live together, eat together, workout together, hang out in your spare time together, fight with each other, and yet you'll still do anything for each other, whether you like each other or not,' she said. Shannon said she ending up feeling 'like one of the guys'. 'I did my best to blend in with the Marines around me, I didn't want to stand out just because I was a female,' she added. 'I wanted to stand out because I was a stellar Marine.' While you may have managed to shave a few dollars off your grocery bill, as soon as you throw cleaning products into the mix of your supermarket trolley then it's easy for the finances to go awry. But now, Jody Allen has revealed how you can clean your entire home using just AUD $3 of cleaning products. The thrifty Queensland-based mother has become famous for cutting her family of four's grocery bill down to just $50 a week - and now she's turned her eagle eye towards cleaning. Here, FEMAIL reveals how you too can make your home sparkling on a budget. Thrifty mother, Jody Allen (pictured), revealed her top tips for cleaning your house using just $3 of cleaning products The Queensland-based mother previously became famous for cutting her family of four's grocery bill down to just $50 a week According to Jody, the average Australian spends around $25 per shop on cleaning products: 'Since I moved to the country a long time ago now, it has totally changed how I view cleaning products,' she wrote on her blog. 'We aren't allowed to put any chemicals down the sink as it will kill our sewerage treatment plant'. This has led the 41-year-old mum to stop buying bleach, chemical sprays and oven cleaners - and instead move over towards more natural products. Detailing her current cleaning cabinet, Jody explained that she has now filled it with soapnuts (pictured) - which she uses for the dishwasher and laundry 'I [also] use lemons to clean my microwave and freshen up the dishwasher's bad breath!,' Jody explained on her blog (stock image) Jody (pictured with her kids) swears by natural products over harsh chemicals and ingredients Jody has a book (pictured), which is out now Detailing her current cleaning cabinet, Jody explained that she has now filled it with soapnuts. This is a dried berry, which, according to Jody 'creates suds and is a great substitute for washing liquid'. 'I [also] use lemons to clean my microwave and freshen up the dishwasher's bad breath!,' she wrote. The thrifty mum admitted she swears by Bicarbonate of soda - the 'fantastic all-round cleaner of just about everything'. She also uses white vinegar for making clothing soft, 'getting whites whiter and general cleaning'. Finally in her cabinet, Jody swears by white salt: 'These simple items will clean, sanitise and freshen your entire home, including the laundry!,' she explained. The thrifty mum admitted she swears by Bicarbonate of soda - the 'fantastic all-round cleaner of just about everything' (stock image) According to Jody, the average Australian spends $25 on cleaning products every time they go shopping (stock image) HOW TO CUT YOUR GROCERY BILL TO $50 * Do a stock take of your kitchen and eat your way through this food first. * Get a plastic container and put all of your vegetables that are close to their use by date inside it; eat them first. * Crunch the numbers, work out a realistic figure for a grocery bill and cut what you don't need. * Look at old fundraiser cookbooks to get simple, delicious meal ideas. * Shop as your grandmother would have done and avoid packaged things. * Embrace alternative shopping methods such as lay-bys, where Ms Allen bought much of her meat. * Grow your own fruit and vegetables. * Download discount apps like Groupon and buy your toiletries there. * Avoid supermarkets as much as possible. * If you do go to supermarkets, forget the middle aisles; you only need the outer aisles. * Make every meal you cook go towards a second in some way. * Think about what you can do today that will make life easier tomorrow; take the meat out of the freezer. * Don't take your kids shopping - they cost you money. Advertisement For those uncertain how and when to use soapnuts, Jody explained that they have myriad purposes. For around three cents per wash, you can use 5-6 dried berries in a sock or small linen bag, put into the washing machine with your dirty washing. Alternatively, the popular blogger said you can use three or four in place of dishwasher tablets. Jody also said the functional dried berry will also make a great addition to your beauty routine: 'Grab five dried soapnuts and three cups of boiling water. Steep the soapnuts in the water for 20 minutes. Allow cooling. Massage the liquid into wet hair and gently run it through,' she wrote. Previously speaking to Daily Mail Australia, Jody revealed her shopping secrets and how exactly she feeds her young family for just $50 a week: 'Avoid the supermarket as much as humanly possible,' she told FEMAIL. 'If you do go to the supermarket, the best thing I can tell you is to avoid the middle aisles. 'Everything you need is on the outer aisles - bread, eggs, milk and vegetables. It's just packaged stuff in the middle.' She also swears by keeping a plastic container in the fridge, which she calls the 'use by container': 'I throw all of the vegetables in there that are approaching their use-by date,' she said. 'I made sure we ate those first, so nothing went to waste.' To read more from Jody Allen, please click here. She also has a book, The $50 Weekly Shop, out now. Gone are the days when there were only a few vegan options on supermarket shelves. With more people than ever opting for the meat and dairy-free lifestyle, Tesco has become the latest supermarket to launch an entirely vegan range into its stores. The new Wicked Kitchen range of 11 ready meals and nine sandwiches and wraps sent vegan customers into a frenzy on social media following its launch on Monday. But with the ready meals priced at 4, and sandwiches and salads not included in any meal deals yet, some fans have hit out at Tesco for making the range too pricey. One of the 20 new vegan dishes in the Witched Kitchen range is Teriyaki Noodles which contains mushrooms and other vegetables The Wicked Kitchen range includes plant-based dishes such as carrot pastrami, a rainbow curry bowl, two vegan pizzas, a naked burrito and a mushroom bolognese. It was created by British-based US chef Derek Sarno, the co-founder of the popular Wicked Healthy vegan food blog. Tesco launched the range after studies showed that a third of the UK population identifies as 'flexitarian' - those who opt to cut down on their meat intake by also eating vegan or vegetarian meals. The number of vegans is set to increase by 10 per cent this year, according to a study, and Tesco has cottoned on. It has seen the demand for vegetarian ready meals and meat substitutes soar by 25 per cent in the last year, it reports. Interestingly, the new range is not focused on the health benefits of veganism, and instead offers those who opt not to eat any animal products fakeaways and indulgent convenience food. Fans have gone wild on social media for the new range, but others have criticised Tesco for the high prices The new Wicked Kitchen range at Tesco SANDWICHES AND WRAPS One of the new vegan wraps and sandwiches in the new Wicked Kitchen range is a carrot pastrami-spiced wrap with pickled carrot and vegetables in a beetroot tortilla Carrot Pastrami-Spiced Wrap, 270g, 3.00 Beetroot tortilla wrap power-packed with crisp, punchy carrot and a vibrant vegetable mix. Sweet Potato Pakora Wrap, 270g, 3.00 Sweet potato pakora, fire-roasted red pepper, crispy carrot and creamy Sriracha vegan mayonnaise in a tortilla wrap. Smashin' Pumpkin Falafel Sandwich, 249g, 3.00 Not your ordinary pumpkin falafel - dressed with punchy vegan harissa mayonnaise, crunchy vegetables and roasted red pepper hummus on tomato bread. SALADS Rainbow Curry Bowl (GF), 245g, 3.50 Wicked colourful curried pulses with fiery sweet potato, onion bhajis, fragrant mango and a cool minty dressing. This one's gluten free. Moroccan-Inspired Bowl, 179g, 3.50 Turmeric bulgur wheat salad, spiced beetroot, tangy pickled red cabbage and roasted red pepper hummus. READY MEALS Wicked Teriyaki Noodles, 296g, 4.00 Teriyaki-style noodles with press-roasted cluster mushrooms, sweet 'n' savoury glaze, Asian-style vegetables and tangy lime to finish. Naked Burrito, 400g, 4.00 Pulled king Eryngii mushrooms roasted in a blend of Mexican inspired spices and jalapenos. Nana's Mushroom Bolognese, 400g, 4.00 Slow-braised meaty eryngii mushrooms and vegetable linguine in a legendary secret sauce from Derek's grandmother's recipe. PIZZA Caponata Sourdough Pizza, 280g, 4.00 Wood-fired sourdough, aubergine and caper caponata and a pop of zingy salsa verde. BBQ Mushroom Sourdough Pizza, 300g, 4.00 Pulled king oyster mushrooms and spice on wood-fired hand-stretched sourdough. Advertisement There are even two pizzas in the vegan Wicked Kitchen range, including this caponata sourdough pizza that is topped with aubergines and caponata. It's certainly not a healthy treat as the whole thing contains more than 60 per cent of your recommended daily salt intake Most vegans were just excited at the new range launching into Tesco's 600 stores, including Downton Abbey actor Peter Egan. But some said the new range was too pricey Chef Derek said: 'When I first arrived in Britain from America I was hugely surprised at how little choice there was for vegans and those considering a lifestyle change. 'For too long, vegans have been overlooked, with many offerings that are available seemingly created to appease rather than truly please. 'Wicked Kitchen plans to change all that and I'm proud to work with Tesco and offer all its customers delicious meals to get them on board with this growing foodie revolution.' Tesco is far from the only supermarket offering more vegan options this year. Last week Sainsbury's launched Sweet & Smokey BBQ Pulled Jackfruit, a fruit often used as a meat substitute as it bears an uncanny resemblance to pulled pork when cooked. It forms part of a new vegan range at the supermarket that also includes 'mushroom mince'. However the product has been criticised as the packet just contains chopped mushrooms. Today, M&S was under fire for selling 'cauliflower steaks' for 2.50 when you can buy a cauliflower for 1 and slice it yourself. Tesco has been contacted for comment. Theresa May sporting a diabetes patch the size of a 2 coin on TV a few weeks ago giving a speech to the Lord Mayor's Banquet Catching sight of Theresa May sporting a diabetes patch the size of a 2 coin on TV a few weeks ago, George Hakes saw it as a hopeful sign hed soon be able to get one on the NHS. The device, worn on the upper arm, continuously monitors glucose levels. Results can be read using a device which scans through clothing, reducing the need for finger-prick blood tests. For 350,000 people in the UK who have type 1 diabetes these tests must be done throughout the day, before and after eating and exercising and before driving, to monitor for dangerously low or high blood sugar levels. George, who was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when he was 11, needs to inject himself with insulin around six times a day and was measuring his blood sugar up to ten times a day with a finger-prick test. Its time-consuming and painful and doesnt give you an accurate picture of your blood sugar over time, just at that moment, says George, 27, a local government officer, who lives in Cambridge. The device he spotted on Mrs May, the FreeStyle Libre, is the first of its kind. It monitors glucose in fluid between cells via sensor filaments the width of two hairs. A device roughly half the size of a mobile phone takes readings. The patches last two weeks and store up to eight hours of data, displaying it on a graph so people can see if their blood sugar is on an upward or downward trend and can adjust their insulin dose, or food intake, accordingly. Aimed at those with insulin-dependent type 1 or type 2 diabetes, the charity Diabetes UK says systems like this have been shown to improve blood sugar control, reducing hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar attacks) and hyperglycaemia (high blood sugar). Research published in the Lancet in 2016 found the Libre reduced night-time low blood sugar attacks by 40 per cent and serious cases by 50 per cent. Around 11,000 people are admitted to hospital in England each year because of low blood sugar. My average levels have improved since I began using it, says George. I have to sit in long meetings at work and it just isnt convenient to prick my finger. But scanning the patch can be done discreetly. I also discovered my blood glucose levels were dropping dangerously low early in the morning, so I may have fallen into a hypo and never woken up. The device spotted the pattern and I adjusted my insulin. A few years ago my blood sugar was a rollercoaster. In the long term high blood-sugar levels can cause complications such as kidney disease, nerve damage and blindness. I was aware of people dying as a result of hypos. It was a source of worry. For two years, George has paid 96 a month for the patch, plus a one-off cost of 133 for the reader. But, like many, he cant always afford it. In theory, it is now available on the NHS. On November 1 last year, the FreeStyle Libre patch was added to the NHS drug tariff, meaning it can be prescribed subject to local health authority approval. But a postcode lottery seems to be emerging. Prescribing committees have given it the green light in Wales, Greater Manchester, Cumbria and Brighton. Hampshire and London committees are believed to be deciding in the next few weeks. However, Georges clinical commissioning group (CCG), Cambridge and Peterborough, is among those that have previously said there isnt enough evidence the Libre is effective, and George says he hasnt heard yet if this has changed. For 350,000 people in the UK who have type 1 diabetes these tests must be done throughout the day, before and after eating and exercising and before driving, to monitor for dangerously low or high blood sugar levels David Stephens, 26, from Newport, Wales, who has type 1 diabetes and uses an insulin pump a portable device that delivers a constant supply of insulin is lucky. His local health authority agreed to fund the FreeStyle Libre for him. I was previously self-funding but had to go back to finger-prick testing after I lost my job, says David. I am hoping I will be able to go back to work in the retail sector as its now so much more convenient to take my blood glucose reading. I was having to do finger-prick tests 15 to 20 times a day thats not easy when working on a checkout. While the Libre doesnt wholly remove the need for finger-prick tests The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) advises you still do some for back-up or before driving, for example David now does only four to eight a day, which he says is much more manageable. Guidance from NHS Englands Regional Medicines Optimisation Committee makes it clear that patients with type 1 must meet strict criteria to get the Libre, such as two or more admissions a year for hypoglycaemia or diabetic ketoacidosis (where the body starts to run out of insulin) and having to check their blood sugar more than eight times daily. People with type 2 diabetes are not currently eligible. Nikki Joule, Diabetes UKs policy manager, says getting the Libre on the drugs tariff is a major step forward. It doesnt go as far we would have liked, but we are encouraged. We would like anyone using insulin intensively [more than two injections a day or using an insulin pump] to have this on prescription. While some CCGs say there isnt enough evidence that the devices reduce complications and hospital admissions, this is as the data hasnt been collected yet. In a bid to get the details, Libre manufacturer Abbott Laboratories has requested an audit, to be carried out by the Association of British Clinical Diabetologists, of all data from people prescribed a device. Now local prescribing committees have the guidance, there should ideally be no blanket bans on funding the devices if people meet the criteria, says Dr Partha Kar, a consultant endocrinologist at Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust and associate national clinical director for diabetes for NHS England. He adds that if he had type 1 diabetes he would want one in an ideal world. But is it affordable for all diabetes patients for the NHS now, with the evidence available? Probably not. George, meanwhile, is writing to his MP. I realise the NHS is under pressure but Im convinced this device will help me better control my blood glucose and reduce the risk of complications and, ultimately, that will save the NHS money. People suffering from different forms of cancers believe exposure to contaminated water from an Air Force base is to blame for their devastating illnesses. Former soldiers, firefighters and residents near the Peterson Air Force base in Colorado Springs, Colorado, have been diagnosed with thyroid, prostate and testicular cancers after being exposed to toxic water. The base admitted last year to accidentally releasing 150,000 gallons of water containing toxic chemicals from firefighting foam into the sewage system, moving the Air Force to spend $4 million in purifiers. However, thousands of firefighters and first responders across the US believe that exposure to the foam and other firefighting equipment meant to save lives could be behind what is killing them. Chemicals found in firefighting foam are believed to have contaminated the water in Colorado Springs, leading to cancer diagnoses in hundreds of residents [file image] Peterson Air Force base (pictured) in Colorado Springs admitted to accidentally dumping 150,000 gallons of contaminated water in the sewage system According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), any toxins over 70 parts per trillion found in water could be dangerous. However some of the water tested in Colorado Springs had over 1,300 parts per trillion. The water contained perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) which have been linked to prostate, kidney and testicular cancer, along with other illnesses. These chemicals are a main component of firefighting foam that has been used by the military for training and to extinguish fires since the 1970s. The same foam has been used at Air Force bases and fire stations across the US leading other first responders to believe the toxins are behind their cancer diagnoses. Retired firefighter Chief Jeff Hermes from Ohio worked as a paramedic and in the fire industry since 1983. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer and underwent surgery nearly a year ago. He told Daily Mail Online: 'At 52 years old and no family history I truly believe these chemicals used in the foam and our protective gear had an affect.' Hermes said he is involved in a suit to fund tests on firefighters' blood for levels of PFCs. The base in Colorado Springs is one of 190 Air Force bases where PFCs may have 'leached in the ground' and surrounding areas, according to CBS News. Last year the EPA's test results showed that 15 million Americans across 27 states could be exposed to PFCs in their drinking water. Steve Berry spokesman for Colorado Springs Utilities assured the community that the chemicals did not get into the city's drinking water. The wife of a former firefighter from Massachusetts created a Facebook page to update those who believe they have been affected by the toxins from firefighting gear. Diane Cotter's husband was diagnosed with cancer two years ago and after learning about the effects of PFCs created the Facebook page. She told Daily Mail Online: 'Our focus is calling attention to the plight of every firefighter who has used AFFF (aqueous film forming foam) or worn turnout gear,' said Diane Cotter. The Air Force has responded by spending more than $4 million to provide bottled water and filtration systems to the bases. Air Force firefighters will now train with water instead of the foam. They have switched to using a different foam that is believed to be safer, though not everyone is convinced it will not have the same damaging effects as PFCs. A new type of pacemaker treatment could help thousands of patients with heart failure. This is when the heart cannot pump sufficient blood around the body, causing extreme fatigue and breathlessness. In around a fifth of cases, patients have an abnormally long delay in the time it takes for natural electrical signals that tell the heart to contract to travel from the top to the bottom of the heart. This is known as PR prolongation. Until now doctors have been unable to correct this problem. However, in a new trial, funded by the British Heart Foundation and led by Imperial College London, doctors are investigating whether inserting a pacemaker lead into the middle of the heart to target an area of cells there could help. A new type of pacemaker treatment could help thousands of patients with heart failure, it helps when the heart cannot pump sufficient blood around the body, causing extreme fatigue Known as the His-bundle, this small track of muscle fibres plays a key role in keeping the different parts of the heart beating in sync but has never been targeted with a pacemaker before. Around 900,000 people in the UK have heart failure. It can follow a heart attack that can starve the muscle of oxygen, making it weak or stiff, or it can become stretched and overworked coping with high blood pressure. In normal hearts, a tiny area of tissue or cells, known as the sinus node, in the right upper chamber (atrium) generates electrical impulses that keep the heart rate regular by stimulating all four of the heart chambers. The impulses start in the right atrium and make the left atrium contract at the same time, then travel along special pathways and down a tiny track the His-bundle in the centre of the heart which branches into the left and right bottom chambers (ventricles). These contract a fraction of a second after the top chambers. Heart failure can damage this mechanism, leading to an abnormal heart rhythm. Where patients have a slow heartbeat or a significant delay in the hearts natural electrical impulses, treatment is typically a pacemaker which sends electrical impulses to the heart via two leads, one in the right atrium the other in the right ventricle. However, these arent always effective for people with severe heart failure, partly because they do not improve the pumping function of the heart, but also because they cant help if the heart is not relaying electrical signals from the right to the left side, or from top to bottom, efficiently. A relatively new development is cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT), a pacemaker with a third lead placed in the left ventricle, helping it to pump more efficiently as signals are sent to both the right and left sides of the heart. Pacemakers aren't always effective for people with severe heart failure, because they do not improve the pumping function of the heart, and they can't help relaying electrical signals But this doesnt help the estimated 180,000 heart failure patients who have a significant time delay between top and bottom heart chambers contracting. It can make the pumping action of the heart even more inefficient and increases the severity of symptoms. Some patients develop PR prolongation naturally as their heart failure worsens; drugs used to treat heart failure such as beta blockers can also trigger it. The new approach on trial involves a standard CRT-type device, but the third lead is put directly on the His-bundle instead of the left ventricle. The theory is that stimulating the heart this way will tackle the delay between top and bottom chambers and improve the hearts pumping action. Fifteen hospitals across the UK and 160 patients are involved in the HOPE-HF trial, with results expected in October 2019. Brian Hope, 76, is among those taking part at Glenfield Hospital, in Leicester. The former factory worker and grandfather of three, from nearby Birstall, was diagnosed with heart failure last year after a heart attack more than 20 years ago. He was referred to Professor Andre Ng, a consultant cardiologist at the University of Leicester and was fitted with the three-lead CRT device last November. Fifteen hospitals across the UK and 160 patients are involved in the HOPE-HF trial, with results expected in October 2019 For the trial, doctors will switch on the leads in only half the patients at first. After six months, the groups are swapped. Like all the patients, Brian doesnt yet know if his device has been activated. But three months on, my wife Jean says I look healthier and Ive got more colour although Im still breathless and not very mobile, says Brian. Professor Ng explains: These are patients who, despite the maximum amount of medication available for them, are forced to lead very limited lives. If the results from the trial are positive, then Id hope there would be improvements within a few months. Commenting on the research, Dr Jerome Ment, a consultant cardiologist at Spire Parkway Hospital in Solihull, said the new approach could extend the benefits of pacemakers to a much larger population. He added: The prognosis for heart failure is worse than most cancers, apart from lung and pancreatic. CRT offers a significant advance but unfortunately only a minority of patients are eligible for current treatments and only about 30 per cent respond. To join the trial, contact HOPE-HF@imperial.ac.uk The recent protests in Iran are a result of the dire economic situation in the country. January 9, 2018, 11:16 Armenian MP of Iran links current state in country to its economic situation STEPANAKERT, JANUARY 9, ARTSAKHPRESS: Karen Khanlarian, an Armenian member of the Iranian parliament, told the aforesaid to Armenian News-NEWS.am. He noted that this bad economic situation in Iran is caused by the sanctions that are imposed on the country by the superpowers, which pursue several objectives. In the Armenian MPs words, contrary to the positive disposition of Europe, the US has serious intentions to continue these sanctions, and it even attempts to intensify them further. As per Khanlarian, in this way, an attempt is made also to weaken Irans role in the region. Also, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Pakistan are trying to weaken Irans role in the region, and thats why the sanctions continue, he said. They are diminishing Iran in the economic, commercial sectors. A bride-to-be was almost driven to suicide after waking up covered in an agonising rash that has left experts baffled. Kate Crawford, 27, from Stirling, Scotland, woke on New Year's Eve 2016 to find angry red hives all over her body. After trying everything from prescription drugs to cutting out alcohol and sugar, nothing has worked, with Ms Crawford being told she may have to take leprosy medication. The excruciating rash, which could be chronic urticaria, has made everyday activities like showering and getting dressed agony, and even caused Ms Crawford to delay her wedding to her fiance, PHD student Paul Marnie, 31. Struggling to cope with her changing appearance, Ms Crawford even considered taking her own life. She said: 'I couldn't see a way out. I didn't want to be a burden to anybody anymore. I became so withdrawn, because I didn't look or feel myself.' After taking antidepressants Ms Crawford's mental health is now stable and she is speaking out to show other sufferers of chronic conditions that there is support out there. Kate Crawford, 27, was nearly driven to suicide after waking up covered in an agonising rash that has left experts baffled (pictured with her fiance, PHD student Paul Marnie, 31) Ms Crawford woke on New Year's Eve 2016 to find her body covered in mysterious red hives She has been told she may have to take leprosy drugs as other medication has not worked WHAT IS CHRONIC URTICARIA? Chronic urticaria, also known as hives, are red, itchy welts that arise from skin reactions. It is considered chronic if it appears for more than six weeks and returns regularly over months or years. Symptoms can include red-coloured wheals; severe itching; painful swelling of the lips, eyelids and inner throat; and flare-ups due to heat, exercise and stress. Their cause is often unclear but can include reactions to pain medication, infections, scratching, stress, sunlight, alcohol or extreme temperatures. Hives can be serious if they trigger anaphylaxis or prevent breathing by restricting airways. Treatment usually starts with antihistamine drugs. If these are unsuccessful, immunosuppressant medication may also be tried. Source: Mayo Clinic Advertisement 'I couldn't see a way out' After trying numerous medications to try and control the rash, Ms Crawford pinned all her hopes on a course of infections usually intended for allergic reactions, which doctors were confident would ease her condition. She said: 'The injections were so painful. It was like having a corkscrew in my skin. 'I kept going, because I thought it'd make a difference, but by the fourth injection, my rash was completely back. It was all over my face, too, looking like I'd been burnt.' The disappointment and frustration caused Ms Crawford to spiral into a deep depression. By September 2016, she was considering ending her life. Ms Crawford said: 'I was in so much pain, and I couldn't see a way out. I didn't want to be a burden to anybody anymore. 'I became so withdrawn, because I didn't look or feel myself. It became a real juggling act to make sure I didn't completely fall apart.' 'Although it was incredibly hard, I told Paul and our families how I was feeling and they were amazing. Paul phoned the doctor and got me an emergency appointment to get some antidepressants. 'I was in a dark place, but I've come out the other side. I knew I had to get better and that I had the fight in me to push on.' The excruciating rash has made everyday activities like showering and getting dressed agony She initially feared the rash, which came out of nowhere, may be life-threatening meningitis The condition caused Ms Crawford's face to swell, with drugs generally just working for days Ms Crawford once woke with her eyes so swollen she was unable to open them The rash also caused her chest to tighten, leaving Ms Crawford struggling to breathe 'This happened to show me I'm stronger than I thought' Ms Crawford is speaking out to show others living with chronic conditions that support is out there. She said: 'To anyone else living with something like this, remember you aren't alone and you aren't an outcast. I spent so long feeling like this happened because I did something wrong, but it's nobody's fault. 'Everything happens for a reason, and I believe this happened to show me I'm stronger than I thought. 'I'm living with a chronic condition now and life is different, but I'm going to make the best of it. I'm going into 2018 determined to be positive.' Ms Crawford is now taking the immunosuppressant drug cyclosporine, which is usually given to organ transplant patients to reduce their risk of rejection. The medication seems to be working, however, if she misses a single dose, her rash returns. She is also waiting for blood test results to see if she is suitable for treatment with the leprosy medication dapsone. Doctors are still completely unsure what is behind her mysterious disorder. She said: 'Doctors are still totally flummoxed. Nobody knows why the rash appeared and I don't think we ever will.' Ms Crawford and Mr Marnie are also starting to organise their wedding again, which was postponed from its original date in August this year. Ms Crawford is determined to have clear skin on her big day. Ms Crawford (pictured before) felt like a burden to others and like she had no way out She credits Mr Marnie (pictured) and their families for helping her through the 'dark cloud' Mr Marnie arranged for Ms Crawford to be given antidepressants when she was feeling low The couple postponed their wedding, intended to be in August, due to the stress of her rash She is encouraging others to seek support (pictured the day before her rash appeared) 'I felt like a guinea pig' Ms Crawford's nightmare began when she woke on December 31 two years ago with an angry rash. Mr Marnie panicked that it may be meningitis and did the 'glass test' to see if the marks faded under pressure. Ms Crawford said: 'It went away under the glass, which didn't indicate meningitis. By that point, the rash was incredibly itchy but fear had kicked in, too, which was far more overwhelming. 'I was getting really quite upset. This had come on out of nowhere, and I had no idea what was happening.' After calling the NHS non-emergency line, who sent her to an out-of-hours doctor, Ms Crawford was given antihistamines and told to come back if her symptoms did not improve. At first, the medication appeared to be working, however, in the early hours of January 3, Ms Crawford woke to find her face was so swollen, she could not open her eyes. She said: 'My heart was pounding. I realised this wasn't an isolated incident and that something was very wrong.' Returning to the GP, Ms Crawford was given a doubled dose of antihistamines. Yet, once again, the drugs only worked for a few days until, on January 7, the rash returned and her chest began to feel tight, leaving her struggling to breathe. Racing to A&E at Forth Valley Royal Hospital, in Larbert, Scotland, Ms Crawford was hooked up to fluid drips and given steroids. For the next three weeks, she was signed off work while doctors investigated what the cause might be, which included conducting blood tests, and checking the rhythm and activity of her heart. Yet, none of the results showed what was happening. Ms Crawford was then referred to a dermatologist, who placed her on a course of oral steroids and medication to open her airwaves. She said: 'They actually seemed to work, but the problem with steroids is you can't be on them long term, because of the negative side effects, like mood changes and high blood sugar, so we had to find another solution. 'For the next few months, I tried out various different drugs. I felt like a guinea pig.' She also tried to tackle the rash by giving up alcohol, drinking plenty of water, cutting out processed foods, and minimising her sugar, dairy and gluten intake. For a while, it seemed to work but as soon as Ms Crawford came off the steroids in May, the painful hives returned. Piers Morgan interviewed his 'saviour' on Good Morning Britain after the eagle-eyed viewer spotted he may be suffering from skin cancer during a TV appearance. Gillian Nuttal, founder of Melanoma UK, noticed a blemish on 52-year-old Piers' chest while watching ITV's Serial Killer, which was presented by Morgan last November, and contacted him to advise he got it checked. When the breakfast TV host visited a dermatologist, the doctor was horrified and removed the mark, which had not been bleeding or recently changed shape, within an hour. Although he has now been given the all clear, the doctor told Piers the blemish would almost certainly have turned cancerous within months, telling him to give the observant viewer a 'gold star'. Expressing his gratitude, Piers said to those watching at home: 'I am living testament to getting it checked. Youre playing with lives if you dont; it takes 10 minutes'. Melanoma, which is the most serious form of skin cancer and often spreads, affects more than 15,000 new people every year in the UK. Scroll down for video Piers Morgan interviewed his 'saviour' on Good Morning Britain after the viewer spotted he may have skin cancer during a TV appearance (pictured with his co-host Susanna Reid) Gillian Nuttal (pictured), founder of Melanoma UK, noticed a blemish on Piers' chest while watching the presenter on television and contacted him to advise he got it checked Ms Nuttal said the mark, visible just above his open-neck shirt 'caught her eye' and 'really bothered' her (Piers pictured on ITV's Serial Killer with convicted killer Mark Riebe) WHAT DO CANCEROUS MOLES LOOK LIKE? CHECKING IS AS EASY AS ABCDE The more moles someone has, the higher their risk of developing melanoma. The following ABCDE guidance can help people identify moles that might need looking over by a doctor. Asymmetry Look out for moles with an irregular shape. Check for asymmetrical moles that have an irregular shape Borders Check for jagged edges. People should look out for moles with irregular borders and jagged edges Colour change If a mole changes in colour or is a different colour in one part than in another, seek medical advice. Moles that change colour or have a different colours within them should be looked over Diameter Any increase in size should be checked, but be particularly cautious of moles that grow more than around 6mm across. Any change in size should be checked, but more than 6mm across is very concerning Elevation The E section is generally classed as 'elevation'; warning you to watch out for moles that are raised from the surface, particularly if this is irregular. Yet, Dr David Fisher, director of the melanoma program at Massachusetts General Hospital, explains many dermatologists have different classifications for this. His preferred word is 'evolving'. Dr Fisher previously told MailOnline: 'Is it changing? Do you notice anything suspicious or concerning? That is key.' Look out for moles that are raised or those that 'evolve' over time Advertisement Blemish was expected to turn cancerous Piers said: '[The dermatologist] took one look at it and he cut it out within the hour. He said, "Give that lady a gold star". Because if I hadn't done something fairly soon he was pretty certain it was going to turn cancerous.' Ms Nuttal emailed the father-of-three, who is married to journalist Celia Walden, 41, after noticing a blemish on his chest when the camera panned in on him during the documentary. Piers, who has previously had several moles removed, was shocked to receive the email but promptly visited his doctor. Speaking on Good Morning Britain, Piers said he is very grateful to Ms Nuttal, adding: 'The key thing [the doctor] said to me is to keep having a check-up. 'I am living testament to getting it checked. Youre playing with lives if you dont get this stuff checked. It takes 10 minutes'. A dermatologist was horrified and removed the blemish (pictured) within an hour 'I haven't got a Piers Morgan fetish, honestly!' Piers previously addressed Ms Nuttall on the breakfast show he co-presents with Susanna Reid saying, 'Thanks, Gillian. Oh the irony of a serial killer inadvertently helping to save my life. Merry Christmas!' Ms Nuttal, from Manchester, wrote on social media: 'He was interviewing a serial killer and I watched it - he had an open neck shirt on and it caught my eye. 'I stopped the TV and looked closely - it really bothered me so as I'd got his email, [I] just thought "quick shove in the right direction won't harm".' She joked: 'I was right. I haven't got a Piers Morgan fetish, honestly!' Speaking on the latest Good Morning Britain episode, Ms Nuttal added: 'Our skin is our biggest organ but we never check it. Our message is to do skin checks every four-to-six months and report any changes.' The show also featured TV make-up artist Joanna Morgan who has ocular melanoma; a type of cancer that develops in the cells that produce pigment and affects at most 600 people a year in the UK. Ms Morgan, who has worked with Piers, urged viewers to visit the opticians at least every 18 months to two years for a check up. A man who went for a cigarette on a night out, woke up paralysed in a ditch hours later. Dan Woodall, 26, a former electrician, suffered a drunken blackout 18 months ago and now cannot walk or work, and depends on a carer to help him carry out everyday tasks. Despite initially being given just a 0.5 per cent chance of ever walking again, Mr Woodall is making remarkable progress after embarking on a pioneering treatment that applies electrical stimulation to the legs, known as wide pulse muscle stimulation. This treatment was backed by the late American actor and quadriplegic Christopher Reeve, who became a household name after playing Superman in the 1980s. Mr Woodall, from Rainham, Kent, said: 'The goal is to walk again. 'In June, an MRI scan showed that my spinal cord is going round the injury. 'The surgeon said he had never seen this before and we don't know yet what it will mean for me in the future. But if anyone can make it happen, Neurokinex can.' Dan Woodall went for a cigarette on a night out and woke up paralysed in a ditch hours later WHAT IS NEUROKINEX? Neurokinex is specialised neurological rehabilitation for various forms of paralysis. It uses 'locomotor training' to awaken dormant nerve pathways by repeatedly stimulating muscles and nerves in the lower body to train the spinal cord to 'remember' walking. Patients practice standing and stepping using body weight support on a treadmill. This involves suspending the individual over a treadmill while their legs are moved to simulate walking. At the same time, sensory information is sent from the legs to the spinal cord. The rehabilitation technique also applies electrical stimulus to paralysed limbs, which excites the central nervous system. Source: Neurokinex.org Advertisement 'I thought it was the end' Mr Woodall visited the nightclub Strawberry Moons in Maidstone, Kent, in June 2016, but woke up around 5:30am in a ditch near a Sainsbury's a couple of hundred yards away. When he woke up Mr Woodall said his legs 'felt dead and floppy', and he was in pain. He managed to get the attention of a man walking home from a night shift and was rushed to hospital, where he was told he had just a 0.5 per cent chance of ever walking again. He said: 'No one actually knows what happened and I can't remember anything. 'I went out for a couple of beers, I was only drinking Desperados - I haven't touched them since - and I had a drunken blackout. 'I'll never get my memory of exactly what happened back, but I remember going into the last nightclub and ordering a beer and that's it. 'I bought a Subway which I don't remember, I only know that from checking my bank statement. 'The police couldn't see me on any of the CCTV but the next thing I remember is waking up in a ditch. He said: 'I woke up and didn't know where I was, but I was in a bush and I was trying to stand up but I couldn't move; I couldn't even sit up. 'That's when I knew that was it and I thought it was the end, but luckily someone walked past and heard me shouting for help, and they came down and rang the ambulance.' Mr Woodall was given a 0.5 per cent of ever walking again but is making remarkable progress 'The goal is to walk again' Mr Woodall has started a treatment, offered by the spinal cord injury facility Neurokinex, that has made him able to wriggle his toes and regain movement in his legs. He said: 'The treatment is having an effect but it's a lot of hard work. 'I have electrical stimulation for an hour a week, where they put volts in between my muscles to contract them. 'I have to do a lot of physio and tell myself I can do it, and it's working wonders at the moment. 'They'd never say I'll walk again - they can't say that because they don't want to give me false hope - but in the amount of time I've been doing it, they've been surprised at what I've achieved.' Mr Woodall has managed to achieve results in less than a year, despite most studies showing the technique takes around two years to have an effect. He said: 'My short-term goal is to be able to stand up with aids and then build on this to stand without them. 'Long term, of course, the goal is to walk again. 'Nobody knows how far I can get in restoring strength, sensation or movement.' 'Its pulled everyone closer together' After he was found in the ditch, Mr Woodall spent five weeks at St George's Hospital in Tooting, south London, where his condition deteriorated. He suffered septicaemia, E-coli and spinal fluid to the brain, as well as losing five stone in weight, including muscle in his legs. Mr Woodall was then transferred to Stanmore Orthopaedic Centre, where he was told about Neurokinex. He now attends a clinic near Gatwick twice a week, and relies on his girlfriend Kayleigh Hutchinson and friend Danny Lowman to help with his recovery. Mr Woodall said: 'In June, an MRI scan showed that my spinal cord is going round the injury. 'The surgeon said he had never seen this before and we don't know yet what it will mean for me in the future. But if anyone can make it happen, Neurokinex can.' His family and friends, including his mother Lorraine Sweeney, who has helped to raise money for the 70 sessions, have been very supportive. Mr Woodall said: 'My mate Danny is my carer, and he comes around every day for a couple of hours to help me out - he's a massive help. 'I think its really pulled everyone closer together as a family.' A two-year-old boy who had his legs cut off in a train accident has miraculously taken his first steps after surgeons reattached his limbs. Mohammed Saleh was left fighting for his life after the accident which killed his mother while they crossed train tracks. Quick-thinking onlookers scooped up the child and put his severed limbs in a polystyrene box filled with ice, and rushed him to hospital. Incredibly, medics were able to reattach them during a painstaking seven-hour operation. Experts at the hospital claim the successful re-connection of both limbs has only happened 13 times in the world before only four times involving children and Mohammed is the youngest in the world to have it done. Now, eight months on, the brave boy, from Mangalore in Karnataka state of India, is now able to walk and run, and met the surgeons who saved his life. Mohammed Saleh had both of his legs severed in a train accident that killed his mother Quick-thinking onlookers scooped him up and put his severed limbs in ice 'He was lying in a pool of blood' A J Hospital medical director Dr Prashant Marla, said: 'The toddler boy was being carried by his mother. 'In a heartbreaking, disastrous train accident the mother was killed, while the boy luckily survived but lost both his legs. 'He was lying in a pool of blood with severed lower limbs and was rescued by some citizens and railway police and taken to a hospital in Payyanur, Kerala. Medics in India were able to reattach both of the boy's limbs during a seven-hour operation Mohammed is one of only four times children in the world who successfully had a pair of limbs reconnected after they were severed WHAT IS REPLANTATION? Replantation refers to the surgical reattachment of a body part (such as a finger, hand or toe) that has been completely cut from the body. The goal of replantation surgery is to reattach and restore function to as much of the injured part as possible. Steps: 1. Damaged tissue is carefully removed Then, bone ends are trimmed before they are rejoined to make putting together the soft tissue easier. 2. Arteries, veins, nerves, muscles, and tendons are all stitched together Uncovered nerves, tendons, and joints may be covered by a free-tissue transfer, where a piece of tissue is removed from another part of the body, along with its arteries and veins. 3. Areas without skin are covered with skin that has been taken from other areas of the body Recovery: Braces are used at the beginning of recovery to protect the newly repaired tendons, and to allow the patient to move the replanted part. Physical therapy exercises are used to prevent the joints from becoming stiff, to keep the muscles moving and to minimize the formation of scar tissue. Although the replanted part never regains 100 percent of its original use, most doctors consider 60 percent to 80 percent use 'excellent'. Source: American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons Advertisement 'After giving first aid, the baby was referred to our hospital with the amputated limbs well preserved in ice. 'The amputated legs were transported in a thermocol box, kept in a polythene pack with surrounding ice.' He was 'too dazed to even cry' Doctors treating little Mohammed did not even know his name, and were not able to trace his father, who works in Dubai, before the operation. Following the procedure, his details were released to the media, and his grandparents got in touch. 'At that time we had no clue about the whereabouts of the family of this child,' Dr Marla added. 'It was extremely rare and critical situation for the baby and the treating doctors had to take a decision on the further course of action. 'He was alert, in a state of shock, anxious but unable to communicate, too dazed to even cry. 'He was very pale due to severe blood loss. The priority was to save the child and treat the injuries. 'Rejoining was a logical step, however, was not a simple task, particularly when no parent was around. 'Rejoining a amputated limb is a complex procedure, both technical and its effects on the patient. It is a long process. 'Such decision is taken with due considerations to all aspects, explaining the pros and cons to the family, so that they make informed decisions. 'We decided to give our best efforts to replant both the limbs and hope to succeed based on our previous experience in several such cases in the past. 'Railway police were extremely supportive of our decision, gave consent to go ahead.' Good recovery Mohammed is said to be the first successful patient to undergo the operation in India. The operation was carried out by plastic surgeon Dr Dinesh Kadam and his team. One leg has had been severed below the knee and the other above the knee in the accident. Dr Marla said: 'The boy was monitored intensively and has made a good recovery. 'He has undergone skin grafting surgeries and implant removal procedures. Fractured bones have united and he is now able to walk independently. 'He has made good recovery of muscle power and sensory recognition in both his rejoined limbs.' Saleh's father works in Dubai and visits him often but he is now living with his grandparents. As many as 2,000 people in Salt Lake County, Utah are at risk of hepatitis A after visiting a local 7-Eleven store where an employee diagnosed with the virus came to work during their infectious period. Salt Lake County's ongoing outbreak is part of a multi-state resurgence of the disease over the course of the last year, affecting primarily California, Kentucky and Michigan, as well as Utah. The county health department issued a warning on Sunday, urging anyone who had visited the store in West Jordan, just south of the state's capital, between December 26 2017 and January 3 2018 to get vaccinated. So far, there have been no confirmed additional cases as a result of exposures in the convenience store, but this is the first time the virus has moved from homeless and drug-using populations into the general public in the state. An infected employee at a Utah 7-Eleven may have exposed co-workers and thousands of customers to hepatitis A Outbreaks of hepatitis A began cropping up sporadically throughout the US in March of 2017, spurring the California government to declare a public health emergency. Until now, Utah's outbreak had been confined to about 152 cases among the state's homeless population and illicit drug users. Just over 70 percent of those had occurred in Salt Lake County, the state's largest, but the 7-Eleven case is the first known instance of the virus's communication outside the particularly at-risk groups. Hepatitis A, a virus that causes liver inflammation, is typically spread through sexual contact, needle sharing, or by consuming food that has been contaminated by infected feces. The infection can cause abdominal pain, fever, diarrhea and vomiting, but if it goes untreated, prolonged liver inflammation can be deadly. What is hepatitis A and how can it be treated? Hepatitis A is a viral liver disease that can have both minor and severe symptoms for the person infected. It is primarily spread when a person who isn't vaccinated ingests food or water that has been contaminated with feces of an infected individual. The virus is one of the most frequent causes for foodborne infections. Symptoms The incubation period of hepatitis A is normally 14 to 28 days. People can experience: Fever Loss of appetite Diarrhea Nausea Dark-colored urine Jaundice Acute liver failure Who is at risk? Anyone who has not been vaccinated or has never been infected with the hepatitis A virus is at risk. Other factors that increase risk include: Poor sanitation Lack of clean water Recreational drug use Living with an infected person or having sexual relations with one Traveling to areas with high risk without a vaccination Treatment There is no specific treatment for hepatitis A. It may take some people a couple weeks to a couple months to recover from the symptoms. Doctors recommend everyone to get a vaccination to help prevent the risk of getting infected by the virus. Source: World of Health Advertisement The Salt Lake County Health Department confirmed that a single employee at the affected 7-Eleven had been diagnosed with the disease, and that they had come to work while the disease was live and transmissible in their system. Hand-washing is the most effective way to prevent the spread of the disease, so the employee likely failed to properly clean theirs. For this reason, those who came in contact with certain areas and products in the store are particularly at risk for contracting the disease. The health department warned that that fountain drinks and other self-serve beverages, fresh fruit and food from the store's hot case, like pizza, hot dogs, chicken wings or taquitos were the most likely sites of contamination. Packaged food or drinks, on the other hand, are not likely to carry the virus. The Salt Lake County Health Department is taking calls to answer questions about the possible exposure and screen for who is most likely at risk of infection. So far, press department spokesperson Pam Davenport told Daily Mail Online that the agency has fielded between 600 and 700 calls, and assessed 350 of those callers to be at sufficient risk to need to get the preventative vaccination. She said that it is too soon yet for many of those who have possibly been exposed to show symptoms, and no diagnoses have been confirmed as a result of the 7-Eleven exposure. The county has mobile 'foot clinics' which Davenport estimates have vaccinated some 5,000 homeless people for free. But, she said, 'it is only a matter of time before [Hepatitis A] gets out into the general public.' The Salt Lake County Health Department is offering free vaccinations to those without insurance, but encouraging insured callers to see their primary care physicians or get their shots at local pharmacies. Amazon's dominance of online shopping is the biggest threat to everyone on the High Street. Only those UK retailers, most notably Next and perhaps Argos, part of Sainsbury's, which fully embrace the online challenge and manage to integrate it with bricks and mortar have a cat in hell's chance of prospering. In the UK, department store chains Debenhams and House of Fraser are hanging on by their fingertips, not helped by the debt build-up which came with private equity and Icelandic ownership. There is no such excuse for Mothercare with its once envied unique place in the new born and childrenswear market. Retail titan: Amazon's sprawling fulfilment centre in Hemel Hempstead. The dominance of the online giant threatens everyone on the High Street Same-store, online and international sales all fell. Shares plunged by a quarter and have almost joined the 90 per cent club inhabited by banks and housebuilders during the financial crisis. But there is no safety net for retailers as there was for finance and new homes. If the US is any guide, breaking the stranglehold of Amazon is a titanic task. In the five weeks from the Thanksgiving holiday Amazon claimed 89 per cent of the online market in America. Rivals Best Buy, Target and Walmart maintained share by arranging pick-up of web purchases at nearby stores, a strategy being pursued by Next, John Lewis and M&S, but this is in its infancy. As store portfolios are shrunk, retailers need to move more purposefully to prevent Amazon asserting the same dominance here. This ought to be an opportunity for Ocado in food and also explains why the shares of Asos, Boohoo and other web fashion retailers sell on such high price-to-earnings ratio. Britain is in the middle of a shopping revolution and casualties are certain to multiply. Stern stuff TheFederal Reserve has a new chairman in Jay Powell. The search for the next governor of the Bank of England, to replace Mark Carney, starts this year, and manoeuvring to replace Mario Draghi, president of the European Bank in 2019, also is under way. Draghi did everything in his power to save the euro after it almost fell apart in 2010. In 2015 he embarked on a large scale programme of quantitative easing which pulled the eurozone back from stagnation and unconscionable levels of joblessness. Top jobs in the EU are about sharing the spoils rather than who is best qualified. Because the ECB is based in Frankfurt there has been a reluctance in the eurozone for the job to go to a German because of concern it will be dominated by Bundesbank orthodoxy. But after the leadership of Holland's Wim Duisenberg, France's Jean-Claude Trichet and Italy's Draghi it may be Germany's turn with Bundesbank head Jens Weidmann campaigning for the post. He wants to end printing money by September 2018 and is demanding eurozone banks shed their bad debts before a regional deposit insurance plan is implemented. Weidmann will have to be careful not to frighten the horses. Golden haul Fox News has had problems with allegations of sexual harassment. But Rupert Murdoch and his merger partners at Disney had plenty to cheer at the sombre Golden Globes. Fox Searchlight grabbed no less than six wins, including best movie for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. 21st Century Fox investors may have the case for a higher exit price. Peter Preston As a former economics writer, Washington correspondent and financial editor of the Guardian, I must record my huge sadness at the death of the paper's enigmatic former editor Peter Preston. He took enormous interest in my work at the paper providing me with wise counsel during the banking and economic crises of the 1970s, which culminated in Britain's application for an IMF loan in 1976. As editor he risked sending me to Washington in 1979 and was a regular visitor during my decade there, showing great interest and knowledge in US politics and the Reagan-Thatcher free-markets revolution. Soon after my return to London I was installed as financial editor and City commentator, preparing me for my role at the Mail since 2000. Most significantly he helped steer the Guardian from financial weakness and insecurity to a safe and prosperous future. He was a brilliant newspaper man who will be much missed. SPACE AGE Elon Musks SpaceX has successfully launched its first rocket of 2018, carrying a top-secret payload for the US government. The space company run by the owner of electric car firm Tesla saw Falcon 9 launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Successful launch: SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket soars into space after blasting off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida FESTIVE BOOST Bar and club operator Deltic has reported an 8.2 per cent increase in Christmas sales compared to a year earlier. Deltic sold 10,000 bottles of champagne and prosecco in the four weeks to December 31 as it enjoyed a record New Years Eve with 2.4million worth of sales made on the evening. RECORD BREAKERS The London Stock Exchange processed a record value of derivatives trades last year. Its clearing arm LCH handled 643 trillion of the financial instruments, which are used for everything from guarding against sharp currency movements to betting on future commodity prices. This is a 31 per cent rise on 2016. BEST YEAR Savers from 58 countries pumped 125million into businesses through investment website Seedrs last year. It is the companys best performance since launching in 2012, with 168 different projects backed. SEEDRS ALLOWED people to put their money into privately owned businesses, with potentially much better returns than the stock market but far higher risk that the companies being supported could go bust. BULKING UP Markets firm TP Icap has bought US broker SCS Commodities as it seeks to bulk up its energy and agriculture trading operations. BANK JOB Top HSBC banker Richard Davies has been poached by TSB to run its small business arm as commercial banking director. He was also boss of start-up lender Oaknorth. TOP CARATS Angola-focused Lucapa Diamond Company has recovered 83-carat and 103-carat diamonds from its Lulo Diamond Project in Angola. It marks the ninth 100-plus carat diamond recovered from Lulo, including a 404-carat stone which sold for 11.8million in 2016. OIL DEAL Embattled oil services provider Petrofac has been hired by oil producer Chrysaor for 12 months to support its operations in the North Sea. Fresh hopes that a rescue deal could be around the corner sent shares in Carillion rocketing. The embattled construction service firm saw more than 21.4million added to its value as punters placed bets on a potential government bailout. Carillion, one of the builders of HS2, is holding crunch talks with banks including Barclays, HSBC and Santander about a potential refinancing deal. Bosses are also allegedly considering a rescue plan that would see it hand back loss-making contracts, revise others and potentially take financial support from the Government. Carillion has struggled since reporting half-year losses of 1.15billion. Its share price plummeted 90 per cent after announcing its first profit warning last July. Rumours: Carillion saw more than 21.4m added to its value as punters placed bets on a potential government bailout It's also the most shorted stock a process in which people make money when a firm's share price falls on the London Stock Exchange. As much as 15.4 per cent of its stock is short sold, according to Financial Conduct Authority figures. Yesterday short sellers lost out, with its shares booming 26.4 per cent, or 4.98p, to 23.87p. The FTSE 100 finished down 0.36 per cent, or 27.71 points, to 7696.51 while the FTSE 250 also fell 0.36 per cent, or 76 points, to 20,856.56. A contract win with Netflix failed to stop shares in mobile payments company Bango falling. The company said the contract will enable Netflix customers in Mexico to pay for their monthly subscriptions via mobile by charging the cost to their phone bill. STOCK WATCH - XEROS TECHNOLOGY Cleaning pioneer Xeros Technology jumped higher after inking an agreement with a leading washing machine manufacturer. The company, spun out of a university upstart in Sheffield, has signed an agreement with an unnamed partner to make washing machines with its leading cleaning technology. It produces pea-sized plastic spheres which absorb dirt from clothing, replacing the need to use excessive water. Shares soared 6.1 per cent, or 14p, to 243p as a result. It follows a similar agreement with Amazon customers in Japan. Bango's technology is popular in countries where credit cards are less widespread, as it offers an alternative method of paying for items. It said the value of sales made on its platform was up 105 per cent to 271million in 2017, up from 132million in 2016 as it capitalised on the growing market for digital goods and services. But Bango did not update on profits, sending shares down 7 per cent, or 18p, to 240.5p as investors braced themselves for its full-year results in March. G4S jumped 4 per cent or 11.1p to 286.3p after UBS upgraded its rating to 'buy' from 'neutral.' The security firm also raised its target price to 310p from 300p. Engineer Babcock fell 0.7 per cent, or 5.2p to 710.2p despite announcing a 1.3billion Ministry of Defence contract. It has joined with Thales, BMT, Harland & Wolff and Ferguson Marine to form Team 31 to bid for the MoD's light frigate programme. Berenberg's bankers think upmarket pubs are going to make a killing this year, as they pass on cost pressures like national living wage and business rate changes on to customers. It said: 'Premium operators Fuller, Smith & Turner and The City Pub Company are likely to continue outperforming, with well-invested, differentiated offerings that tap into the consumer trends towards premium alcohol consumption. 'Wetherspoons should also remain solid, due to its focus on price leadership and support from its mobile app. 'However, for the 'squeezed middle' brands within Greene King, Mitchells & Butlers and, to some extent, Marston's, earnings growth is likely to remain subdued at best and negative at worst, weighed down by under-invested estates, some poorly located assets and continued growth in casual dining supplier.' Greene King finished up 0.3 per cent, or 2p, to 580p, Fuller, Smith & Turner was up 0.3 per cent or 3p to 954p, Mitchells & Butlers was flat at 281.6p while The City Pub Company fell 0.6 per cent or 1p to 169p, as did Marston's (0.4 per cent or 0.5p to 116.5) and Wetherspoons (0.2 per cent or 2p to 1274p). Persimmon has continued to profit from the taxpayer-funded 'Help to Buy' scheme as it saw revenues for the full-year increase to 3.4billion. The housebuilder, which has come under fire for agreeing to pay its boss Jeff Fairburn a share bonus worth more than 100million this year, said demand for new homes and rising prices boosted sales numbers. Revenues at the group rose 9 per cent to 3.42billion in 2017 after completion volumes were up by 872 homes, or a 6 per cent increase, to 16,043. Excessive pay? Persimmon will pay boss Jeff Fairburn a share bonus worth more than 100m It saw a 3 per cent rise in the average selling price of its homes to 213,300 in the year and the value of forward sales at the end of December was 10 per cent ahead than 2016 at 1.35billion. Persimmon said it was confident pre-tax profits will be modestly ahead of analysts consensus, which stood at 957million prior to the update, according to Thomson Reuters. The shares, which rose 1.3 per cent in early trading, but lost the gains and were trading 0.9 per cent lower at 2,723p by mid morning on Tuesday. With Help to Buy boosting demand for new builds, the pattern of housebuilders rising above more lacklustre data from the wider housing market is well-established, said George Salmon, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. Sure enough, Persimmon has turned in another impressive performance despite the weaker than expected numbers in the latest Halifax survey. However, given the fact that uncertainty still hampers sentiment toward the sector, this update will nonetheless provide some reassurance for investors. Persimmon said it bought some 17,300 plots of new land in about 80 locations throughout the UK during the year. This month, it launched a new business based near Ipswich in Suffolk to improve their operational capability and supplement their existing operations in the east of England. The pre-closing trading update comes as Persimmon is embroiled in a row over excessive executive pay. The bonus scheme which will reward a total of 150 executives and regional bosses with around 500million has been widely criticised. Chairman Nicholas Wrigley and senior director Jonathan Davie resigned earlier this month for failing to put a cap on the potential bonus. Wrigley is understood to have urged Fairburn to give some of the bonus to a housing charity. It is based on shareholder returns rather than the number of homes built and many believe it has been inflated by the taxpayer-funded Help to Buy loan scheme. Unsafe hands: Dominic Chappell, bought BHS from Sir Philip Green for just 1 back in 2015 The disgraced former owner of BHS failed to hand over vital information to an investigation into the sale of the collapsed retailer, a court heard. Dominic Chappell, 51, a former bankrupt with no retail experience, bought the High Street chain from billionaire Sir Philip Green for just 1 back in 2015. But the company subsequently crashed just 13 months later, leaving a pensions black hole of 571million. The Pensions Regulator (TPR) is prosecuting Chappell for neglecting or refusing to provide information and documents. The court heard he failed to hand over information about the firm's two pension schemes after he bought the chain. The watchdog has already agreed a 363million cash settlement with Green in order to rescue the scheme and halted its legal proceedings against the billionaire. Chappell, who denies three charges of neglecting or refusing to provide information and documents to TPR, appeared at Brighton Magistrates Court today. Opening the case Alex Stein, prosecuting, said BHS which had around 11,000 employees was sold to Retail Acquisitions, headed by Chappell, for 1 in March 2015. He told the court TPR had concerns about the future and running of two pension schemes run for 19,000 former BHS employees. He said: 'As of March 2015 the combined deficit for both BHS pension schemes was in the region of 500million.' As a result TPR launched a probe code-named Project Danny into all the dealings surrounding the sale of BHS. DEFICITS FALL BY 8BN The pensions black hole at Britain's biggest businesses shrank by 8billion last year thanks to buoyant markets and a concerted effort to plug gaps. Companies in the FTSE 350 index have a combined shortfall of 76billion in their defined benefit pension schemes, which guarantee workers a set proportion of their income in retirement. The cut is likely to leave more cash for investment or dividends. But consultant Mercer, which calculated the figures, said the total amount the firms will eventually have to pay to retired staff has risen by 4 per cent to 857billion. It made three requests for information to Chappell, the director and majority shareholder of Retail Acquisitions, in April and May 2016 and February 2017. Asked if TPR had received any reply to that request by the deadline date, Claire Boorman, a senior case manager at the regulator who led the investigation replied: 'No, we did not.' The request for information to Chappell on May 13, 2016 was made by email and by direct delivery post to his home. He responded to the email asking TPR to direct all future correspondence to his lawyers. Boorman told the court that after all the deadlines had passed Chappell phoned her and told her it would not be possible to access all the information requested by TPR because the firm had gone into administration and the administrator would not give him access to the documents. The former racing driver has been accused by one former BHS executive of using the 88-year-old chain as his 'personal piggy bank' after extracting millions from the firm as it teetered on the brink. The case continues. Acting Special Envoy and Coordinator for International Energy Affairs Sue Saarnio will visit Azerbaijan in February, Trend reported. January 9, 2018, 15:52 US Envoy for International Energy to visit Azerbaijan STEPANAKERT, JANUARY 9, ARTSAKHPRESS:The special envoy will participate in the fourth meeting of the Southern Gas Corridor Consultative Council in Baku, said the US State Department spokesman. The exact date will be announced in the coming days. The first meeting of the Consultative Council of the Southern Gas Corridor was held on February 12, 2015, the second - on February 29, 2016, and the third - on February 23, 2017. Marks & Spencer will outsource the majority of its in-house IT department to Indian conglomerate Tata Consultancy Services as it bets on a technology overhaul in a bid to turn its fortunes around. Launching a new technology transformation programme, the retailer said that about 250 roles will move to TCS from March 1, but will remain based at the firms headquarters in Middlesex. About 30 roles are set to change following the move and M&S said it will consult with staff affected next week. It will also retain a small in-house IT team of around 170 people and stressed it was not making staff redundant. IT overhaul: M&S said the move will save it around 30million a year The programme, which also includes a simplification of its IT supplier base, is part of M&S' five-year plan, which has seen it retreat from Asia to focus on its UK business, close down poorly-performing stores and slow down the opening of its Simply Food stores. M&S said the move will save it around 30million a year over the next four years, but also said it will take a one-off hit of 25million. The announcement comes ahead of the retailer's Christmas trading update, which is scheduled for Thursday and is expected to show a decline at its troubled women's fashion arm. Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX Capital, said M&S had fallen way behind in its online offering and so it needed 'a major revamp to stay relevant'. As retailers update the market about their festive periods, those which have invested in their digital resources seem to have fared better than those who havent. High street fashion retailer Next, which last week emerged as a winner over the Christmas period, posted a 1.5 per cent increase in sales in the period. That was thanks to the retailer's large online operation, which climbed nearly 14 per cent, which helped offset a 6.1 per cent decline in store sales in November and December. Debenhams, however, downgraded its profits forecast after disappointing sales over Christmas. Steve Rowe, chief executive of M&S, said: We are committed to transforming M&S for our colleagues, customers and shareholders by delivering digital-first retailing across our stores and offices. Technology plays a huge role in this transformation - and having the right partners and model will enable us to be more agile, flexible and responsive. Through our Technology Transformation Programme, our business will be faster, simpler and more focused on achieving a seamless customer experience. Vladimir Putin is poised to create a special force to protect against terrorist drone strikes on key nuclear power stations, following attacks on Russian bases in Syria. The move - involving the development of technology to reliably zap drones - comes amid fears that terrorists could use sophisticated long-distance weapons to target nuclear bases. Russian concerns have been heightened by jihadist attacks on its military bases in Syria using UAVs - unmanned aerial vehicles. Vladimir Putin is poised to create a special force to protect key Russian installations like nuclear power stations from drone attacks in the same week his forces came under attack from 'assault drones' at its Khmeimim air base and Tartus naval base in Syria Russia's Ministry of Defence this week shared an image of what it claims is a drone fitted with explosives brought down before it attacked one of their military bases in Syria Russian concerns have been heightened by jihadist attacks on its military bases in Syria using UAVs - unmanned aerial vehicles. Pictured: An assault drone Russia says was used by militants in Syria The Kremlin has demanded that the Defence Ministry, several secret service agencies and the Russian National Guard work together to find a solution to destroy drones before they reach their targets. Technology to zap drones has been developed in Russia but needs testing, said Col-General Sergey Melikov, first deputy director of the national guard. He made clear nuclear power plants were among the state facilities that required protection. 'We are considering an option to create groups to test experimental equipment to fight UAVs within our units,' he said. 'We have a certain device but it is not clear how easy is it to use. 'It needs to be tested first. 'If we realise that a special unit with a team of specialists needs to be created, of course we will do so.' The move - involving the development of technology to reliably zap drones - comes amid fears that terrorists could use sophisticated long-distance weapons to target nuclear bases He revealed the plan is being studied by experts including those from the Defence Ministry and FSB, the former KGB counter-intelligence service. Security expert Yury Zakharchenko said there was no universal technology yet to fight sophisticated drone attacks. Such a system or systems must recognise and identify incoming UAVs and then launch an appropriate strike by either radio electronic attack or missile. 'This task has not been resolved anywhere in the world because it's difficult, but the work is being done,' he said. 'The establishment of a separate unit of Rosgvardia (national guard) will perhaps allow us to intensify research and development in this area.' Recent pictures of captured Jihadist drones in Syria were released. This week Russian forces came under attack from 'assault drones' at its Khmeimim air base and Tartus naval base in Syria, said the defence ministry. 'Air defence forces detected 13 unidentified small-size air targets at a significant distance approaching the Russian military bases,' said a statement. 'Ten assault drones were approaching the Khmeimim air base, and another three at Tartus. 'Six small-size air targets were intercepted and taken under control by the Russian EW units. 'Three of them were landed on the controlled area outside the base, and another three UAVs exploded as they touched the ground. 'Seven UAVs were eliminated by the Pantsir-S anti-aircraft missile complexes operated by the Russian air defence units on 24-hours alert. 'The Russian bases did not suffer any casualties or damages.' But Russia also fears that 'hooligans' could use drones to cause disruption, said Melikov. The statement comes days after Moscow announced that two Russian servicemen were killed in a mortar attack by Islamist militants at the Hmeimim air base on New Year's Eve (stock) After two years of Russian military support for the regime of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad (pictured), President Vladimir Putin announced in mid-December the partial withdrawal of forces from the country, saying their task in the war-torn country had been largely completed Of the 13 drones used in the attacks, seven were destroyed while the six others were intercepted by the Russian army, it said. The statement comes days after Moscow announced that two Russian servicemen were killed in a mortar attack by Islamist militants at the Hmeimim air base on New Year's Eve. According to the Russian Kommersant business daily, seven military planes were 'practically destroyed' in that attack, but the ministry dismissed the report as 'fake'. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that Russian forces were on alert following drone attacks on the Hmeimim base, the largest Russian military base on Syrian territory. After two years of Russian military support for the regime of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, President Vladimir Putin announced in mid-December the partial withdrawal of forces from the country, saying their task in the war-torn country had been largely completed. The size of the Russian deployment in Syria is not known but independent Russian military expert Pavel Felgenhauer told AFP that up to 10,000 troops and private contractors could have taken part in the conflict. More than 330,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the Syrian war, which began in 2011 as the regime brutally crushed anti-government protests. Millions have been displaced. A woman accused of kidnapping and assaulting her elderly mother, is the ex-partner of a Sydney businessman with a net worth of $770 million. Lauren Pollock, 37, is accused of violently kidnapping her mother, Royalane Pollack, from her home in Cherrybrook, Sydney's northwest about 3am on Sunday. Lauren Pollock is the ex-girlfriend of Phil Mathews, a hedge fund manager who made the BRW rich list in 2011. Scroll down for video Lauren Pollock is the ex-girlfriend of Phil Mathews (pictured), a hedge fund manager who made the BRW rich list in 2011 Magistrate Daniel Reiss heard on Monday the incident was linked to a continuing dispute between Pollock and her former partner Mr Mathews. Pollock's 68-year-old mother was tied up, gagged and assaulted before being driven to Naremburn and later Mosman, police allege. Police allege the assault was so severe, Pollock's mother suffered a fractured rib and lacerations to her body. Detectives reportedly found duct tape at Pollock's mother's house, and later discovered cable ties and gloves at Pollock's home. Pollock is accused of enlisting the help of a former soldier, Daniel Cupples, who has served in Afghanistan and East Timor Cupples (pictured) was granted bail on several conditions including that he report to police three times a week and remain in NSW Pollock was denied bail in Hornsby Local Court on Monday afternoon, where Magistrate Daniel Reiss described the allegations as 'very disturbing and somewhat bizarre'. She reportedly burst into tears when told she was denied bail. She is accused of enlisting the help of a former soldier, Daniel Cupples, who has served in Afghanistan and East Timor. Pollock was denied bail but Cupples was granted bail on several conditions including that he report to police three times a week and remain in NSW. They are both next scheduled to appear in Downing Centre Local Court on March 6. The number of women accusing filmmaker James Toback (pictured, September 2017) of sexual harassment or assault has jumped to 395 from the initial 38 published in an LA Times story in October The number of women accusing filmmaker James Toback of sexual harassment or assault has jumped to 395. According to the Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office announced last that it was reviewing five investigations into accusations of sexual misconduct against him. The newspaper also said it was the first week not hearing from a woman alleging that Toback had harassed or assaulted her. In October, the LA Times published an investigation that saw 38 women accusing Toback of sexual misconduct, with 31 going on the record. Since that initial story ran in late October, 357 women contacted Times reporter Glenn Whipp, sharing stories of the writer-director approaching them on the streets of Manhattan and Los Angeles, on trains and airplanes. Most of the accounts involved Toback telling them he wanted to cast them in a movie, which often led to a range of unwanted sexual advances and actions. Toback has also denied all of the subsequent allegations on multiple occasions. Toback, who received an Oscar nomination for writing 'Bugsy,' has been accused of sexual misconduct by dozens of women. Many of the women said Toback had promised them stardom and their meetings would end with sexual questions and Toback masturbating in front of them or simulating sexual intercourse with them. Among them are Selma Blair and Rachel McAdams, who have both now detailed times they were harassed at the hands of the 72-year-old after being invited to an audition at his hotel room. In October, the LA Times published an investigation that saw 38 women accusing Toback of sexual misconduct, with 31 going on the record. Since then, both Selma Blair (left) and Rachel McAdams (right), who have both now detailed times they were harassed at the hands of the 72-year-old after being invited to an audition at his hotel room Julianne Moore (left) revealed on Twitter that she ran into Toback early in her career while walking home in New York City, claiming he tried to pick her up twice. Natalie Morales (right) added her voice to the chorus in response to a tweet from journalist Glenn Whipp, who broke the story, writing: 'Glenn add one more. Exact same playbook by James Toback when I encountered him near Central Park' According to the Los Angeles Times , the Los Angeles County district attorney's office announced last that it was reviewing five investigations into accusations of sexual misconduct against Toback (pictured, May 2017) And both told Vanity Fair that they decided to come forward about their experiences after reading the confessions of other women, and after watching Toback vehemently deny all of the allegations. Both actresses have said the assaults took place when they were at the beginning of their careers and were offered a role in the upcoming movie Harvard Man - which came out in 2001 and ended up starring Sarah Michelle Gellar and Joey Lauren Adams. Julianne Moore revealed on Twitter that she ran into Toback early in her career while walking home in New York City, claiming he tried to pick her up twice. Natalie Morales added her voice to the chorus in response to a tweet from journalist Glenn Whipp, who broke the story, writing: 'Glenn add one more. Exact same playbook by James Toback when I encountered him near Central Park.' As the national codeine ban looms, panic is brewing among regular users who will be forced to get prescriptions to use the drug. Pharmacies are seeing people who rely on the over-the-counter medication stock piling the product in a frenzied panic before the ban is enforced on February 1. Panadeine, Nurofen Plus and Mersyndol are amoung the products being hoarded by people who use the drug for pain relief, including for migraines and toothaches. As the national codeine ban looms, panic is brewing amoung regular users who will be forced to get prescriptions to use the drug (pictured) Pharmacies are seeing customers stock piling the product in a frenzied panic before the ban is enforced on February 1 (stock image) Cough medications including Codral and Demazin will also need prescriptions because they contain condeine. With only three weeks until the Australia wide ban, people are rushing to get their hands on the product before the ban comes into play which will force them to visit a doctor or hospital to get a prescription for the drug. Codeine is an opioid and is related to heroin and morphine which can be highly addictive and can give users a high if taken in large doses. Australia will join the ranks of at least 26 other countries that currently require a prescription for codeine-containing products. There are more than 5 million over-the-counter sales of Nurofen Plus, Panadeine, Mersyndol and Codral in Australia each year. During four years, there were 1917 recorded deaths involving either over-the-counter products containing codeine or Oxycodone between 2007 and 2011. The Dean of the Faculty of Pain Medicine of the Australian and New Zealand College of Anesthetists Dr Chris Hayes told The Daily Mercury that people will still be able to manage pain with over-the-counter medications that don't contain codeine. Panadeine, Nurofen Plus and Mersyndol are amoung the products (pictured) being hoarded by people who use the drug for pain relief, including for migraines and toothaches With only three weeks until the Australia wide ban, people are rushing to get their hands on the product before the ban comes into play (stock image) 'When exploring other alternative treatments it's good to be aware that unlike codeine, paracetamol and ibuprofen are not opioids and not addictive,' he said. 'There are many safer and more effective alternatives available that don't have the harmful side effects of low-dose codeine.' While the nation-wide ban is to deter people from using the drug for non-pain related reasons, one pharmacist believes it won't make a difference. 'There is no way for GPs to monitor someone's opiate use,' pharmacist John Jones told The Herald. 'So you can go and see three different prescribers, get three different prescriptions and present to three different pharmacies and no one has any idea.' Sarah Palin's oldest son pleaded not guilty on Monday to a felony charge in the case accusing him of assaulting his father at the family's Alaska home last month. Track Palin's lawyer entered the plea to a burglary charge on his behalf at his arraignment. The 28-year-old did not attend the hearing in person, but participated by phone. His parents, Todd and Sarah Palin, also did not attend. Sarah Palin's oldest son, Track Palin (left and right) pleaded not guilty on Monday to a felony charge in the case accusing him of assaulting his father at the family's Alaska home last month. The 28-year-old did not attend the hearing in person, but participated by phone Palin was arrested in December after Sarah Palin (right), the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee and a former Alaska governor, told authorities her son was on some kind of medication and 'freaking out'. A police affidavit said father Todd Palin (left) was bleeding from cuts on his head During the brief proceeding, Palin said only, 'Yes, ma'am,' when the judge asked if he was on the telephone line. The trial has been set for the week of February 26 Palin was arrested in December after Sarah Palin, the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee and a former Alaska governor, told authorities her son was on some kind of medication and 'freaking out'. A police affidavit said father Todd Palin was bleeding from cuts on his head. He told police the dispute began when his son called to pick up his truck from the Palins' home in Wasilla. According to the affidavit, Todd said he told Track not to come to the house but that his son said he would come anyway to beat him up. Todd told police he got his pistol 'to protect his family.' Track told police he broke a window, disarmed his father and put him on the ground. Wasilla police Officer Adam LaPointe wrote in the affidavit that Todd and Sarah had left the home when police arrived and that she was visibly upset. During a January 2016 rally in support of then-candidate Donald Trump, Sarah suggested Track's problems stemmed from post-traumatic stress disorder he developed after his military deployment in Iraq for a year in 2008 (Pictured, Track with daughter Kayla) Track's ex Jordan Loewe (above) filed an emergency order seeking full custody of their son Charlie following the arrest as did his ex-wife Britta Hanson Track yelled at officers, calling them peasants, and 'moved around in a strange manner' before being arrested without incident, the affidavit says. He told police he 'consumed a few beers earlier,' the document says. The Palins obtained a court order barring their son from having contact with them and their children who live at home. Todd told the court by phone in December that the family is prepared to re-establish contact. In 2016, he was suspected of punching his girlfriend, who then became concerned that he was going to shoot himself with a rifle, court documents said. According to the affidavit, Todd said he told Track not to come to the house but that his son said he would come anyway to beat him up. Todd told police he got his pistol 'to protect his family' (Pictured, left to right: Track and Willow Palin, holding Trig, September 2008) Track (second from left, September 2008) told police he broke a window, disarmed his father and put him on the ground. He yelled at officers, calling them peasants, and 'moved around in a strange manner' before being arrested without incident, the affidavit says He faced several charges but pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm while intoxicated, and the other charges were dismissed. His involvement in a booze-fueled brawl at a family gathering in 2014 also drew wide attention. Authorities did not file criminal charges in the incident. Track's ex-wife, Britta Hanson, filed for a protective order in December against him. Hanson, the mother of the couple's six-year-old daughter Kayla, will be back in court early next month to try and get a long-term order keeping her ex away from her and possibly their daughter. At the same time, Track's ex, Jordan Loewe - mother of his son, Charlie - also filed an emergency motion to change the child custody agreement that is in place between the couple. During a January 2016 rally in support of then-candidate Donald Trump, Sarah suggested Track's problems stemmed from post-traumatic stress disorder he developed after his military deployment in Iraq for a year in 2008. 'My son, like so many others, they come back a bit different, they come back hardened, they come back wondering if there is that respect for what it is that their fellow soldiers and airmen every other member of the military so sacrificially have given to this country,' she said at the time after alluding to the arrest. On Monday, the White House pushed back on an Axios report that said President Donald Trump is spending an increasing amount of time tweeting and watching TV labeled 'executive time' and not showing up to the Oval Office until 11 a.m. each day. 'I mean, it is ludicrous when many of you yourselves have reported on the fact that the president exhibits yeoman-like work every day in this job,' Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told reporters on board Air Force One Monday afternoon. Gidley added that the president spends his a.m. hours 'talking to the cabinet, talking to the chief of staff, calling members of the Congress and the Senate.' Scroll down for video The White House is challenging an Axios report that said President Trump's 'executive time' consists of tweeting and watching TV, with the president not coming down to the Oval Office until around 11 a.m. HOW TRUMP'S DAY REVOLVES AROUND 'EXECUTIVE TIME' WITH JUST TWO HOURS IN THE OVAL OFFICE Trump's Tuesday schedule was leaked to Axios.com and shows a scanty amount of structured work - as little as two hours spent in the Oval Office. 8am: Executive time. has generally been spent in the residence with tweeting, watching television and calls 11am: Oval Office for meeting with John Kelly, White House Chief of Staff Noon: Executive time 1pm: Lunch in the private dining room off the Oval Office 2pm: Executive time 2.45pm: Oval Office for meeting with National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster 3.30pm: Executive time 3.45pm: Oval Office meeting with Johnny DeStefano, head of Presidential Personnel 4.15pm: End of official schedule Other days are similar, according to the drafts given to Axios. Wednesday: Executive time until 11am Oval Office intelligence briefing, followed by executive time until 2pm, when there is an Oval office meeting with Norway's prime minister, Erna Solberg, then at 4pm a 'video recording with communications director Hope Hicks. Advertisement Axios reported that Trump's days begin at 8 a.m., but he conducts business from his private residence in the White House, where he's able to watch television and dash off tweets. He'll then head down to the Oval Office around 11 a.m. As Axios pointed out, that a much later start time than his most recent Republican predecessor, President George W. Bush. Bush was an early riser and would get downstairs to the Oval Office by 6:45 a.m. President Barack Obama, Trump's direct predecessor, would get up early to hit the gym every day. He would then be ready to start work from the Oval Office between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. Once Trump is in the Oval, he doesn't spend a lot of time there each day, usually wrapping things up by 6 p.m., Axios wrote. The president also spends a lot of time in the dining room adjacent to the Oval Office, which has a TV. He'll make phone calls from that room too. He also spends time in the residence making phone calls and watching television, Axios has learned. Trump's schedule hasn't always been so brief in the beginning of his term it began earlier and ended later, the website reported. Gidley characterized Trump's days as stretching much longer, noting that the president 'only needs a few hours of sleep.' The spokesman also argued that the president 'faced 90 per cent negative coverage, headwinds of palace intrigue stories, tabloid trash.' 'In the face of all that, he's still able to accomplish what he's been able to do,' the spokesman said. ''To describe his work ethic as anything other than yeoman like is ridiculous, and everyone knows it,' Gidley added, doubling up on the 'yeoman' description. White House aides have long said the president is always up to something, but the Axios report states that 'his time in the residence is unstructured and undisciplined'. In response to the report, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said, 'The time in the morning is a mix of residence time and Oval Office time but he always has calls with staff, Hill members, cabinet members and foreign leaders during this time.' 'The President is one of the hardest workers I've ever seen and puts in long hours and long days nearly every day of the week all year long,' the press secretary said. President Donald Trump may claim to 'know all the best words' but when it comes to using them in speech and the written word he comes bottom of the class. New research looking at the speech patterns of the last fifteen U.S. Presidents finds the 45th speaks at the level of a fourth-grader - the worst since Harry Truman in 1945. The analysis looked at the President's tweets as well as the spoken word with recent examples where Mr Trump proclaimed himself to be 'like, really smart,' typical of the colloquial style he is known for. Broken speech, fragmented sentences and a limited vocabulary are phrases that have been used to describe Donald Trump's speech which is at the level of a fourth-grader Analysis found Trump has the worst level of vocabulary of any of the last 15 presidents Factbase which studies President Trump's words claims The Donald has the worst vocabulary of any modern president despite him insisting on the opposite. 'I know words... I have the best words,' Mr Trump said one day in his superlative way. Trump's bold claim was trashed after wordsmiths used various calculations by looking at the first 30,000 words spoken in office by each president which was then ranked on the Flesch-Kincaid grade level scale. The words used by Trump were run through a variety of other lexicological analyses but the results were the same every time with The Donald always coming last. Trump was found to use the fewest 'unique words' (2,605) of any president. He also uses the fewest average syllables. Obama was the most fluent using 4,869. Trump often talk about himself in high praise but independent researchers say his language skills are lacking In a series of tweets on Saturday, Trump called himself 'really smart' and 'a very stable genius' 'By every metric and methodology tested, Donald Trump's vocabulary and grammatical structure is significantly more simple, and less diverse, than any President since Herbert Hoover, when measuring 'off-script' words, that is, words far less likely to have been written in advance for the speaker,' Factbase CEO Bill Frischling wrote. 'The gap between Trump and the next closest president ... is larger than any other gap using Flesch-Kincaid. Statistically speaking, there is a significant gap.' Newsweek reports that further tests analyzing English-language difficulty levels found Trump averaged languished around mid-fourth grade - well below Truman who spoke at nearly a sixth-grade level. Presidents Herbert Hoover and Jimmy Carter came top of the list speaking at an 11th-grade level. Herbert Hoover, left, the 31st President Of The United States was found to be at an 11th-grade level while Harry Truman, right, was second from bottom ranking just above Donald Trump Both President Bill Clinton and Barack Obama communicated at a ninth-grade level President Barack Obama placed third with a confident ninth-grade level of communication. President Clinton spoke at a highly-respectable ninth-grade level, while George W. Bush was at a seventh-grade grammar level. But Mr Trump would likely argue that intellectually he would come well above fourth-grade. On Saturday morning he tweeted that he was elected to the presidency 'on my first try.' 'I think that would qualify as not smart, but genius....and a very stable genius at that!' He also tweeted: 'throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been mental stability and being, like, really smart.' Later, at Camp David later he told how he was 'a very excellent student' and 'came out and made billions and billions of dollars ... ran for president one time and won.' Despite such a relatively poor performance linguistically-speaking, researchers in found that the way Mr Trump speaks mirrors the average conversation - which connected with supporters. Trump's language style wooed many voters into supporting his campaign. 'Trump's speech is appealing to many because it contrasts with the rehearsed style of other candidates,' Georgetown University linguist Jennifer Sclafani told DailyMail.com in 2016. 'His conversational style contributes to his overall image as a political outsider and as an 'authentic' candidate.' Trump graduated from Wharton School, has written many New York Times bestsellers and is said to be worth $4 billion. 'Looking at these facts, one would think he would use structured sentences and have a large vocabulary, but his sentences are fragmented and very simple when addressing the masses during debates and rallies. 'Fragmented sentences are actually quite natural and common in everyday speech, regardless of what language a person is speaking or other factors like the geographical origin, social class, or educational background of the speaker,' said Sclafani. 'People take notice of Trump's fragmented sentences because they are less common in formal public speeches, which are often first written and rehearsed or read from a teleprompter.' Advertisement Same-sex couples rejoiced as the new Australian Marriage Act officially came into effect - and some made a mad dash to the alter to become some of the first in the country to legally wed. Lesbian partners Teegan Daly and her new wife Mahatia 'Tie' Minniecon held their nuptials at midnight in a stunning ceremony in Melbourne on January 9. The pair said 'I do' following a cocktail party which began at 9pm at urban bar Ferdyduke and ran until one minute past midnight, when they officially locked lips as wife-and-wife. Lesbian partners Teegan Daly (right) and her new wife Mahatia 'Tie' Minniecon held their nuptials at midnight in a stunning ceremony in Melbourne on January 9 The pair said 'I do' following a cocktail party which began at 9pm at urban bar Ferdyduke and ran until one minute past midnight, when they officially locked lips as wife-and-wife Overjoyed guests partied until 3am to celebrate the union of Teegan and Mahatia in an event which was a long time coming. The couple already held a commitment ceremony in 2016 at a time when they didn't know if Australia would ever recognise them as legally married. 'When we had our commitment ceremony, we didn't know when it was going to be legal, so we decided to call it our wedding,' Teegan told the Australian Financial Review. 'Now that it is actually legal, it means we will just be the same as everybody else.' Overjoyed guests partied until 3am to celebrate the union of Teegan and Mahatia in an event which was a long time coming 'When we had our commitment ceremony, we didn't know when it was going to be legal, so we decided to call it our wedding,' said Teegan told the Australian Financial Review. The couple already held a commitment ceremony in 2016 (pictured) at a time when they didn't know if Australia would ever recognise them as legally married Some of the cost of Teegand and Mahatia's ceremony was covered by a number of wedding suppliers who were happy to help put together the historic nuptials. For the stunning occasion, Teegan opted for a glittering gold jumpsuit while Mahatia decided for a more traditional white gown. Touching photographs, taken by Christian Marc, show the brides kissing passionately as were officially recognised as married under Australian law. The ladies invited 40 friends and family members but also left an open invitation to the Melbourne public. Newlyweds Luke Sullivan and Craig Burns were also one of the first to tie the knot in Queensland during a touching night-time ceremony which saw the pair exchange vows exactly one minute after the law came into effect. Newlyweds Luke Sullivan (left) and Craig Burns (right) were one of the first to tie the knot in Queensland during a touching night-time ceremony which saw the pair exchange vows exactly one minute after the law came into effect The couple (pictured) tied the knot at one minute past midnight in a midnight ceremony in front of 55 friends and family members The athletes married in a beautiful ceremony at the Summergrove Estate, in the Tweed Coast Hinterland, at 12am in front of 55 family members and friends Daylight savings and the time difference meant the grooms were one of the first couples in the country to officially be recognised as married under Australian law The athletes married in a beautiful ceremony at the Summergrove Estate, in the Tweed Coast Hinterland, at 12am in front of 55 family members and friends. Daylight savings and the time difference meant the grooms were one of the first couples in the country to officially be recognised as married under Australian law. 'It's a very surreal feeling,' an emotional Craig said in the lead-up to the event. In a reverse-style wedding event, the couple hosted a pre-ceremony reception until 11.30pm when their marriage was officiated under a backdrop of fireworks. It is a dream both Craig and Luke - who met online three years ago - thought may never become a reality. 'It's a very surreal feeling,' an emotional Craig (pictured left with partner Luke) said in the lead-up to the event In a reverse-style wedding event, the couple hosted a pre-ceremony reception until 11.30pm when their marriage was officiated under a backdrop of fireworks It is a dream both Craig (right) and Luke (left) - who met online three years ago - thought may never become a reality 'I couldn't help but have this thought, 'I might not have this opportunity',' Luke (left) told 7news before his wedding The accomplished athletes became engaged in March 2016 after a touching proposal set on the rocks in Byron Bay, NSW, with both men dressed in Speedos as Craig popped the question on one knee 'I couldn't help but have this thought, 'I might not have this opportunity',' Luke told 7news before his wedding. The accomplished athletes became engaged in March 2016 after a touching proposal set on the rocks in Byron Bay, NSW, with both men dressed in Speedos as Craig popped the question on one knee. Their $50,000 nuptials were gifted by businesses across the state who donated their services towards one of the first legal same-sex weddings. Craig, a sprinter, hopes to qualify for the next Commonwealth Games and will represent Queensland at the 2018 Queen's Baton Relay in March. Their $50,000 nuptials were gifted by businesses across the state who donated their services towards one of the first legal same-sex weddings Craig, (right) a sprinter, hopes to qualify for the next Commonwealth Games and will represent Queensland at the 2018 Queen's Baton Relay in March Australian Commonwealth Games sprinter Craig Burns (left) and fiance Luke Sullivan (right) embrace before their marriage ceremony Craig and Luke (pictured left) pose in a photobooth ahead of their marriage ceremony at Summergrove Estate The happy couple waited nearly two years after their engagement for the new Australian Marriage Act to come into effect Australian Commonwealth Games sprinter Craig (left) and Luke (right) pose ahead of their marriage ceremony at Summergrove Estate, New South Wales on January 8, 2018 Craig (right) and Luke (left) are congratulated by friends after exchanging vows at their marriage ceremony The accomplished athletes became engaged in March 2016 after a touching proposal set on the rocks in Byron Bay, NSW, with both men dressed in tiny Speedos as Craig (left) bent down on one knee It is a dream both Craig (left) and Luke (right) - who met online three years ago - thought may never become a reality Amid scenes of jubilation same-sex couples were quick to lodge formal intentions to wed and while some were granted exemptions to the four-week waiting period, Tuesday is the first official day ceremonies can take place. In Newcastle, 32-year-old Rebecca Hickson will marry her partner of nine years Sarah Turnbull, 34. The pair said they wanted to be part of history and planned to also be one of the first couples to tie the knot in a ceremony from 8am. 'We've already had our big hoo-ha ceremony three years ago but now we get to declare our love for each other again and have it recognised as a real union,' Rebecca said. Pictured is Craig and Luke's official marriage certificate which was legally recognised on January 9 The loving couple celebrated well into the night after exchanging vows at one minute past midnight Newlywed Luke Sullivan (pictured) is embraced by his mother in law Robyn Burns before his midnight ceremony The couple's (pictured) athletic aspirations will delay their honeymoon until the end of the year Australian Commonwealth Games sprinter Craig (left)) and Luke (right) walk together before their marriage ceremony at Summergrove Estate Craig Burns is walked down the aisle by his mother Robyn before his marriage ceremony in Queensland She described the build-up to the postal vote deadline as 'a horrible time' but said the two are now excited to move beyond it. Melbourne couple Ron Van Houwelingen, 50, and Antony McManus, 53, echoed Ms Hickson's feelings about the postal vote and said no country should have to endure the same 'horrendous' process to legalise gay marriage. On Tuesday, the long-time activists will also look forward and tie the knot where they first met as performing arts students three decades ago - at the former Prahran College of TAFE's David Williamson Theatre. Gillian Brady and Lisa Goldsmith pose after the wedding ceremony at The Court on January 9, 2018 in Perth, Australia Lisa Goldsmith and Gillian Brady embrace during their touching wedding ceremony at The Court on Tuesday Lisa Goldsmith and Gillian Brady during the wedding ceremony at The Court on January 9, 2018 in Perth, Australia The loving couple waited years to finally tie the know after the Australian Marriage Act was finally changed 'I'm looking really forward to celebrating the victory,' Ron said. The two have already held more than a dozen commitment ceremonies, including in 1993 on their sixth anniversary when gay marriage 'wasn't on the radar'. 'I suppose it's been a wedding planned for 30 years but we've had really a month to get things together,' he added 'It's been quite hectic trying to organise that in such a short amount of time. The couple decided to tie the knot the day the Marriage Act was officially changed on January 9 Couples across Australia wed in midnight ceremonies as the Australian Marriage Act legalising same-sex marriage took effect on January 9 In an historic moment for the Australian gay community and following a powerful campaign, many same-sex couples signed their names on marriage certificates during spectacular midnight nuptials on January 9 Same-sex couple Lisa Goldsmith and Gillian Brady also took the opportunity to wed on January 9 in a touching ceremony at The Court. The Perth brides married in front of a small group of friends and family with Gillian dressed in a dapper suit while Lisa chose a beautiful white dress. Sarah Turnbull and Rebecca Hickson were quick to exchange vows too and married in a beautiful ceremony in Newcastle, Tuesday, January 9, 2018. Today is the first official day same-sex marriage ceremonies can take place in Australia after legislation was passed in parliament in December Sarah Turnbull (left) and Rebecca Hickson pose for a photograph with their Certificate of Marriage after being married in a ceremony in Newcastle, Tuesday, January 9, 2018 Today is the first official day same-sex marriage ceremonies can take place in Australia after legislation was passed in parliament in December Sarah Turnbull and Rebecca Hickson were quick to exchange vows too and married in a beautiful ceremony in Newcastle, Tuesday, January 9, 2018 Rebecca Hickson (left) and Sarah Turnbull (right) married in a ceremony in Newcastle, Australia Both brides opted to wear stunning white gowns during their historic wedding on the day the Marriage Act was changed Pictured is the loved-up pair posing with their marriage certificate after being wed in a touching ceremony Lainey Carmichael, left, Roz Kitschke, right, and celebrant Jason Betts pose as they show Lainey and Roz's marriage certificate at their home in Franklin, south of Hobart The BBC has asked newsreader Huw Edwards to cut his near-600,000 salary as it scrambles to fend off a legal row over the gender pay gap. As the Corporation grappled with the resignation of China editor Carrie Gracie, it emerged that key female presenters including Europe editor Katya Adler had been handed pay rises. On a day of chaos: As the BBC grapples with the resignation of its China editor Carrie Gracie over the gender pay gap, it is trying to cut the salaries of some of its male stars to make things more even. Newsreader Huw Edwards (pictured) is earning 600,000 a year Miss Gracie's resignation dominated Radio 4's Today programme but, as a presenter on the show, she was not allowed to discuss it; The Equality and Human Rights Commission said it could take action if the broadcaster had broken the law; The BBC admitted a long-awaited report into presenter pay had been hit by delays; Scores of high-profile women including Scottish first minister Nicola Sturgeon backed Miss Gracie; BBC staff were warned they could not report on Miss Gracie's pay row if they had backed her publicly. Miss Gracie, who earned 135,000 a year, quit in protest at widespread 'pay discrimination' turning down a 45,000 raise and has moved to another role in the newsroom. The BBC has kept secret details of which women had pay rises but the Mail revealed last year that Newsnight host Emily Maitlis had her salary hiked by more than 50,000. Miss Gracie, who earned 135,000 a year, quit in protest at widespread 'pay discrimination' turning down a 45,000 raise and has moved to another role in the newsroom Now it appears BBC bosses have also tried to tackle the gender pay gap by cutting pay for its male stars. Bosses have asked Edwards to take a sizable cut, amid concerns that his salary for the News At Ten looks dramatically out of kilter. Last night, the 56-year-old was still locked in negotiations. As he is on a permanent staff contract, the BBC needs his permission to cut his pay. Miss Gracie had accused the BBC of a 'secretive and illegal' pay culture and said she 'no longer trusts bosses to give me an accurate answer'. She said she had warned director-general Lord Hall last August that she would resign if the broadcaster did not pay men and women the same for the same jobs. The 55-year-old was furious that North America editor Jon Sopel was paid up to 250,000 and Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen up to 200,000. Miss Adler the fourth international editor earned less than 150,000 before her pay rise. Miss Gracie (pictured) had accused the BBC of a 'secretive and illegal' pay culture and said she 'no longer trusts bosses to give me an accurate answer' Miss Gracie, who is fluent in Mandarin, said she rejected the 45,000 pay rise as she would not 'collude in unlawful pay discrimination'. Today programme host John Humphrys has admitted he took a pay cut shortly after the BBC rich list revealed he made up to 650,000 a year. These cuts and the selective pay increases for female staff were designed to quell anger but yesterday it became clear they have backfired. Female presenters were furious they had not been singled out for pay increases, while others claimed to have been promised bosses would 'sort things out' only to be told their salaries would stay the same. Could Carrie Gracie take BBC to tribunal? The equalities watchdog is to investigate the BBC over Carrie Gracie's claims of unlawful pay discrimination against women. In her resignation, China editor Miss Gracie claimed the Corporation was 'breaking equality law' and had made a 'botched' attempt to address the gender pay gap. The Equality and Human Rights Commission last night issued a stern warning to the broadcaster over its treatment of women, demanding to see information on its pay policy and the facts of Miss Gracie's case. A spokesman for the watchdog added: 'We will consider whether further action is required based on this information.' And the commission also warned that the duty to report on gender pay gaps brought in last April was likely to expose more instances of unequal pay. Advertisement The BBC was forced to publish pay details for its 96 highest-paid staff last summer, and has spent the past six months urging presenters to be patient as it examines the problem. It commissioned an audit of presenter pay with a report supposed to be published before Christmas, but insiders say it is now on course for the end of this month. They claimed the delay was down to the complexity of the work. An insider said: 'This whole thing about equal pay for equal jobs is really difficult because we don't work in a toothpaste factory.' Yesterday, well-placed sources said the delays and silence had made staff even angrier. One newsroom source said: 'How did they allow things to get to this state? It's amazing how badly this has been handled. 'They keep kicking it into the long grass and now it has got out of hand.' Another said: 'They're so terrified of things getting out that they don't explain things properly but all the secrecy then makes it worse.' Miss Gracie revealed the only call she had received from BBC chiefs since the story broke was to ask if she would still front the Today programme yesterday. Senior sources said bosses were hopeful they could persuade Miss Gracie, who lived 5,000 miles from her teenage children while in Beijing, to remain China editor. Yesterday BBC news director Fran Unsworth warned staff impartiality rules meant they could not report on the issue if they tweeted in support of Miss Gracie. The BBC said it performed better than many organisations on equal pay and an audit had found no systemic discrimination. The 367 authorised customary heads of the 510 blocks of land within the special mining lease area of the Panguna mine do not recognise Philip Miriori as the chairman of the Special Mining Lease Osikaiyang Landowners Association. Unfortunately journalists in the Pacific region are publishing misleading reports on the situation on the ground and which support that the notorious troublemaker Philip Miriori who works (probably for his own profit) with a reputedly nearly bankrupt Australian mining company, RTG. ANDORRA On Monday the PNG Post-Courier published a remarkable article about the situation on Bougainville and the future of the famous Panguna mine. Philip Miriori The title holders said Mr Miriori did not represent them and was trying to advance the interests of disruptive third parties, including the small overseas company RTG which has no mineral rights over Panguna. Despite the decision of the Bougainville executive council to impose a moratorium over the Panguna project, we the title holders remain supportive of development with BCLs involvement, they said in a statement. Our position aligns with the ABGs original decision to reopen the mine in partnership with Bougainville Copper Limited and supports the broader aspiration for a Bougainville that is economically self-reliant. The customary landowners said while they respect the outcome of the wardens hearing it was completely dishonest to describe it as producing an overwhelming rejection of BCL as claimed by Mr Miriori. In fact President John Momis described the outcome as only a narrow divide and the public should be aware that a submission signed by about 320 of the 367 Customary Heads supportive of BCL was made to the Mining Warden, they said. The ABG and the landowners invited BCL to re-engage and they have done so in good faith and we the title holders believe a constructive dialogue with BCL about a development pathway should continue, the landowners said. BCL is a company that Bougainvilleans hold a major interest in through the ABGs shareholding. To us landowners there is a strong logic to supporting a company that is owned by Bougainvilleans. It is also true that there are legacy issues both social and environmental that will need to be addressed and as landowners we have higher degrees of confidence in BCL addressing these issues due to their full awareness, as opposed to alternative developers who will be reluctant to take responsibility. The landowners said the decision to place an indefinite moratorium over Panguna could also open the way for illegal miners to advance their activities in Panguna with authorities incapable of controlling it in Panguna. As you see, Mr Miriori represents only a minority of landowners that oppose to BCL. Since the beginning of this campaign it had been my impression all that cinema was motivated only by RTGs desire to influence its share price . Even if RTGs intentions were honest, such a small company with a few million dollars turnover never would be able to manage a multi-billion mining business like Panguna. So please, dear colleagues, avoid publishing superficial nonsense, such as the ABCs Pacific Beat did: Mining at Bougainville's troubled Panguna copper mine - one of the world's biggest - is being put on hold indefinitely. The community in the autonomous Papua New Guinea region remains divided, raising concerns the island risks a return to violence. The mine was at the centre of a deadly civil war in the 1990s. The Bougainville Government's now imposed an indefinite moratorium on mining, essentially shutting the door on BCL - the company which previously ran the mine - and has been vying to do so again. But others firms, including one with Australian links say they're still hoping to develop the mine. Please dont forget that Mr Momis is already a pretty old man who hesitates to create new problems on the island he stands for. Hes simply afraid to cause new unrest on Bougainville. But one thing is for sure: Without revenues from the Panguna mine under the leadership of BCL that is owned by the Autonomous Bougainville Government, the independence of the island will remain a sweet dream. Prime Minister Theresa May (pictured arriving back in Downing Street yesterday) botched her reshuffle as Jeremy Hunt refused to leave Health Theresa May's New Year reshuffle unravelled last night, denting her hopes of putting the disasters of 2017 behind her. She had hoped to use a shake-up of her leadership team to stamp her authority on government. But the plans were torpedoed when senior ministers refused to move. Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt warned Mrs May he would rather quit than accept a move to the business department forcing her to back down. And, following talks lasting more than two hours, the Prime Minister was forced to sack Justine Greening when she refused to move from education to work and pensions. Whitehall sources said Mrs May had also ditched plans to axe her former leadership rival Andrea Leadsom as Commons Leader. The reshuffle started shambolically when Conservative HQ wrongly tweeted that Transport Secretary Chris Grayling had been made party chairman. A subsequent tweet had to be deleted because of a spelling error and then the Tory website was taken offline because of a security problem. Mrs May had already backed away from plans to shift Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Chancellor Philip Hammond for fear of destabilising her top team. Her reshuffle, which was supposed to increase the Government's 'diversity', also left the gender and ethnic make-up of the Cabinet unchanged and led to the departure of Britain's first openly lesbian Cabinet minister, Miss Greening. One senior Tory described the outcome as embarrassing, adding: 'Far from asserting her authority, it's just highlighted how weak she is.' The problems threatened to overshadow a relaunch designed to focus the Government's efforts on domestic priorities such as housing, social care and schools. The reshuffle followed the sacking of Mrs May's deputy, Damian Green, last month over sleaze allegations. The Prime Minister appointed former justice secretary David Lidington as her new right-hand man. He will deputise for Mrs May at Prime Minister's Questions in the Commons, but he will not inherit Mr Green's grand title of first secretary of state. Justine Greening dramatically resigned from Government tonight after Theresa May tried to move her from Education Secretary After more than an hour with the Prime Minister in Downing Street, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt declined to become Business Secretary and instead left with a wider portfolio that includes all social care policy Mrs May spent hours trying to talk Ms Greening (pictured left leaving the Department for Education tonight) into staying in the government but to no avail. Esther McVey (right at No10) was drafted in as Work and Pensions Secretary after Ms Greening turned the job down Former immigration minister Brandon Lewis and rising star James Cleverly were also appointed to breathe new life into the Tories' moribund campaign machine. And Mrs May appointed a string of young MPs as party vice chairmen to help revive the Tory grassroots. Veteran party chairman Sir Patrick McLoughlin stepped down following criticism of his handling of last year's disastrous snap election at which the Tories lost their majority. The annual conference was also calamitous, with the PM's speech being interrupted by a prankster and letters falling from the party slogan behind her while she spoke. In other developments: Former TV presenter Esther McVey enjoyed a meteoric promotion to Work and Pensions Secretary after Miss Greening turned down the job; Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire resigned on health grounds after revealing he needs surgery to remove a lesion on his lung. He is replaced by former culture secretary Karen Bradley; Mrs May faced a backlash from pro-abortion campaigners over her appointment as Tory vice chairman for women of former nurse Maria Caulfield, who vowed last year to uphold 'the rights of the unborn child'; The Prime Minister sacked three male junior ministers, freeing up room to promote more women in a major shake-up of the junior ranks; Former work and pensions secretary David Gauke became the Tories' sixth Justice Secretary in less than eight years; Matt Hancock, a close ally of George Osborne, was promoted to the Cabinet as Culture Secretary; Mr Hunt was handed responsibility for resolving the social care crisis on top of his duties at the NHS. The Prime Minister will try to reassert her authority today with sweeping changes to the lower ministerial ranks. Significant numbers of female and ethnic minority MPs are expected to get promotion in a bid to make the government less 'pale, male and stale'. Mrs May will underline her focus on housing by appointing a number of new ministers to serve under Housing Secretary Sajid Javid. But her difficulties in moving senior colleagues underline her continuing weakness in the wake of last year's election. Mrs May announced a raft of new vice-chairmen for the Tory Party. They include from left: James Morris, Helen Grant, Marcus Jones, Rehman Chishti, Party Chairman Brandon Lewis, Prime Minister Theresa May, Deputy Chairman James Cleverly, Kemi Badenoch, Chris Skidmore, Maria Caulfield and Ben Bradley The reshuffle was also threatening to descend into confusion as Tory HQ tweeted that Transport Secretary Chris Grayling was the new party chairman - only to delete the post Conservative central office tweeted congratulations to Mr Grayling, before the message was swiftly demoted One Tory MP said: 'Every time she tries to flex her muscles she is quickly reminded just how weak she is.' Miss Greening, a steelworker's daughter, was Britain's first comprehensive-educated education secretary. But, after a series of lacklustre media performances, Mrs May concluded she needed a new face to champion the Tories' credentials on education, an issue which cost the party votes at last year's election. Last month, Mrs May's former chief of staff Nick Timothy criticised Miss Greening's social mobility plan for being 'full of jargon but short on meaningful policies'. Miss Greening told the PM her post was her 'dream job' and suggesting she could cause trouble on the backbenches said social mobility mattered 'more than a ministerial career'. Mrs May was said to be disappointed by her decision to quit the Cabinet, but determined to bring in new blood to lead a drive to improve school standards. Some Tory sources said Mrs May had considered appointing Mr Grayling, who ran her leadership campaign, as party chairman. But the plan is said to have met with 'internal pushback', prompting her to switch instead to Mr Lewis. Amid fevered speculation, Tory Central Office issued a pre-prepared tweet congratulating Mr Grayling, only to delete it less than a minute later. The party's new deputy chairman James Cleverly said someone in Tory central office appeared to have got 'a bit over-excited'. Concern about the Tories' online presence was underlined when the party's website crashed and No 10 had to delete a message congratulating new chairman Brandon Lewis because of a spelling mistake. David Gauke emerged from No 10 (pictured left) as the new Justice Secretary while Karen Bradley (centre arriving at Downing Street) was made Northern Ireland Secretary. She was replaced by Matt Hancock (right) Sir Patrick McLoughlin (left) has been axed as Conservative Party chairman and replaced with Brandon Lewis (right) Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire (left) decided to quit on health grounds as the PM kicked off the reshuffle. Justice Secretary David Lidington (right) has replaced Damian Green as Cabinet Office minister CABINET RESHUFFLE: WINNERS AND LOSERS IN Tory Chairman: Brandon Lewis Culture Secretary: Matt Hancock Education Secretary: Damian Hinds Work and Pensions Secretary: Esther McVey Immigration minister: Caroline Nokes (attends Cabinet) Business minister: Claire Perry (attends Cabinet) STAYING Home Secretary: Amber Rudd Chancellor: Philip Hammond Brexit Secretary: David Davis Housing and Communities Secretary: Sajid Javid Foreign Secretary: Boris Johnson Health Secretary: Jeremy Hunt Business Secretary: Greg Clark Defence Secretary: Gavin Williamson Trade Secretary: Liam Fox Transport Secretary: Chris Grayling Aid Secretary: Penny Mordaunt Environment Secretary: Michael Gove Lords Leader: Natalie Evans Scotland Secretary: David Mundell Wales Secretary: Alun Cairns Commons leader Andrea Leadsom Attorney General: Jeremy Wright QC MOVED Cabinet Office Minister: David Lidington Justice Secretary: David Gauke Northern Ireland Secretary: Karen Bradley OUT Patrick McLoughlin James Brokenshire Justine Greening Advertisement May sacks Greening after two-hour stand-off: Education Secretary snubbed new Cabinet job in clash at No 10 Justine Greening (pictured last night) was unable to hold on to her job as Education Secretary Justine Greening was forced out of Government last night after she unsuccessfully attempted to cling on to her job as Education Secretary. In an extraordinary stand-off, Miss Greening remained in Downing Street for two-and-a-half hours as she refused a move to the Department for Work and Pensions. After Theresa May reiterated that this was the only Cabinet job on offer, she was forced to resign. Miss Greening, 48, who was the first openly gay woman Cabinet minister, could now prove to be a thorn in the Prime Minister's side over Brexit and a third runway at Heathrow. In her job at education, where she has been since Mrs May took office, Miss Greening annoyed allies of the Prime Minister with her lack of enthusiasm for grammar schools. Shortly after 5pm yesterday she was called into No 10, where Mrs May told her she had decided it was time for 'new blood' to drive forward her education reforms and offered her a sideways move to become Work and Pensions Secretary. After Miss Greening resisted, Mrs May made the case that the proposed new job would 'have a big role to play in social mobility', which is an issue close to her heart. Miss Greening mulled over the move in a room next door to the Prime Minister's office for a couple of hours, before she rejected it and was told by Mrs May she had to go. At 7.45pm it was announced that Miss Greening had quit Government. Last night a source close to the Prime Minister said: 'She was offered a good job, but she refused to take it.' Miss Greening tweeted last night: 'Honour and privilege to serve in Govt since 2010. Social mobility matters to me and our country more than my ministerial career. I'll continue to do everything I can to create a country that has equality of opportunity for young people and I'll keep working hard as MP for Putney.' She was the first minister solely educated at a comprehensive to hold the post of Education Secretary. She will be replaced by Damian Hinds, the former employment minister, who attended a Catholic grammar school in Cheshire. Former grammar school boy is the new Education Secretary Former grammar school boy Damian Hinds is the new Education Secretary. The 48-year-old, who was employment minister, faces pressures over school funding and decisions about university tuition fees. Mr Hinds attended St Ambrose grammar school in Altrincham, Cheshire, before studying politics, philosophy and economics at Oxford. Shortly after entering Parliament as the MP for East Hampshire in 2010, he was elected to the education select committee. He served as assistant Government whip from July 2014 until March 2015 and as exchequer secretary to the Treasury from May 2015 until July 2016, before taking up his post as employment minister. Married with three children, he spent 18 years working in the pubs, brewing and hotel industries. The MP for East Hampshire Damian Hinds (pictured) is the new Education Secretary Advertisement Miss Greening, the daughter of a steelworker, attended Oakwood comprehensive in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, before studying economics at the University of Southampton. She trained as an accountant before becoming an MP in 2005, entering the Cabinet as Transport Secretary in 2011 and then International Development Secretary. Two days after the Brexit referendum in June 2016, Miss Greening, who had supported the Remain campaign, announced she was gay. Miss Greening said she had been persuaded to come out by her partner, a university lecturer named Tess, and announced that the decision was 'the best thing I've done in many, many, many a year'. Miss Greening, who only held her staunchly Remain constituency of Putney by 1,554 votes at the election in June last year, could turn into a headache for Mrs May if she rebels over Brexit. She is also a fierce opponent of the plan for a new runway at Heathrow as her constituency is under the flight path. In a reshuffle beset with social media blunders, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt was last night forced to explain why he had 'liked' a tweet stating that Miss Greening had left the Government. Mr Hunt later tweeted: 'Like button pressed by accident. Justine was an excellent minister and will be a great loss to govt.' ... but 'unsackable' Hunt defies PM to stay in charge at Health Jeremy hunt (pictured last night) refused a sideways move yesterday Jeremy Hunt joined the ranks of the Cabinet 'unsackables' last night after seeing off Theresa May's efforts to prise him out of the Department of Health. The minister flatly refused a sideways move to the business department after five years in charge of the NHS. Friends say Mr Hunt made it clear he would rather quit than leave the Health Department. After an hour-long meeting in No 10, the Prime Minister backed down and let Mr Hunt stay on to 'finish the job'. She also accepted his request to take charge of the Government's response to the social care crisis. Mrs May had already abandoned any idea of shifting Chancellor Philip Hammond and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson for fear of destabilising her administration. Yesterday's events suggest Mr Hunt is also now all but unsackable. The Health Secretary is highly rated in No 10 and has impressed Mrs May with his loyalty since last year's botched election. In recent days aides had even sounded him out about the becoming Mrs May's effective deputy only for him to make clear he was not interested in taking what is largely a backroom role. The Health Secretary (pictured last night) made it clear he would rather quit than leave the Department Downing Street sources acknowledged Mr Hunt had argued 'very passionately' to stay at the Department of Health. A source said: 'He wanted to see it through. He made the case very passionately. He persuaded the PM he's got the best experience to find a long-term solution on social care.' Mr Hunt will now take charge of drawing up the Government's care proposals. His success in resisting a move yesterday is also likely to strengthen his hand in negotiations with the Chancellor on future NHS funding. Sydney awoke to deafening thunder and thousands of lightning strikes on Tuesday, but meteorologists say worse could be on the way. A super cell storm with winds of up to 100km/h could hit Sydney as early at 1pm, bringing torrential rain. Weatherzone meteorologist Graeme Brittain said thunderstorms were expected, although temperatures will still tip 30 degrees in parts of the city. Scroll down for video Sydney awoke to deafening thunder and thousands of lightning strikes (pictured) on Tuesday, but meteorologists say worse could be on the way Weatherzone meteorologist Graeme Brittain said thunderstorms were expected, although temperatures will still tip 30 degrees in parts of the city (pictured) A super cell storm with winds of up to 100km/h could hit Sydney as early at 1pm, bringing torrential rain (pictured is lightning on Tuesday morning) 'There is potential for a thunderstorm with wind gusts of 80km/h or more,' he told Daily Mail Australia. 'Stormy weather could hit on and off throughout the afternoon, or last for about an hour, any time between 1pm and midnight.' 'There is the potential for a super cell storm this afternoon or evening and that could bring heavy rain and damaging winds,' Samantha Chiari told News.com.au. 'The cool change is coming through but later than initially forecast. Its looking more like the evening around 6pm or 7pm.' A powerful thunderstorm rolled over Sydney on Tuesday morning, bringing heavy rain, more than 4,600 lighting strikes and strong winds (pictured) By 5am, the thunderstorm had made its way to the inner-city, bringing more than 6mm of rainfall in three hours Ms Chiari, meteorologist at Sky News Weather, said the afternoon storm could be far more severe than the one which woke Sydneysiders this morning. The powerful thunderstorm rolled over Sydney early on Tuesday, bringing heavy rain, more than 4,600 lightning strikes and strong winds. The brunt of the storm lashed the western suburbs overnight, bringing up to 16mm of rain, uprooting trees and knocking off roof tiles near Blacktown. About 6,800 properties in Bankstown lost power at about 4.30am, according to The Sydney Morning Herald. The brunt of the storm lashed the western suburbs overnight, bringing up to 16mm of rain, uprooting trees and knocking off roof tiles near Blacktown (pictured) Weatherzone reported 4649 lightning strikes between 3am and 6am over Sydney on Tuesday Emergency crews worked to restore power to 700 customers in Sefton and Chester Hill, 1,300 homes in the Dudley and Whitebridge, 1,400 customers in Narara, Niagara Park and Ourimbah, and 600 customers in Castle Cove and Roseville Chase, according toAusgrid. A lightening trike knocked out power to another 1,000 homes in Westleigh, Thornleigh and Hornsby. By 5am, the thunderstorm had made its way to the inner-city, bringing more than 6mm of rainfall in three hours. Weatherzone reported 4649 lightning strikes between 3am and 6am over Sydney on Tuesday. Passengers were told to expect slight delays on domestic flights out of Sydney Airport, but international and domestic arrivals left on time. About 6,800 properties in Bankstown lost power at about 4.30am as the storm hit the city Passengers saw slight delays on domestic flights out of Sydney Airport, but international and domestic arrivals were on time The SES has warned NSW residents to take precautions as the storm activity sticks around. Residents are warned to secure outdoor furniture, tie down trampolines and stay inside and keep away from windows. Temperatures will drop between 6C and 8C at night and will remain in the mid-20s on Wednesday. The thunderstorms come after days of extreme heat. Temperatures soared to the mid-30s in Sydney on Monday, with the western suburbs reaching 40C, after the city sweated through its hottest day in almost 80 years. A lightening trike knocked out power to another 1,000 homes in Westleigh, Thornleigh and Hornsby Sydney was reportedly the hottest place on earth on Sunday with Penrith taking out the title of the hottest part of the city on Sunday, reaching 47.3C just after 2.30 pm. Richmond reached 46.3C just after 2.30pm while the temperature in Bankstown broke 45C. More than 50 new fires were sparked on Sunday, with 21 blazes continuing to burn into Monday, according to the RFS, and a severe fire danger rating was issued for the Hunter region. The NSW Rural Fire Service warned residents to prepare their bushfire plans. If people are considering leaving their homes they should 'leave early', the RFS said. A homeless man underwent an incredible transformation thanks to the helping hand of a kind-hearted stranger. After only being in Sydney for a day, Luis Xavier del Rosario, 18, told Daily Mail Australia he had gotten off a bus and was already feeling the heat when he spotted Ian begging on the hot pavement near Queen Victoria Building. 'I felt really bad for him,' Mr del Rosario said. 'I saw his cardboard sign and his motto of smiling and staying positive, [it] really touched me. Scroll down for video Homeless man, Ian, underwent an incredible transformation (pictured before left and right after) thanks to the helping hand of a kind-hearted stranger who had been in Sydney for a day Luis Xavier del Rosario, 18, (left) told Daily Mail Australia he had gotten off a bus and was already feeling the heat when he spotted Ian (right) begging near Queen Victoria Building Mr del Rosario said Ian had been living on the streets for six years but wanted to give the 52-year-old a new start in life by cleaning him up for job opportunities (Ian's sign pictured) 'I bought Ian some water and that's when our journey started.' Mr del Rosario, a South Australian student, said he sat down with Ian on Monday afternoon, who has been living on the streets for six years, and asked if he could 'change his life'. 'He seemed skeptical at first but he quickly got up ... it's good that we were able to establish that level of trust, especially for complete strangers,' he said. Usually left alone, the teenager said Ian said he was 'scared to die, not because of death itself but because [he] won't be remembered'. On a mission to start a new life, the pair went shopping for some new outfits, a welcome replacement for the old clothes Ian had been wearing for months. After his first 'proper shower in years' at a local pool, the 52-year-old was able to dress in fresh clothes before Mr del Rosario took him to a barber for a fresh cut to land him a job. 'He said he had been struggling for most of his life due to the lack of proper education,' Mr del Rosario told Daily Mail Australia. 'He never mentioned what work he did before, but he told me he had no qualifications.' The pair went shopping for some new outfits, a welcome replacement for the old clothes Ian had been wearing for months (pictured), followed by a new haircut Mr del Rosario (left) said he took Ian (right) for a chicken schnitzel dinner which gave Ian 'a glow of hope' as it was his first real meal in weeks The kind-hearted stranger took Ian, who grew up in a broken family and has been on his own since he was a child, out for his first real meal - a pub chicken schnitzel - in weeks. 'He loved the dinner, he savoured every bite,' Mr del Rosario said. 'Since he has no teeth he would always just eat soft foods like Hungry Jacks ... having a real meal prepared for him and eating that meal on a plate made him really happy. 'His true colours showed, he began to chuckle and smile more. 'His eyes had a new glow to them, a glow of hope.' Visiting family for a week in Sydney, Mr del Rosario, who spent about $250 helping Ian, said they went their separate ways after the pub meal but he hoped to check in with the 52-year-old before he leaves. 'We gave each other a big tight hug and that was the bittersweet ending to our story,' he said. With the hope to get a job and have a new start at life, Mr del Rosario, who said his family have 'loved and supported him' all his life, shared Ian's story online which quickly gained more than 14,000 views in less than a day. The mother of a teenager left traumatised by a violent Apex gang carjacking says her son is fleeing overseas because he is so scared of being attacked again. Sam Newman was driving home with his mate Daniel after a night out in the south of Melbourne in late-2015 when their car was rammed from behind by a stolen BMW. Issac Gatkuoth, an ice addict and alleged ring leader of the notorious Apex gang, got out of the BMW and ran up to the window of their car brandishing a shotgun. In the wake of that shocking attack, a traumatised Mr Newman took his own life. And now, after the Sudanese gangster appealed against being deported back to his homeland, Daniel's mother told Daily Mail Australia she is furious her 21-year-old son may leave first because he is so frightened of again falling victim to gang violence. Scroll down for video Sam Newman (right) and his best mate Daniel (left) were carjacked by an alleged leader of the Apex gang, Isaac Gatkuoth in 2015. The event led Mr Newman to take his own life, while Daniel continues to be traumatised to this day Isaac Gatkuoth (pictured) is fighting against a move to deport him back to Sudan Shelley - who is so scared for her safety she asked for her or Daniel's last names not to be used - said her son had not yet recovered from the incident some two years on. 'He relives Sam's death everyday. The day Sam took his own life was the day I lost a part of my son,' she tearfully told Daily Mail Australia. 'My son's leaving the country in August because he can't handle it anymore. I'm now losing him and it's not fair, it's all because of this stupid idiot. 'He's scared to go out now in case any of that kid's friends recognise him and attack him again. Victim's of Crime put an alarm system in our house, but we're still scared.' On that fateful night Gatkuoth - wearing a smiley mask - walked up to the driver and pointed a sawn-off shotgun at his head before ordering him to hand over his keys. He was ordered to spend 16 months in youth detention, a sentence which led to his visa automatically being cancelled and plans made to ship him back to Sudan. But the 20-year-old, who is currently being held on Christmas Island, has appealed a move to cancel his visa - leaving Shelley furious . 'He had every chance to make a life for himself in this country, but he took drugs and committed the crime,' she said. 'There's consequences. I lost my son the day he committed that crime. I lost Sam the day he committed that crime. 'The day Sam took his own life was the day I lost a part of my son': Shelley (right) said her shattered son Daniel relives the death of his best friend Sam (left) each and everyday Gatkuoth (pictured) spent 16 months in youth detention after the carjacking and is now being held on Christmas Island. He is appealing against a move to have him deported back to Sudan 'Daniel keeps blaming himself for Sam's death because he was away with his dad and sister on holidays at the time and he was going to ask Sam to come with them. 'We miss that kid so much and Daniel's just lost. They were soul mates. And now he's going to go overseas to escape because he just needs to get away.' The shocking carjacking attack wasn't the only one to be committed by members of the Apex gang in the stolen BMW. Amanda Matheson, 47, died after her vehicle was struck head-on by the same luxury car as it hurtled down the wrong side of the road three days later. The mother-of-three died in hospital three days after the attack. A 15-year-old boy at the wheel of the stolen car was jailed for three years in 2016. Amanda Matheson (pictured), 47, died after her vehicle was struck head-on by the same stolen BMW just days after the carjacking. A 15-year-old boy was jailed for killing the mother-of-three In recent weeks there has been growing unrest in Melbourne's western suburbs over growing crime rates among African youths (Pictured is a man being arrested in an unrelated incident) In Tarneit, in the city's west, African youths have reportedly committed a number of robberies and violent crimes in recent weeks (Pictured is a youth being spoken to by a police officer out the front of a Tarneit shopping centre) Gatkuoth has previously denied being a member of the Apex gang, with supporters of his online saying his 'hellish upbringing' had contributed to his crime spree. A petition aiming to 'stop the Australian government deporting Issac Gatkuoth' was backed by 602 people when set up last year. 'Issac Gatkuoth came to Australia as a nine-year old child refugee. He "endured a hellish, parentless upbringing in Sudan",' the petition read. 'He hasn't seen his mother since he was five years old, his two brothers were killed when his village was "wiped out".' One of the world's oldest silverback gorillas has died at the ripe old age of 56. Nico celebrated his last birthday in July and died in his sleep on Sunday at Longleat Safari Park. He spent most of his life at the park in Wiltshire where he lived in the middle of an island, in a purpose-built house that was centrally-heated and complete with classical pillars and a TV. Scroll down for video Nico celebrated his last birthday in July and died in his sleep on Sunday at Longleat Safari Park He spent most of his life at the park in Wiltshire where he lived in the middle of an island, in a purpose-built house that was centrally-heated and complete with classical pillars and a TV Nico is pictured admiring his home, where he lived for many years after moving from Switzerland A spokesman for Longleat said on Facebook: 'Everyone here has been truly saddened by the death of Nico. 'His main keeper has been working with Nico virtually on a daily basis since 1989 and has forged an extraordinarily close bond with him. 'It goes without saying that he is particularly devastated by the loss along with the rest of his keeping team who have cared for Nico over the years.' Keepers were unsure of Nico's exact age and there was a likelihood he may have been older than 56. He was moved to the UK from Switzerland in the 1980s. The silverback gorilla is pictured on his 56th birthday chowing down on some food The gorilla, who once tipped the scales at 34 stone, lived on his own island in the middle of a lake at Longleat in a purpose-built, centrally-heated house, complete with classical pillars and his own television. He also had a series of lookout stations and giant tree trunk climbing frames where he could sit and watch the antics of the nearby colony of three younger gorillas - brothers Kesho, Evindi and Alf. The oldest male gorilla in the world lives in the USA and was born in 1961 while the oldest female, who also lives in America, was born in 1956. Keepers were unsure of Nico's exact age and there was a likelihood he may have been even older than 56 Acclaimed actress Kerrie Anne Greenland says Craig McLachlan's alleged 'inappropriate behaviour' was well-known among Australia's theatre community. Ms Greenland, who performed in the 2014 production of Les Miserables, told The Daily Telegraph on Tuesday she was warned about McLachlan by his fellow cast members from The Rocky Horror Show. 'It was common knowledge about Craig and I wasn't surprised when it came out,' she said. 'I know people were feeling very uncomfortable onstage and offstage [with McLachlan] and a lot of the women felt very uncomfortable during the show.' McLachlan, however, has strenuously denied the allegations describing them as baseless. Scroll down for video Acclaimed actress Kerrie Anne Greenland (pictured) says Craig McLachlan's alleged 'inappropriate behaviour' was well-known among Australia's theatre community 'It was common knowledge about Craig and I wasn't surprised when it came out,' she said of McLachlan (pictured) Ms Greenland, who performed in the 2014 production of Les Miserables, said on Tuesday she was warned about McLachlan by his fellow cast members from The Rocky Horror Show (pictured) The Helpmann award-winner told the publication that the rumours deterred her from auditioning for the 2014 production of the Rocky Horror Show. 'I just didn't want to put myself in that position. What I heard was powerful and I just didn't want to be treated like that,' she said. Three cast members from the Rocky Horror Show told a Fairfax Media and ABC investigation that McLachlan inappropriately touched them or exposed himself to them. A woman and a man who worked as part of the crew in the 2014 production also went to police on Monday, according to the ABC. McLachlan said the allegations by Erika Heynatz, Christie Whelan Browne and Angela Scundi are 'baseless'. Three cast members from the Rocky Horror Show told a Fairfax Media and ABC investigation that McLachlan inappropriately touched them or exposed himself to them Erika Heynatz (pictured left) and Christie Whelan Browne (right) are among the women to make allegations against McLachlan, who says the accusations are 'baseless' Scundi alleges McLachlan kissed her passionately onstage even after she had asked that it not be done 'They seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety,' he was quoted as writing. 'These allegations are ALL made up.' McLachlan has agreed to stand down from the current production at the Adelaide Festival Centre and will be replaced in Tuesday night's show by his understudy. The show's producers, the Gordon Frost Organisation, said they are taking the allegations very seriously, have vowed to co-operate fully with authorities and will also conduct a full internal investigation. The producers of the popular television series The Doctor Blake Mysteries, which stars McLachlan, will also hold production on a new series to allow 'due process'. 'These allegations are ALL made up,' McLachlan said. One of his accusers Erika Heynatz is pictured Whelan Browne said McLachlan indecently assaulted her on stage during a sexual scene The cast of The Rocky Horror Show, led by Craig McLachlan, are pictured in Perth in 2014 Victoria Police have confirmed they're investigating allegations of sexually inappropriate behaviour by the 52-year-old. GFO said it was shocked to learn of the allegations from the three actresses. 'They seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety,' he was quoted as writing. Whelan Browne said that during Rocky Horror in 2014, McLachlan, who played transvestite Frank N Furter to her character Janet, indecently assaulted her on stage during a sex scene. McLachlan has withdrawn from the current production of The Rocky Horror Show amid allegations he sexually harassed and bullied his former co-stars Scundi alleges McLachlan kissed her passionately onstage even after she had asked that it not be done. GFO said it was not aware of any details of the allegations until they were published in the media, although it received correspondence from a law firm before Christmas. 'We can also confirm that our records show the claimants at no time made any complaint - formal or informal - to the company manager or executive producer of The Rocky Horror Show in 2014,' the company said. 'Furthermore no one at GFO recalls any verbal discussion of this nature. It would be distressing to us if anyone within our company was dismissive of sexual assault allegations, and this will form a part of our internal investigation.' Erika Heynatz is among the women to allege McLachlan of inappropriate behaviour Advertisement Theresa May launched a major revamp of Tory HQ yesterday, appointing a new chairman and bringing in a raft of young and ethnic minority MPs. Sir Patrick McLoughlin resigned, shouldering the blame for lacklustre party organisation during the election and problems with the stage set at October's party conference. The ex-chairman said he accepted the need for new blood, telling Mrs May there was plenty of talent to bring forward. The Prime Minister said she wanted to put the party on a 'strong footing to fight and win the next general election'. Her new team will implement the results of a party review into what went wrong at the polls last June. They will also attempt to turn around the slow decline in membership, which stood at around a million when Margaret Thatcher left office in 1990. It was 250,000 when David Cameron took over as leader in 2005. But it is now put at 70,000 and only 10,000 of those are thought to be aged under 30. A nurse, Pakistan PM's former aide and a rising star aged just 28 1. JAMES MORRIS, MP for Halesowen and Rowley Regis (vice chairman, Training and Development): A former small-business owner, the little-known MP since 2010 has never made ministerial rank. 2. HELEN GRANT, MP for Maidstone and The Weald (vice chairman, Communities): Solicitor and former Labour Party member who switched sides and became a Tory MP in 2010. The mother of two was promoted quickly by David Cameron to sports minister, but was seen as having under-performed and was sacked in 2015. 3. MARCUS JONES, MP for Nuneaton (vice chairman, Local Government): Former council leader and MP since 2010, he held several ministerial bag-carrying jobs before becoming a junior local government minister. 4. REHMAN CHISHTI, MP for Gillingham and Rainham (vice chairman, Communities): Pakistani-born, he grew up in Gillingham, and worked as a criminal barrister. Political adviser to former Pakistani PM Benazir Bhutto aged 21, then worked for Tories in opposition. Became an MP in 2010. 5. BRANDON LEWIS, MP for Great Yarmouth (chairman, Tory Party). 6. JAMES CLEVERLY, MP for Braintree (deputy chairman, Tory Party): One of the party's rising stars, the former Territorial Army officer and father of two became an MP only two years ago. Pro-Brexit. 7. KEMI BADENOCH, MP for Saffron Walden (vice chairman, Candidates): Born in London but raised in Nigeria, she came to the UK aged 16 and stayed for A-levels and university. Has praised the 'British dream' that allowed her to go from immigrant to MP. Wowed the Tory faithful when she introduced Theresa May at last year's party conference. Pro-Brexit. 8. CHRIS SKIDMORE, MP for Kingswood (vice chairman, Policy): An Oxford-educated historian, he has written several books about Tudor England. Held a junior Cabinet Office ministerial post. 9. MARIA CAULFIELD, MP for Lewes (vice chairman, Women): The 44-year-old Conservative Christian Fellowship member has been an MP since 2015. A former nurse, she grew up on council estates in the South London boroughs of Wandsworth and Lambeth and did not go to university. 10. BEN BRADLEY, MP for Mansfield (vice chairman, Youth): A 28-year-old father of two and former council leader who, against the odds, took Mansfield from Labour last year. He has called for an inspiring, positive message to win back young people to the party. Advertisement Sir Patrick was replaced by Brandon Lewis, a former barrister and council leader in Essex who has impressed as immigration minister and is considered a good performer in TV interviews. Mrs May also hired several young and ethnic minority MPs to inject renewed energy into Conservative Campaign Headquarters. James Cleverly has been made party deputy chairman just two years after entering parliament. Confident and straight talking, he is also one of the few Tory MPs to impress on social media. Always ready with a quip, he relishes baiting Labour MPs on Twitter. The 48-year-old is the son of an English surveyor and a midwife mother from Sierra Leone. Kemi Badenoch, a pro-Brexit MP born in London and raised in Nigeria who entered parliament in June, is vice chairman for candidates. She wowed party members when introducing Mrs May at October's party conference. Ben Bradley, who is 28 and won the Mansfield seat from Labour last year, becomes vice chairman for youth. Pakistan-born Rehman Chishti and mixed-race ex-sport minister Helen Grant become vice chairmen for communities. Abortion campaigners condemned Mrs May's decision to appoint a pro-life MP to the post of Tory vice chairman for women. Maria Caulfield, a former nurse who grew up on a council estate, led opposition to a parliamentary bid to decriminalise terminations. Sir Patrick McLoughlin (pictured) resigned, shouldering the blame for lacklustre party organisation during the election in June The British Pregnancy Advisory Service, a major abortion provider, described the decision as profoundly disappointing. 'We are shocked that the Conservative Party has decided to appoint as their vice chair for women an MP who supports the criminalisation of women who end their own pregnancies,' said a spokesman. But Conservative MPs hit back, accusing pro-choice groups of 'trolling' a politician simply for holding a different view. Miss Caulfield, MP for Lewes since 2015, will be expected to help devise campaigns to persuade more women to back the party. Chris Skidmore, Andrew Jones and Marcus Jones gave up junior ministerial positions to take up roles as vice chairmen for policy, business and local government respectively. James Morris becomes vice chairman for training and development. Esther's shock Cabinet comeback Esther McVey has been appointed Work and Pensions Secretary in a remarkable comeback. The former television star, who previously attended Cabinet as an employment minister under David Cameron, was the most high-profile Tory casualty of 2015 when she was ousted from Wirral West by Labour. She returned to Parliament last June after taking George Osborne's former seat in Tatton, and was made deputy chief whip in November. Now she returns to the Cabinet table in charge of the Department of Work and Pensions. Miss McVey, 50, who found fame as a GMTV presenter, is one of the party's strongest media performers. She lost her seat two years ago after a union-led campaign in her constituency, which was surrounded by Labour seats. Esther McVey has been appointed Work and Pensions Secretary in a remarkable comeback May brings in her new Mr Fix-it Former justice secretary David Lidington will move into the Cabinet Office to act as Theresa May's Whitehall 'fixer'. Stationed next door to No10, he will become Mrs May's right-hand man, chairing vital policy committees overseeing Brexit. He takes over from Damian Green, who was sacked last month after an inquiry found he failed to tell the truth about pornography found on his office computer. However, though he has been named Minister for the Cabinet Office, the Aylesbury MP will not take Mr Green's former title of First Secretary of State. Despite not having the prestige of the de facto deputy prime minister role, Mr Lidington's new job will hand him significant power as chairman of a number of important committees. Many of these concern Brexit, meaning the former minister for Europe will have a significant say over the process of leaving the EU. The Remainer will also stand in for Mrs May at Prime Minister's Questions when she is away on business. Asked why Mr Lidington had not been given his predecessor's title, No10 said: 'First Secretary of State is a title which the Prime Minister chooses when to use and when not to use. She believes David Lidington will perform this job ... with great skill.' Osborne's protege gets Culture post George Osborne's former protege Matt Hancock was promoted to the Cabinet yesterday. He becomes Culture Secretary, a step up from the digital minister role he has filled in the same department for 18 months. His responsibilities now range from arts, museums and the internet to gambling, the BBC, Press regulation and sport. Matt Hancock (pictured) was promoted to the Cabinet yesterday and became Culture Secretary The appointment illustrates the continuing influence of Mr Osborne despite being sacked as Chancellor by Mrs May when she became Prime Minister. Mr Hancock was Mr Osborne's chief of staff before he was elected MP for West Suffolk in 2010. Three years later he was brought into Government as a business minister by David Cameron following the then-Chancellor's intervention. He was soon promoted to Cabinet Office minister before being demoted to digital minister in 2016. His new remit will include regulation of internet giants such as Facebook and Twitter. At ease, troops. Unfix bayonets. Loosen those chinstraps. Yes, Gunner Smudge, you may light a Woodbine, provided you go to the trench's designated smoking area. Some of you may have been under the impression the balloon was going up and R-Day (for Reshuffle) was going to be 'a bit of a show', as battledogs say. Well, er, it wasn't. Not so much a shuffle as a slow-motion shimmy. At glacial speed through the day we learned that the big posts would remain in the same hands. More Chancellor Hammond (groan). More Home Secretary Rudd. More Health (and now Social Care) Secretary Hunt, who may have insisted on an umpire decision review and refused to walk after initially being given the finger. Greg Clark was left at Business. Industrialists unscrewed whisky bottles and poured themselves quadruples. Mr Clark is far from scintillating. Veteran party chairman Sir Patrick McLoughlin (pictured) stepped down following criticism of his handling of last year's disastrous snap election For the capital's diplomatic spouses, meanwhile, there was better news. Boris would remain Foreign Secretary, a man to bring jollity to any wine and cheese evening but also uncertainty in the orbit of the ambassadorial residence's burgeoning tray of champagne flutes. Boris's reconfirmation was not announced until after 3pm and by that time some of the paparazzi in an Arctic Downing Street were so cold, they could barely press their camera buttons. In most respects it was a case of 'Carry on, Cabinet'. The most exciting promotions? David Gauke 'Who he?' cries the nation was sent to Justice. Mr Gauke was previously in charge of welfare. At Justice he replaced David Lidington 'Eh?' said the British people, again struggling to put a face to this titan of our public affairs. Mr Lidington was sent to the Cabinet Office to become the new Damian Green, or rather the new Damian Green from the navel upwards. Tory Party chairman Sir Patrick McLoughlin, perhaps three years late, was led away to the glue factory. Nice old donkey, McLoughlin, but spectacularly ineffective. Prime Minister Theresa May (pictured yesterday) botched her reshuffle as Jeremy Hunt refused to leave Health and Justine Greening resigned rather than move 'He's done amazing work,' said congenial bruiser James Cleverly, newly promoted party vice-chairman. An innocent enough fib. Karen Bradley was sent to Northern Ireland. She may enjoy the more liquid aspects of that office. The rolling-news bods, particularly those reporters who were in Downing Street from the wee hours, shivering in their winter coats and jumping up and down to prevent their toes from going numb, must feel the most frightful fools. Will they ever again believe what they read in the Sunday papers which had hyperventilated with so many theories about who was for the chop? Sky News had laid on all sorts of Reshuffle Day plans and had lined up endless pundits to explain what all these ingenious changes meant. But by late afternoon Sky's hot-shot presenter Kay Burley, a tigress who can make Jeremy Paxman look like Private Godfrey, had so lost interest in the political news that she was down on the studio floor doing press-ups with some muscle man in a New Year keep-fit feature. Westminster had spent the day a-quiver, to little avail. Those of us who have rushed wives to maternity hospitals on inconclusive missions, only to return home later with them still defiantly pregnant, will know the feeling. Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt warned Mrs May he would rather quit than accept a move to the business department and essentially forced her to back down In the Commons chamber it was Home Office Questions and peppery Tory Philip Davies (Shipley), who has long attacked Mrs May from the Right, raised a laugh by making an early contribution. 'I thought I'd better get in quick before the Prime Minister's inevitable call to me,' said Mr Davies, self-teasingly. Looking down at the benches from the galleries, it was not hard to spot the ones who ache to be minister and those who, like Mr Davies, consider it the higher honour to be outspoken in defence of their constituents. Taunton Deane's ultra-eager Rebecca Pow, who is no danger to Mensa, exemplified the wannabes. She strained to ask the front bench helpful questions. She boinged to her feet with goody-goodiness. There is no guarantee she will ever make the grade. Why do they do it? Trading in gold bullion is usually seen as a licence to print money but, curiously, Formula One billionaire Bernie Ecclestones former son-in-law has managed to make only a tiny profit. I can disclose that James Stunt, who divorced Bernies 29-year-old daughter Petra last year, achieved a turnover of 11.5 million with his business Stunt & Co. However, newly published accounts at Companies House report that it made a profit of just 23,118. James Stunt's company made a profit of just 23,118 last year. He divorced Bernies 29-year-old daughter Petra last year (pictured right together in 2014). Left: Bernie Ecclestone arrives at court to support his daughter in her divorce hearing Its very intriguing, a source tells me. Stunts brother, Lee, was the companys chief financial officer until his death in 2016 at the age of 37. His untimely death was one of a string of misfortunes suffered by James, whose family home in Chelsea was attacked with a petrol bomb earlier that year. The terrifying incident was caught on CCTV, as a bottle was lobbed over security gates before landing on the drive and bursting into flames just yards from Petras Range Rover. Luckily, Petra and her three young children were not at home when the attackers struck. The couple were known for their lavish way of life and Jamess 35th birthday party at St Jamess nightclub Tramp last year was attended by guests including Chloe Green, daughter of retail billionaire Sir Philip. Petra was granted a divorce last October after lawyers revealed that a settlement had been reached with Stunt. Their assets included a 100 million Chelsea mansion and a 158 million home in Los Angeles. No details of the settlement were revealed. The couple met in 2006 and married in 2011, but last June began their court battle which saw Stunt evicted from the Chelsea property. During a bad-tempered hearing, details of their marriage were laid bare, including hotly disputed allegations that he was abusive, violent and took overdoses. A spokesman for Stunt & Co tells me: There is no correlation between turnover and profit. Stunt and Co, by contrast, moved from loss into profit, which was as expected for its second full year of trading. The Beebs descent into W1A chaos over Carrie Gracies resignation as China Editor was complete when the aggrieved journalist appeared on the BBC News Channel. A rogue subtitle presented her complaint over pay discrimination as: I cannot collude in what I see as unlawful papist rumination. At least they kept the Freemasons out of it. Little Britain star Matt Lucas seems to have spent too much time in La-la land, pursuing a Hollywood career. He admits: When I come back to London and try to order the chicken but without skin, with potato, but with the butter on the side . . ., the waiters simply look at me as if to say: Who the f*** do you think you are? Youll get wot youre given. Bahamas babe Lottie's post holiday blues It's back to reality this week for Kate Mosss model half-sister Lottie, who cut a desultory figure in Chelsea yesterday after returning from her sunshine break in the Bahamas. It's back to reality for Lottie Moss who has returned from a beach trip in the Bahamas to her home in West London The Calvin Klein mannequin, who turns 20 today, swamped her petite frame in an 18 Boohoo Melissa mustard pom pom jumper, leggings and trainers. Appearing bored as she carried a large Waitrose bag and a six-pack of Evian water bottles, its certainly a far cry from the little white bikini she opted for last week. Could Commons Speaker John Bercow a man who places such a premium on political correctness himself be guilty of prejudice? He has started mocking the broad Scottish accent of Kilmarnock and Loudoun MP Alan Brown. Hard-working Brown happens to speak in a handsome brogue, something Bercow seems to find so hilarious he has taken to mimicking it when he calls Brown to speak. Should Bercow not report himself to the Equalities Commission for hate speech? Benjamin Hunt was appointed as an Office for Students adviser, leading to concerns about the body's commitment to free speech The new universities watchdog has recruited an adviser accused of suppressing free speech after lobbying against a former Archbishop of Canterbury over gay marriage. The Office for Students (OfS) yesterday appointed Benjamin Hunt who ran a campaign to have a poster of Lord Carey removed from Kings College London. The watchdog is already in the spotlight over the controversial appointment to its board of journalist and free schools pioneer Toby Young who posted obscene and sexist tweets several years ago. Mr Hunt was president of the students union at Kings when he campaigned against Lord Carey, saying it was not right to celebrate someone with his views against gay marriage. The poster, in a line-up of famous former students, was taken down in 2016. Mr Hunt was accused at the time of attempting to shut down legitimate debate, with one academic labelling him the Gaystapo. His appointment to the OfS will raise further eyebrows since part of its remit will be to ensure universities allow a wide range of views to be heard. The universities minister, Jo Johnson, has said institutions will face fines and even the prospect of being deregistered if they do not tackle campus censorship. Universities minister Jo Johnson, left, defended the appointment of Benjamin Hunt despite Chris McGovern, right, questioning Hunt's commitment to free speech Yesterday Chris McGovern, of the Campaign for Real Education, questioned how committed Mr Hunt was to free speech. He said: Central to British values, being promoted by Government, is respect for those whose views may differ from ones own. 'This means mutual respect between supporters and opponents of gay marriage. Mr Hunt will be on the OfS student panel which will advise the board when the OfS becomes fully operational in April. The OfS said the panel will consider how best to ensure its work is relevant to students from all backgrounds. Nicola Dandridge, chief executive of the OfS, said of Mr Hunts appointment: The panels strength will be in the diverse range of opinions its members will be able to offer. Mr Hunt was leader of his universitys Liberation Association for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. His campaign against Lord Carey came after the former archbishop was quoted as saying that same-sex relationships should not be put on the same level as heterosexual unions. Lord Carey, pictured speaking at the Queen Mother's funeral, was criticised by Benjamin Hunt, who campaigned to remove a poster of the former archbishop Lord Careys office said yesterday: Lord Carey said he had no personal ambition to be included in the line-up at Kings but was concerned about what signal the move would send out about the status of free speech in the universities especially in a period when it is under exceptional attack. In the Commons yesterday Mr Johnson defended the appointment of Mr Young. He argued that the new OfS adviser had been on a developmental journey since posting his controversial tweets, had promoted equality as a free school founder and was an eloquent supporter of free speech. Before Consensus CNY, the campaign to merge the city of Syracuse and Onondaga County governments, there was another endeavor to consolidate a large upstate city and county into one regional government. The man who led that push was Joel Giambra, who served two terms as Erie County executive from 2000 through 2007 and is now seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Gov. Andrew Cuomo. As county executive, Giambra advocated for merging the city of Buffalo and Erie County, upstate's two largest municipalities. He also attempted to combine the Buffalo Police Department and the Erie County Sheriff's Department. Both efforts were unsuccessful. Despite the failures, Giambra hasn't given up on his support of regional government. "I think it's the only way that you can really effectively reduce the cost and size of local government," he said in a phone interview with The Citizen last week. The Consensus CNY plan is a major component of the region's CNY Rising economic development strategy, a product of the state's Upstate Revitalization Initiative that awarded central New York $500 million to support various projects and boost job creation. Consensus CNY outlined a slew of recommendations in 2016, including the proposed Syracuse-Onondaga County merger. Some city and county leaders, including Onondaga County Executive Joanie Mahoney, supported the concept or were willing to learn more about the possible consolidation of the two governments. Others, such as then-Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner, criticized the plan. The final Consensus CNY report was released last year and once again recommended the city-county merger. "I've told people I sincerely believe that we could form a metropolitan government that no one would notice in their everyday lives after we did it," Mahoney said in an interview last year. Consensus has the support of the state. Through the Upstate Revitalization Initiative, the state pledged $25 million to help advance the merger and other recommendations outlined in the plan. But Giambra believes the state should do more to implement regional governments across New York. Cuomo, a Democrat, has advocated for government consolidation over the years. He has repeatedly said there are too many local governments in New York and links the number of municipalities, fire districts, water districts and other entities to the high property tax burden. One of Cuomo's proposals last year was for counties to form panels to discuss ways to share services among local governments. In his 2018 State of the State agenda, he proposed making those panels permanent and requiring local government officials to meet annually to develop ways to share services. Giambra, though, doesn't think that's enough. "It's nice that we can share a bulldozer, but it doesn't really save a whole lot of money," he said. "We have to get more nimble. We have to have a broader approach to government service delivery. You can't have 15 highway superintendents. That system of governance doesn't work. He added, "I will be taking that message from Jamestown to Montauk because the problem exists throughout the entire state and our system of governance." Giambra also believes regional government can help address issues the state faces because of changes made to the state and local tax deduction in the recently adopted federal tax plan. The tax plan approved by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump alters the state and local tax deduction. Now, there is a $10,000 cap on the amount of state and local income, property and sales taxes you may deduct. Cuomo, who was a critic of the Republican tax plan, has said the changes to the state and local tax deduction will harm New Yorkers. But Giambra views it as an opportunity for the state to explore ideas, including regional government, to lower property taxes. "Let's get serious about reducing the cost of service delivery at the local government level, which will stimulate economic development and maybe avoid us from having to give away taxpayer dollars in failed experiments," he said. On what would have been her beloved father's 55th birthday, the daughter of Darren 'Razzle' Thornburgh has posted a beautiful tribute to her late father. Zoe Thornburgh, 23, took to Instagram on Tuesday morning to write, 'My Dad my king forever in my heart' alongside a series four sweet throwback snaps. Alongside one image, she wrote, 'Happy Birthday to my number 1' and '55 today but didn't look or act a day of 25. I love you' alongside another. The nightclub entrepreneur was found dead on the veranda of his home in Barmah on the Victorian-NSW border on 13 November 2017, with police ruling out foul play. Alongside an old image of her father, Zoe Thornburgh wrote, 'Happy Birthday to my number 1' Zoe Thornburgh, 23, took to her Instagram on Tuesday to pay tribute to her late father 'Razzle' '55 today but didn't look or act a day of 25. I love you,' Zoe captioned a beachside pic of her dad Zoe's social media accounts contain numerous throwback pictures of her and her late father In the aftermath of his death, Zoe posted throwback pictures of Razzle with his two daughters on her Instagram, writing: 'To us he wasn't Darren Thornburgh or Razzle, or nightclub king ... he was just dad. 'He was my dad. He is my dad. I love you dad. You're my everything and always will be. I keep waiting thinking my phone is gonna ring and your call me laughing and say "Got ya Zo! Got ya all!" 'And I'll roll my eyes & breathe a sigh of Relief and it will all be okay.... I'm waiting Dad. Please call me.' Darren 'Razzle' Thornburgh was found dead on the veranda of his Barmah home in November 'Razzle Dazzle' has daughters Zoe (left) and Mia (front) with his ex-wife Denise Foster (right) Zoe's Instagram and Facebook are both peppered with sweet throwback snaps of her father Zoe then took some time away from to terms with the loss, writing, 'Whoever said you can't run from your problems didn't have a passport' alongside a pictures of herself relaxing in Bali. One month after her father's death, Zoe opened up about the painful phone call that she said changed [her] life forever. 'You were my lifeline dad,' the devoted daughter wrote. 'I don't feel as though I will ever be okay again. My heart is broken and you're not here to fix it.' Zoe travelled to Bali after the death of her beloved father to relax and 'come to terms' with it 'Whoever said you can't run from your problems didn't have a passport', wrote Zoe from Bali It was a stark contrast to the photo Zoe posted last year on her father's 54th birthday, when she shared: 'For fifty-something [my dad] is an AMAZING man and been there for me and my sister more than I could ever explain. 'I don't even know if he knows this but with no doubt would I have made it though my life and so many obstacles without him. 'Our family is off the charts nuts but Dad I can say that I am so lucky to have you as the one man in my life I can depend on and thank you,' she concluded, alongside a picture of herself, her father and sister Mia on a quad bike. 'Our family is off the charts nuts': Zoe posted a sweet snap of her father and sister Mia last year 'He was my dad. He is my dad. I love you dad. You're my everything & always will be,' Zoe wrote His death was ruled to be not suspicious after a police investigation - a weapon was found beside Mr Thornburgh and his white Range Rover was parked out the front of the property. His nightclub empire had collapsed just one month before his death and he had reportedly refused to seek help for drug addiction. Police were initially investigating the link between his death and two recent shootings - three shots fired into his Prahan nightclub in October and a drive-by attack on his at his ex-wife Denise Foster's house just three days later. However, authorities found no links between the two shootings and Mr Thornburgh's death. Police initially thought the death was connected to a drive-by shooting at his ex-wife's home Razzle's ex-wife Denise Foster was at home when three shots were fired into the windows Ms Foster took to Facebook in the aftermath of his death, asking 'idiots' to 'have some respect and integrity for his children', while friends paid tribute to the late mogul on social media. 'Tragic news last night an old friend from the mid 80's Darren 'Razzle Dazzle' Thornburgh was found dead in his country home,' Peter Kalia wrote on social media. 'Darren was always a great bloke with me ... May you Rest In Peace my friend.' A grammar school criticised for charging pupils 5 a week to study GCSE music has defended the decision revealing that the move has led to an increase in uptake. Bingley Grammar School was accused of 'pricing' pupils out of the course after introducing the fee. It blamed dwindling numbers for the need to introduce the cost to pupils who want to sit the GCSE, which is now only offered after school. But the recent shake-up, labelled 'shocking and deeply troubling' by critics, has actually resulted in a rise in the number of students choosing the subject. A grammar school criticised for charging pupils 5 a week to study GCSE music has defended the decision and revealed that the move has led to an increase in uptake Luke Weston, headteacher of the West Yorkshire school, said that 25 people signed up for the class after the cost was introduced in October, but just 'two or three' kids were in the class last year. Moving the subject to an after-school slot gives youngsters an opportunity to gain an extra GCSE which may be encouraged by aspirational parents. This may explain the increase in uptake following the introduction of charges. Mr Weston said: 'Last year we had two or three kids in class and now, having moved to our new system, we've got 25, which is more than we've had in the last five years. 'This wasn't because of funding - we had the numbers sitting the subject falling away and were down to about two or three students sitting music GCSE. 'We looked at ways to improve this, and what we're basically doing is allowing students to do an extra GCSE. Bingley Grammar School (pictured) was accused of 'pricing' pupils out of the course after introducing the fee but its headteacher has defended the decision 'We got in two external professional musicians, and it has really increased the levels of children taking music GCSE. 'We decided to charge 5 because it was outside of school hours. 'This has boosted the take up of GCSE music, and we're pleased more students are doing the subject. 'We are paying 99.9 per cent of the bill. The GCSE cost is not 5 a week, it's significantly more than that.' He added that children of lower-income parents would not be penalised following the introduction of the charge and will get the same support as they would for school trips or other activities that cost money. Schools have come under increasing pressure from the government to focus on core academic subjects. It wants more pupils to take the EBacc at GCSE - a suite of five GCSEs including maths, English, history or geography, the sciences and a language. Critics claim this has resulted in creative subjects, such as art and music, being squeezed out of the curriculum. Deborah Annetts, Chief Executive of the ISM, the professional body for musicians, said: 'This new development is shocking and deeply troubling. 'Music is at risk of becoming the preserve of those who can afford it and the Government must act now to ensure it is available to all.' She said the ISM had written to the school 'asking for them to reverse their policy'. A 20-year-old man accused of attacking two horses has been charged with animal cruelty A central Queensland man who sprayed two horses in the face with a fire extinguisher in a drive-by attack has been charged with animal cruelty. The 20-year-old man allegedly attacked horses Kenny and Bailey around 9.30pm on January 5 as they pulled a carriage through Rockhampton's CBD. Police said the attack was carried out from a car, which slowed as it passed the popular Clydesdales and then sped away after the horses had been doused with chemicals. 'Shocked. I'm just totally shocked,' said carriage driver Steven May. 'I was bewildered about anyone even contemplating doing something like that.' The offender allegedly leaned out the window and sprayed the fire extinguisher into Kenny and Bailey's face before driving away. The horses were seen by a vet for minor injuries. 'It seems like an act that by any set of standard norms is completely unacceptable,' Inspector David Peff told the ABC. 'Clearly the level of social media commentary and the level of public interest in this would tell me that the entire community is pretty much disgusted by the act.' '[Owner] Steve has had to flush our eyes & Bailey has some nasal discharge,' the Kenny the Clydesdale page posted to Facebook shortly after the incident. Mr May told 7NEWS that Bailey was still suffering from conjunctivitis a day later after 'copping a faceful of the white powder'. A subsequent post showed a video of the horses recovering from the painful ordeal the next morning with a fresh bale of hay for breakfast. The alleged attacker handed himself into police after the footage was shared online and was charged on Monday with two counts of animal cruelty. He will appear in Rockhampton Magistrates Court on January 31 facing two charges. CCTV captured the moment that the man sprayed chemicals onto the horses from his vehicle Well-wishers took to Facebook to express their relief that both of the Clydesdales will recover Shocked and upset Rockhampton residents have flocked to Kenny's Facebook page to express their condolences and outrage. 'Great news. Hopefully he has learnt a very important lesson,' wrote one woman, while another was not so gracious: 'What type of a***hole does this? There has to be harsh consequences for this turd then throw him out of town.' Another called the attacker a 'd*ck', and suggested that he be made to help Mr May: 'He should be made come & help...everyday for the next year to feed water & pickup your sh*t as punishment.' Several more well-wishers expressed their relief that the horses will recover and their gratitude that the police pursued the case. Theresa May (pictured) suffered a troubled reshuffle on Monday As momentum towards Theresa May's reshuffle built up last week, we were told that she would take the opportunity to reassert her battered authority. The reverse has happened. Yesterday was the Westminster equivalent of a motorway pile-up. I am an admirer of the Prime Minister, but there's no pretending it was a success. Indeed, it is no exaggeration to say that future students of politics will be given the British Cabinet reshuffle of January 2018 as a case history of how it should not be done. The aim of the reshuffle had been to make Mrs May look strong. Instead, it reminded the nation of the perils of not having a majority in the House of Commons and the subsequent dangers of having a Prime Minister who does not have the full confidence of her Cabinet colleagues. Ideally, Cabinet reshuffles are swift and efficient affairs. Not so yesterday. Pushover It was broad daylight when Mrs May called Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt into No 10 with the intention of awarding him a new portfolio, most probably the Business department. Two hours had passed and darkness had fallen by the time Mr Hunt left the building. He was still in the same job, very much so. Indeed, he had been given the extra responsibility of social care policy. I believe this was ill-advised because Mr Hunt's current role, running the NHS, is already hugely onerous. It was the same mini-shambles when it came to Business Secretary Greg Clark. The Prime Minister was determined to move him. And yet Clark dodged the bullet because Mr Hunt had refused to take his job! Can you imagine if a minister had tried to defy Margaret Thatcher. Or if she had been faced with the prospect of having to keep in her Cabinet someone she considered to be deadwood? Exactly. The imagination boggles. Mrs May a pushover for her own ministers is no Mrs Thatcher. Next, Mrs May tried to move Justine Greening, her wet and ineffective Education Secretary, to take charge of welfare. Greening wouldn't do it. Three hours of horse-trading ensued, at the end of which Greening flounced out of the Government. It's clear that Mrs May went into Reshuffle Monday with a Plan A. And did not even emerge with a Plan B. Or even a Plan C. She found herself dealing with Plan D 'D' for Damage limitation. The Prime Minister called Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt (pictured) into No 10 to offer him the a new role - but he said he would not leave his current department In fact, when the Daily Mail went to press last night, the Prime Minister had managed to sack only one Cabinet minister! Meanwhile, the farce had begun as Conservative Campaign Headquarters announced that Transport Secretary Chris Grayling had been made party chairman, when he hadn't. We still don't know whether Mrs May wanted to send Mr Grayling to run the Conservative machine and he refused or whether he agreed but senior figures inside the Tory party HQ wouldn't take him. Whatever the case, Mrs May was defied again. One thing is, however, certain. Sir Patrick McLoughlin, the Tory Party chairman, has quit. But Mrs May can't even be given the credit for that! It emerged yesterday that the bumbling McLoughlin had been begging to be put out of his misery and to leave his job for months. It's no secret that Mrs May yearns to sack Philip Hammond, who many believe lacks the intellectual and personal calibre to be Chancellor. Disposing of Hammond would have sent out the positive message that Mrs May was prepared to be ruthless, while enabling the introduction of younger new talent to a Cabinet which is in crying need of younger blood. However, she lacked the guts to dump Spreadsheet Phil. Other changes amounted to tinkering such as the name change at the now Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. To be fair to Mrs May, there is a great deal to be said for leaving ministers in the same job for many years. The longer they get to know their department, the longer they understand the issues at stake. With experience comes good judgment. Furthermore, Mrs May achieved two crucial appointments which do address the two central weaknesses in her Government. The first is the arrival of David Lidington as Cabinet Office minister to replace disgraced Damian Green. This is, beyond question, good news. Mrs May ended up sacking Justine Greening (pictured) when she refused to move over to work and pensions From now on, Dr Lidington will, in all but name, be the Deputy Prime Minister. He will make many of the key decisions, while assuming charge of the Cabinet committees through which government is conducted. Task Having known Mr Lidington for three decades, I cannot think of a better man for the job. He is competent and self-effacing. He knows his way around Whitehall better than almost anyone else. Two years ago, he was on the verge of being sacked by David Cameron. Now he will be the heart and soul of the Theresa May administration. Mr Lidington's first task will be to sort out the machinery of government in No 10. And not before time. Mrs May's office under her political secretary Stephen Parkinson, who must carry the can for much of yesterday's chaos has been shambolic. Mr Lidington's priority will be to sharpen up the Downing Street operation and give direction and purpose to a Government which has often lacked both. The second, equally crucial, appointment is that of Brandon Lewis as Tory Party chairman. By replacing Sir Patrick McLoughlin, arguably the worst chairman the party has ever had, he will have to address the awesome challenge of invigorating a Conservative Party whose membership is in free fall and now stands at an estimated 70,000. Trouble This compares abominably with Jeremy Corbyn, who has galvanised Labour to such an extent that its party membership stands at just under 600,000 more than eight times higher than that of the Tories. Brandon Lewis is energetic and capable. He enjoys campaigning. He is ambitious. He certainly needs to be, given that he's been handed one of the most difficult tasks in politics. Mrs May has chosen wisely in appointing James Cleverly, one of her most gifted new Tory MPs, as his deputy. Historically it has been very rare for a Conservative leader to try to revive the party machine while in government. Three giant cheers to Mrs May for attempting to achieve this. But she has had no choice. The appointments of Lewis and, even more to the point, Lidington, send out a powerful message. Contrary to much recent analysis, Mrs May is utterly determined to fight the next general election, scheduled to be held in 2022. Britain needs a period of stability as we navigate Brexit. Let's hope that the shambles of yesterday's Cabinet reshuffle is quickly forgotten and we can concentrate on ministers' achievements rather than their jockeying for position round the Cabinet table. Because if it isn't, there'll surely be trouble ahead. Almost two New Zealanders a day are having their visas cancelled as part of a crackdown on foreigners with criminal records living in Australia. Hundreds of Kiwi criminals have been sent home since laws were changed in December 2014, with the visas of 664 cancelled in just the last financial year. Killers, bikies and members of street gangs are among the more than 3000 non-citizens to have had their visas revoked over the past three years, according to the Courier-Mail. Finks sergeant-at-arms Jesse Johnston has been deported due to his bike gang membership Senior Rebels bikie Aaron 'AJ' Graham, 50, was deported from Australia to his native New Zealand after his visa was cancelled for a third time amid an immigration crackdown Shane Martin (pictured), father of AFL star Dustin Martin, has been deported to New Zealand A spokesperson from the Department of Immigration and Border Protection could not give Daily Mail Australia the precise reasoning Jesse Johnston (pictured) was exiled Shane Martin, father of premiership-winning AFL star Dustin Martin is one of the most high-profile Kiwis to be sent packing, due to his Rebels bikie links. Martin was exiled to New Zealand in March under 'character grounds' in the Migration Act and was stopped from entering Bali on a planned holiday before Christmas. The Martin family, who blame Australian authorities for intervening in the 50-year-old's Indonesian travel plans, have been fighting the decision to deport him. In November another bikie was kicked out of Bali and Australia and deported back to New Zealand due to his connections to the outlaw motorcycle gang the Finks. Jesse Johnston, a heavily-tattooed sergeant-at-arms who had been living on the New South Wales Central Coast, was allegedly visiting Indonesia on a gang holiday when he was refused entry to the country. After being sent back to Sydney the 22-year-old was reportedly met at the airport by authorities who would not accept his denial of Finks membership. Shane Martin was deported home to New Zealand based on his association with the Rebels Jesse Johnston, who has been living on the NSW Central Coast until recently, was allegedly visiting Indonesia on a gang holiday before he was refused entry into the country Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton has been ridding Australia of New Zealand-born criminals A spokesperson from the Department of Immigration and Border Protection could not give Daily Mail Australia the precise reasons for Johson's exile at the time. But the department did release a statement in relation to the government's policy on bikie gangs. 'The government remains committed to protecting the Australian community from those involved with outlaw motorcycle gangs.' it read. 'General visa cancellation provisions under the Migration Act 1958 allow for visa cancellation on a number of grounds including non-compliance with visa conditions, or where the presence of the visa holder in Australia is or may be a risk to the health, safety or good order of the Australian community. 'Non-citizens who do not hold a valid visa will be liable for removal from Australia.' In October a Rebels bikie boss was deported to his native New Zealand after his visa was cancelled for a third time. Kiwi bikie Jesse Johnson, who has had his visa cancelled, enjoying a cocktail with friends Deported bikie associate Shane Martin is the father of AFL star player Dustin Martin (pictured) Aaron 'AJ' Graham, founder of the Rebel's Tasmania chapter, was escorted through a side door onto an Air New Zealand flight from Sydney to Auckland. Graham was among 158 foreign-born bikie gang members who have had their visas cancelled since 2014. The 50-year-old, who has distinctive tattoos covering half his face, won a High Court appeal against his second visa cancellation in September. But within hours of the ruling, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton - now in charge of the Home Affairs portfolio - cancelled Graham's visa for a third time. In August a New Zealand man who walked free from court over a one-punch attack that killed a teenager was re-arrested for deportation. Daniel Maxwell, 21, received an 18-month suspended sentence in the Brisbane Supreme Court, after admitting to assault and affray over the death of Cole Miller, 18. Daniel Maxwell (pictured), who started a fight that killed Cole Miller, has had his visa cancelled Jesse Johnston allegedly told authorities he was not a member of the Finks outlaw bikie gang But just hours after his release Maxwell was taken back into custody by Australian Border Force officers, following the cancellation of his visa. Others to have had their visas cancelled include New Zealander Jerome Sua, who has a long history of offending in Victoria. Sua, who bashed a prison officer at Port Phillip Prison in October, is in immigration detention and fighting moves to deport him, according to the Courier-Mail. New Zealand national Maueofa Fakauafusi, who was involved in a notorious riot at Melbourne's Metropolitan Remand Centre in 2015, is also facing deportation. The Courier-Mail also reports jailed Kiwi brothers Rick and Brett Kelly are at risk of deportation after abducting, bashing and torturing a man with a blowtorch. A court has heard Rick Kelly was convicted in his homeland for dishonesty and weapons offences. The Church of England has laid claim to over half a million acres of underground mineral resources, it emerged last night. Since 2010 the church has registered ownership of privately owned land covering an area the size of the Lake District, including in regions earmarked for fracking, it has been claimed. Thousands of people have allegedly been warned that they do not own potentially valuable deposits under their land. The Church of England has laid claim to over half a million acres of underground mineral resources, it emerged last night Since 2010 the church has registered ownership of privately owned land covering an area the size of the Lake District (pictured), including in regions earmarked for fracking, it has been claimed In most cases, this is land that the church used to own but is now held privately, according to The Times. The church has insisted it has no plans to profit from fracking, although ancient property laws give it the right to cash from the extraction of stone, metals and other minerals in the earth. A recent report by the churchs investment bodies concluded that there was no Christian reason to object to the extraction of underground resources as long as the environment and local communities were protected. The church cannot profit directly from fracking because shale gas, such as oil, is owned by the Crown. But lawyers have suggested that it could seek compensation from fracking companies that want to drill through its minerals. Land Registry data reveals that the Church Commissioners have filed claims to mineral rights in 5,773 locations in eight years. These include the rights to all mines and minerals in five sites around Retford in Nottinghamshire all of which fall within shale prospective areas. A change in the law in 2013 meant that mineral rights may be lost if not logged with the Land Registry. Thousands of people have allegedly been warned that they do not own potentially valuable deposits under their land. Pictured is the Lake District - the area of land equivalent to what the Church of England claims to be theirs A spokesman for the Church Commissioners said: Our mineral rights registrations have no relation to fracking as all oil and gas deposits in the UK are owned by the Crown. There are absolutely no plans for us to exploit our land or mineral rights for that purpose. They added that they were not claiming new rights and we require to register existing rights so that the Land Register will show who owns the surface and, where severed, who owns the minerals interest. The Trump administration is deliberating the pros and cons of a possible strike on North Korea in what officials are calling a high-risk retaliation of future weapon tests, a new report says. The strike, described as 'bloody nose' attack, may likely do more harm than good - and even ignite nuclear war, The Wall Street Journal revealed of the possible plan. President Trump's National Security Advisor Herbert Raymond McMaster is pushing for the strike, while Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Secretary of Defense James Mattis are urging against the decision. On Saturday, Lt. Gen. McMaster acknowledged in an interview with the New York Times that the country's leader Kim Jong un's weapons programs development 'has been quicker and the time timeline is a lot more compressed than most people believed.' McMaster said: 'We have to do everything we are doing with a greater degree of urgency, and we have to accelerate our own efforts to resolve the issue short of conflict.' A spokesman for the director of national intelligence, however, told the outlet that the intelligence community was not caught off guard with the leader's accelerated pace. 'Any suggestion that we didn't see these tests coming is dead wrong,' Brian P. Hale said. 'The intelligence community has always assessed that Kim Jong un is firmly committed to developing a nuclear capability. The Trump administration is weighing the pros and cons of a possible strike on North Korea. National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster said Saturday that leader Kim Jong un's weapons programs development 'has been quicker than most people believed' McMaster (pictured in Washington D.C. during a speech for Jamestown Foundation) told the NY Times: 'We have to do everything we are doing with a greater degree of urgency, and we have to accelerate our own efforts to resolve the issue short of conflict' The ICBM Hwasong-15 was launched in Pyongyang, North Korea in November. It's said the missile, pictured, can fly more than 8,000 miles and reach Washington 'We were, therefore, no surprised by his accelerated pace of testing over the past few years.' When Trump first took office almost a year ago, intelligence agencies told the new administration that they had at least four years to come up with a plan to slow or stop North Korea's development of an atomic bomb that was capable of striking US soil, according to the Times. Agency officials believed Kim faced a wide range of issues that would give Trump and his administration more than enough time to negotiate or look into countermeasures. The intelligence community also said 34-year-old Kim was 'young, inexperienced and distrusted by his military', according to the outlet. Aside from the said setbacks, a forensic expert who analyzed Kim's voice has also newly suggested he may be suffering health complications. Chungnam State University professor Cho Dong-uk sampled Kim's voice in an audio test, which revealed the overweight smoker and drinker could likely be suffering from kidney disease. Cho explained in a statement that while his heart and lungs tested OK, 'at least, the samples show that his kidneys are weaker than other organs.' The Hwasong-15, pictured, did not survive re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere and broke apart in the waters off the coast of Japan, US officials said Pyongyang staged eight intermediate-range missile tests, including Hwasong-15 (pictured). Seven of the eight missiles either blew up on the pad or shattered in flight Furthermore, senior officials who began looking more heavily into North Korea's weapons programs, made two wrong assumptions about how fast Kim and officials are working to develop stronger and deadlier warhead. One wrong assumption, the Times claims, is that officials thought North Korea would need as much time to solve the rocket science as other countries did during the Cold War. Officials also misjudged Kim, who made the country's weapons program a higher priority than his father or grandfather. One official reportedly thought the North Korean leader wouldn't be able to strike the US until 2020 or 2022. Recently, Pyongyang staged eight intermediate-range missile tests, seven of which either blew up on the pad or shattered in flight. On November 29, North Korea launched its latest intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), dubbed Hwasong-15. Kim Jong un made North Korea's weapons programs a high priority when he became leader Trump is said to be unaffected by the intelligence community underestimating North Korea and their weapons program It was said that the bomb could fly about 8,100 miles, which would reach Washington, but it did not survive re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere during the test. US officials told Fox News that the missile broke apart landing in the waters close to the Japanese coast. Despite the intelligence community's predictions seemingly being off, McMaster told the Times that Trump is not worried. 'He doesn't have the expectation of perfect intelligence about everything. He is very comfortable with ambiguity,' McMaster said. 'He understands human nature and understands he will never have perfect intelligence about capabilities and intentions.' On Friday, Trump confirmed he would be willing to talk to Kim on the phone - but not with preconditions. 'Sure, I always believe in talking,' he told reporters while at a presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland. 'Absolutely, I would do that.' A quick-thinking dad has been hailed a hero by local shoppers after he prevented the theft of a Cole's roast chicken. Staff and onlookers at the Southern Highlands supermarket applauded as Adrian Brennan returned from chasing a young shoplifter who had attempted to flee with a roast chicken without paying. Mr Brennan was with his 20-year-old daughter Eliza in the fruit and vegetable section when he heard a ruckus coming from the store's entrance. Adrian Brennan (pictured) was at Coles supermarket and heard a commotion at the front of the store before realising a young thief was trying to make an escape While ignoring pleas from a staff member to stop a young man could be seen clutching a hot chicken, walking through the checkout area and heading quickly toward the exit. The nearby 58-year-old abandoned his trolley and went after the man, chasing him into the car park. Mr Brennan demanded 'Give me the bloody chicken,' to the youngster who had made his way to a car full of mates nearby. The thief handed over the chicken before taking off and Mr Brennan re-entered the supermarket, returning the cooked chicken to the Bowral Coles it had been taken from. He spotted a youth making a quick beeline for the exit of the Bowral Coles (pictured) and quickly took action, rescuing the stolen chook from the culprit Amid the praise of shoppers, including one who deemed him a 'hero', Mr Brennan resumed his shopping. 'I think he was just stoked that he was able to catch up to the young guy, despite being 58,' Eliza said. 'Despite being sunburned and with a split heel from the beach I rose above the pain barrier. Because there is no such thing as a poultry crime,' Mr Brennan said. Prosecutors will not bring criminal charges against Oscar-winning director Roman Polanski after a woman said he molested her in 1975 - when she was 10. Artist Marianna Barnard told police she was molested during a photo shoot on Will Rogers State beach in Malibu, California, after Polanski made her pose nude. The latest allegations were reported to police in October. But Los Angeles prosecutors are declining to bring charges in the case because the statute of limitations had expired, a district attorney's office memo obtained by The Associated Press on Monday says. Artist Marianna Barnard (above) told police she was molested during a photo shoot in 1975 after Roman Polanski made her pose nude Prosecutors will not bring criminal charges against the Oscar-winning director because the statute of limitations has expired Polanski's attorney, Harland Braun, has said the allegations are untrue. Last month, Ms Barnard said she had been inspired to come forward by actresses like Rose McGowan who spoke out in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein scandal. Now in the early 50s, Ms Barnard claimed Polanski took pictures of her in a bikini before asking her to change into an open fur coat and then molested her. She said her mother had initiated the meeting and taken her to a beach near their home to meet Polanski for the shoot which she believed was for a magazine. 'First he was taking pictures of me in the bikini, then it was in the coast then he said take off the bikini top, which I was comfortable with as I was only 10 and I often ran around with no top on,' she told The Sun. Ms Barnard said she started to feel 'very uncomfortable' when Polanski wanted her to remove her bikini bottoms. Ms Barnard (above, when she was a child) clams Polanski molested her on a beach when she was 10 Now in the early 50s, Ms Barnard claimed Polanski took pictures of her in a bikini before asking her to change into an open fur coat and then molested her Polanski (pictured in 1969) has been a fugitive since fleeing to France in 1978 while awaiting sentencing for sexually assaulting a 13-year-old 'Then at some point I realised my mom had gone. 'I don't know where she went and I didn't really register her leaving but she was no longer there. Then he molested me.' She said she's suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder for decades because of it. Ms Barnard has set up a petition urging The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences - which quickly kicked out Weinstein - to revoke Polanski's board membership. It has attracted more than 20,000 signatures. Polanski, 84, has been a fugitive since fleeing to France in 1978 while awaiting sentencing for sexually assaulting a 13-year-old. Two of the accusers have claimed they were attacked in 1969 the same year Polanski's first wife Sharon Tate (pictured on their wedding day) was murdered by members of the Charles Manson family Eleven women have come forward to accuse Polanski of molesting or sexually assaulting them. Two of the accusers have claimed they were attacked in 1969 the same year Polanski's first wife Sharon Tate was murdered by members of the Charles Manson family. The latest woman to come forward with allegations against Polanski is 77-year-old Mallory Millet, who claimed he tried to rape her twice. In November, Ms Millet claimed she was a struggling young actress when she met Polanski at the Plaza Hotel in New York in 1970. She said that she had been warned by the friends accompanying them to dinner that the director was high on LSD. Ms Millet claimed that when her friends left Polanski's suite, he tried to rape her. Despite this, she said she met the director a second time and he apologized. 'I ended up alone with him, he tried to put his arms around me and hold me down and I had to flee for a second time,' she told The Sun. A Perth pub has been forced to ban patrons under 25-years-old after a spate of anti-social behaviour. The Windsor Hotel in South Perth has implemented a 'no Under 25s' policy in its back bar after 6pm on Friday and Saturday nights. A spokesperson for the venue said the decision followed repeated disrespectful behaviour from a group of 'rowdy young guys'. The Windsor Hotel in South Perth has implemented a 'no Under 25s' policy in its back bar after 6pm on Friday and Saturday nights A response from the venue to a 'rowdy patron' 'We've had young guys come into the pub every Friday and Saturday for the last couple of months they are a rowdy bunch and disrespect the venue' the spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia. 'They've been putting other patrons off... they'd come in after pre-loading which is a problem with Australian drinking culture at the moment.' 'We tried to resolve the problem with the group but it lead down an empty road' But after hearing of the new policy the group attempted to slander the venue online, the spokesperson said. 'What's happened is they have created a group online and in about 45 minutes the venue got over 100 one star ratings.' Comments from the young men involved have since been removed. The spokesperson noted the policy, which has been in place for over a month, has received overwhelming support from local patrons. A Perth pub has been forced to ban patrons under 25-years-old after a spate of anti-social behaviour New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has launched an investigation after his office received numerous complaints from consumers about possible misconduct by propane suppliers. The complaints were filed over the last week when temperatures dipped into the single digits and wind chill values were below zero across the state. According to Schneiderman's office, consumers reported that it took days for their propane company to respond to their calls. In other cases, consumers reported that they never received a response from their propane supplier. There were also complaints about price increases and fees. Some people said they called their propane company for days and finally received a delivery over the weekend, but the company forced them to pay a weekend delivery fee of up to $150 or $200. Complaints also indicated that some companies refused to fill another supplier's propane tank and told consumers to buy new tanks from their company, according to the attorney general's office. Schneiderman said Tuesday that his office intervened and helped some consumers get the propane they needed to heat their homes. But, he added, there were "systemic failures" that left many consumers without much-needed fuel. "I will not allow any business to exploit a weather emergency and leave New Yorkers in the cold," Schneiderman said. "That's why I'm launching an investigation into possible misconduct by propane suppliers across the state, and will not hesitate to take action on behalf of consumers when necessary." Schneiderman urged New Yorkers who believe they are victims of price gouging or other misconduct by a propane company to contact his office. The phone number for the attorney general's hotline is (518) 776-2000. You may also file a complaint online at ag.ny.gov/price-gouging-complaint-form. The complaints will help with the attorney general's investigation and Schneiderman said his staff could help resolve individual issues facing consumers. A Christian school has made a landmark decision to amend its strict uniform policy after it discriminated against a young Sikh boy because he wore a turban. Melton Christian College in Brookfield, Melbourne, was found to have breached the Equal Opportunity Act by a Victoria court in September after not allowing Sidhak Singh Arora, then aged five, to attend school wearing a patka - a child's turban. Sidhak's parents and the school released a joint statement which said the uniform policy has been changed 'to allow exceptions where genuine medical or religious grounds exist'. Five-year-old Sidhak (pictured) was banned from wearing his turban at Melton Christian School Sagardeep Singh Arora (pictured left) fought on behalf on his young son believing he was denied a basic human right because the school wouldn't allow him to wear his 'patka' The young boy will now be able to attend Melton Christian College in the beginning of the 2018 school year wearing his turban. 'MCC regrets the difficulties that took place with respect to the enrolment and the family is grateful to the school for the amendments it has made to the uniform policy in order to welcome Sidhak to the school,' the statement read. Sidhak's parents, Sagardeep Singh Arora and Anureet Kaur Arora, tried in 2016 to enrol their son at the school before the Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission intervened in the case. During the VCAT hearing, Melton Christian College argued its decision was lawful under exemptions to the Equal Opportunity Act. VCAT ordered the school and parents to negotiate an arrangement to resolve the situation. 'We are very pleased that religious freedom ... is alive in Victoria,' Mr Arora (pictured) reportedly said in a statement Sidhak is enrolled to begin school at Melton Christian College (pictured) at the start of the year and will be attending school with his cousins The ruling found 'MCC's uniform policy, in so far as it prohibits head gear of a non-Christian faith, could be described as 'openly discriminatory''. Mr Singh Arora fought on behalf on his young son, Sidhak, believing he was denied a basic human right. 'We are very pleased that religious freedom ... is alive in Victoria,' Mr Arora reportedly said in a statement. The school's uniform policy was described in court as 'openly discriminatory' which prompted the move for other educational institutions to re-examine uniforms. However, the Christian school reportedly argued their uniform policy was a 'level playing field' which promoted equality. During the VCAT hearing, Melton Christian College (pictured) argued its decision was lawful under exemptions to the Equal Opportunity Act Sidhak was enrolled to begin school at the college at the start of 2017 however the school's uniform policy did not accept his head covering. David Gleeson, principal of MCC, previously claimed that several Sikh students attended school but none were given an exception to wear the religious head covering, ABC reported. Mr Gleeson likened the situation to a child who likes to wear a New Balance cap but is not permitted because anything additional to the uniform was not acceptable. 'I believe students should be allowed to practice their religion and should be allowed to wear their article of faith,' Mr Arora previously told ABC. 'I was very surprised in an advanced country like Australia, they are still not allowing us to wear patka in the school,' he said. For many, this week marked their return to work after a busy Christmas and New Year's. After running from party to party and entertaining family members, most revellers feel like they need a holiday just to recover from their holiday. Jetstar is offering several flight deals for those wanting to get away, with tickets to Hawaii from just $249 each way. Jetstar is offering several flight deals for those needing a holiday after a busy Christmas and New Year's, with tickets to Hawaii (pictured) from just $249 each way If Hawaii is a bit too far, a trip to Rarotona in the Cook Islands will cost just $236 each way from Sydney If Hawaii is a bit too far, a trip to Rarotona in the Cook Islands will cost just $236 each way from Sydney. Tickets to Fiji start at $159 and trips to Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam, and Phuket, Thailand, are listed at just $209. Flying from Sydney to either Christchurch or Auckland will cost $139. Flights to Queenstown will cost a little more at $179. Flight dates will depend on the deals, which are available until tickets sell out. A man who was last seen on New Year's Eve was last spotted in a mysterious location in northern Queensland. Jayden Penno-Tompsett, 22, may have visited the property with a unique bull skull on a post with a silver fence near a set of yards, a witness told detectives. However, police do not know where the location is and are calling for locals in Charter Towers, an hour south-west of Townsville, Queensland, to come forward if they recognise the area. Jayden Penno-Tompsett, 22, (pictured) was last seen on New Year's Eve and may have been spotted in a mysterious location in northern Queensland The 22-year-old may have visited a property with a unique bull skull on a post with a silver fence near a set of yards, a witness told detectives 'The witness described the location as a rural property on an unsealed road with a red steel fence,' Queensland Police said. There was a house visible several hundred metres from the unsealed road which ran of a bitumen road. The 22-year-old was reported missing on January 3 but was last seen on December 31, 2017 after an argument between friends at a roadhouse on Flinders Highway at Charters Towers. Queensland Police believe Mr Penno-Tompsett may have hitchhiked from Charters Towers area and returned to New South Wales. Mr Penno-Tompsett's father Brendan Tompsett told Townsville Bulletin he wanted to know if his son was safe. 'As you can imagine the worst thing is the not knowing,' he said. The 22-year-old (pictured) was reported missing on January 3 but was last seen on December 31, 2017 after an argument between friends at a roadhouse on Flinders Highway Queensland Police believe Mr Penno-Tompsett (pictured) may have hitchhiked from Charters Towers area and returned to New South Wales The 22-year-old was last seen wearing a black singlet, navy blue board shorts and black and red thongs and was travelling in a red Nissan Pulsar (pictured) 'We don't care what the issues were ... just let us know he's safe.' Mr Penno-Tompsett is described as Caucasian in appearance, 175 centimetres tall and has mousey brown hair. The 22-year-old was last seen wearing a black singlet, navy blue board shorts and black and red thongs and was travelling in a red Nissan Pulsar. Former Trump aide Sebastian Gorka inadvertently confirmed that White House staff were told to cooperate with Michael Wolff while writing his book. While attempting to discredit Wolff's controversial new book about the Trump administration, 'Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House', in an op-ed in The Hill, Gorka accidentally revealed that he had been asked to meet with the author. Gorka's admission contradicts the president's recent tweet that he 'authorized Zero access to White House.' Former Trump aide Sebastian Gorka (left and right) inadvertently confirmed that White House staff were told to cooperate with Michael Wolff while writing his book on, 'Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House' Gorka wrote: 'When I met Michael Wolff in Reince Priebus' office, where he was waiting to talk to Steve Bannon, and after I had been told to also speak to him for his book, my attitude was polite but firm: "Thanks but no thanks"' (Pictured, Wolff on Friday) It was not immediately clear whether Priebus (pictured, left), then Trump's chief of staff, was the one who instructed Gorka to speak with Wolff Describing the book as a 'politically-motivated publication,' Gorka said he first met the author as he was waiting inside the West Wing to speak with then-White House chief strategist Steve Bannon. 'When I met Michael Wolff in Reince Priebus' office, where he was waiting to talk to Steve Bannon, and after I had been told to also speak to him for his book, my attitude was polite but firm: "Thanks but no thanks".' It was not immediately clear whether Priebus, then Trump's chief of staff, was the one who instructed Gorka to speak with Wolff. Doing so would contradict what other White House officials, including President Trump, have said about the level of access Wolff had to the president and his aides. On Friday, Trump tweeted: 'I authorized Zero access to White House (actually turned him down many times) for author of Phony book! I mever spike to him for book. FUll of lies, misrpresentations and sources that don't exist. Look at at this guy's past and watch what happens to him and Sloppy Steve!' Doing so would contradict what other White House officials, including President Trump, have said about the level of access Wolff had to the president and his aides Gorka later tweeted that stories about his admission were '#FAKENEWS' After Twitter went wild over the accidental admission, Gorka tweeted: '#FAKENEWS does it again. Request 2 pleae @MichaelWolffNYC the hack came from outside @WhiteHouse. I was happy to refuse. FAIL.' A search for 'Gorka' in Wolff's book only one mention, in which Wolff describes the former Trump aide as 'the oddball White House foreign policy adviser.' A source close to the White House told the Washington Examiner on Friday that many of current and former aides who spoke with Wolff did not know they were speaking on the record during their meetings. A 10-year-old boy has escaped through a window after two balaclava-wearing gunmen stormed his home. The intruders, believed to have been armed with handguns, forced their way into a home on the Princes Highway at Thirroul at 5:30am on Tuesday. Police said in a statement they believe the attack was 'targeted' and said the men wearing gloves and ski masks broke down the door of the home. A 10-year-old boy has escaped through a window after two balaclava-wearing gunmen stormed his home (stock image) The intruders confronted a 45-year-old man and a 47-year-old woman who were at home with the 10-year-old before the intruders 'ransacked' the house. The woman and boy escaped through a window to a neighbour's house while the male occupant barricaded himself in a room. The attackers then fled in a silver-coloured sedan. The intruders, believed to have been armed with handguns, forced their way into a home on the Princes Highway at Thirroul (pictured) at 5:30am on Tuesday No one was injured during the incident, which police have described as an aggravated break and enter. Detectives believe the incident was a targeted attack and say the victims from the house 'are not assisting police'. Police have appealed for help from the community to track down the two men, and urged anyone with information to contact Wollongong Police. A 'bogan Barbie' car lover who has become the unofficial face of Summernats claims she is simply a mother and nurse whose life is actually 'pretty boring'. Natalie Wardell this week slammed the legendary car festival over its family-friendly focus, posting online the event had lost its atmosphere and was 'very disappointing'. The 46-year-old, who has attended Summernats for 24 years, first made headlines in 2017 after telling how she travels to car events with her identical looking daughters. But after dubbing the petrol head event the #NannaNats, Mrs Wardell again took to her social media on Tuesday to claim she doesn't lead the wild life that's portrayed and is instead simply a 'cheetah pyjama-wearing nurse'. Scroll down for video Natalie Wardell (top), 46, says she is simply just a 'cheetah pyjama-wearing nurse' whose life is pretty 'boring'. She's a regular attendee at Summernats with daughter Jazmyne, 22 (bottom) The mother-of-three (pictured) gained widespread praise for her criticism of Summernats on Monday, but said despite the intrigue her life is much the same as most other people 'I'm sorry to say but my life is actually pretty boring! I'm a nurse by day, then head home to get into my cheetah PJ (Pyjama) pants,' Mrs Wardell wrote on Tuesday after slamming Summernats The mother-of-three gained widespread praise for her criticism of Summernats, but said despite the intrigue in her life it was much the same as most other people. 'I'm sorry to say but my life is actually pretty boring! I'm a nurse by day, then always head straight home to get into my cheetah PJ (Pyjama) pants,' Mrs Wardell wrote. 'I sit down and play with all my animals and clean up all their poop, clean the house, than I read a book or get on my phone (I'm actually very boring). 'I hardly every go out, because I'm too too tired and lazy these days. 'They say I go clubbing every weekend (I go like five times a year) and go to festivals all the time - I have been to like four festivals in my entire life.' Her claims are different to the picture she painted when talking to Daily Mail Australia in 2017 about her special bond with her daughters who she says are her best friends. Mrs Wardell regularly shares pictures with her 11,000 Instagram followers alongisde daughter Jazmyne, 22 - who was crowned Miss Summernats 2017 - and Tamika, 19. Last year she explained that while many daughters are embarrassed to hang out with their mum once they become teenagers, she and her three girls are best friends. Mrs Wardell (left) and Jazmyne (right) first made headlines for their identical looks and love of cars at the 2017 Summernats event, but say the family-friendly 2018 event was 'disappointing' Mrs Wardell (left) regularly shares pictures with her 11,000 Instagram followers of her with daughter Jazmyne, 22 (right) - who was crowned Miss Summernats 2017 - and Tamika, 19 Jazmyne Wardell (pictured) last year won the Miss Summernats contest, however she was not able to defend her title after the event was scrapped by organisers The bikini model (pictured) regularly attends car events all across Australia with her family 'People ask if we're sisters all the time, and some even think Jazmyne is my mum because she's so tall and I'm so short,' Mrs Wardell said. 'I guess it's a compliment to me, but people will say things like 'You try to copy them', but I mean I've had long blonde hair since I was 15. It's just genetics.' Aiming to stamp out the blokey reputation it has gained over the past three decades organisers of Summernats cracked down on excessive drinking and harassment. Entrants to the 2018 festival were forced to declare they would not to harass patrons while scantly dressed models and adverts for strip clubs were also banned. Posting photos of herself with her daughter, the festival veteran labelled the event 'NannaNats' after the burnout and Miss Summernats competitions were cancelled. Summernats has a long history of male-dominated crowds, boozy behaviour (pictured) and occasional violence One man showed off his mullet, which he is seemingly hoping to grow over the coming years 'Was a little unfazed this year, no Miss Summernats, no car wash babes, got in s*** for smoking it up,' Mrs Wardell wrote. 'I only did it once and it wasn't even that bad yet I got told off by security, no one was around to get hurt... very disappointing this year. 'Just didn't have the atmosphere, car overheated a little but still ran well all weekend!' But on 'Tuff Street', a notorious section of the festival, revellers reportedly continued on with their anti-social behaviour. According to The Canberra Times numerous groups of men were observed shouting at women in the hope they would expose themselves. That woman refused to comply with their wishes as did another woman further along the track. A woman who was filmed attacking a man who groped her breast at a music festival has organised a topless march to fight against harassment. Madeline Anello-Kitzmiller found global fame when footage emerged of her launching a retaliation attack against a fellow festival-goer who touched her without consent at Rhythm and Vines in New Zealand. The 20-year-old has since spoken out proudly in defence of her actions - and has now invited women to join her in a 'glittery march for consent' at a secret location in Auckland. Scroll down for video Madeline Anello-Kitzmiller (right) found global fame when footage emerged of her launching a retaliation attack against a fellow festival-goer who touched her without consent at Rhythm and Vines in New Zealand. The American-born woman, pictured right with boyfriend Max Ashworth, was filmed walking next to her friend Kiri-Ann Hatfield when a man crept behind her and groped her breast 'On January 28th we are marching in Auckland together, to stand in solidarity with each other and for anyone who has ever been the victim of sexual assault, victim blame, anyone who wants to stand up and say this is my body and these are my rights,' the online event promises. Ms Anello-Kitzmiller, who was born in Portland, Oregon, was wearing only a sprinkling of glitter on her chest and a skirt when she was groped by an unknown male. She and friend Kiri-Ann Hatfield were filmed as they followed the man and launched their own counter-attack, throwing a drink in his face and punching him several times. The young woman inadvertently became the poster child for standing up against non-consensual touching and defended her right to be topless without consequence. Revellers at the Rhythm and Vines festival in Gisborne, on New Zealand's North Island, watched on as a male attendee (pictured left and right in blue) crept behind and groped a woman (left and right) wearing only glitter on her breasts 'I stand by my actions and hope that I've inspired women to feel comfortable in their bodies, no matter how they look, and to stick up for themselves when anybody says otherwise or tries to deny you the right to protect your own body,' she previously told Daily Mail Australia. 'He grabbed my breast. I hit him. There was a lot of built up anger coming from harassment throughout the day. This happens everywhere, not just New Zealand.' Following the groping incident, Ms Anello-Kitzmiller has organised an activism march for January 28 in Auckland to further her cause. The event has no dress-code and will have festival glitter gurus from Gypsy Fest NZ on hand to paint female chests and create 'glitter boobs'. Footage of Ms Anello-Kitzmiller's (left) revenge assault went viral and she has since defended her controversial glittery outfit and the ensuing attack Footage of the incident was shared online and has since garnered thousands of views and a divided opinion on who was in the wrong (Pictured is a shot of the music festival) 'We are going to gather as many people there as possible, all genders included, all ages, if you have a body you can march!' the Facebook event reads. 'We're going to bring each other together to stand up not only for ourselves but for all of our brothers and sisters who have been victimised, to stand up and fight back against what we know to be inhumane. There is no dress code. Our freedom to express ourselves however we choose, modestly or not, does not equate an invitation to touch our bodies. This is for consent. This is for us as a people to initiate moving forward. We march to make a stand, will you stand with us?' The official location of the march is yet to be disclosed and 176 people have already expressed interest in attending. A father who was left for dead on New Year's Eve is in 'agony' after a hit-and-run incident in Melbourne. Wanting to check out some fireworks, Mike Gill stepped onto the street when he was 'bowled over' by a car full of passengers in Malvern, east of Melbourne. '[I saw] car headlights from over my shoulder and a hard revving engine,' Mr Gill told 9 News from his hospital bed. Scroll down for video Mike Gill (pictured) was left for dead on New Year's Eve is in 'agony' after a hit-and-run incident Mr Gill was left with a broken leg (pictured) after the car hit hit and sped off in Melbourne Wanting to check out some fireworks, Mr Gill stepped onto the street when he was 'bowled over' by a car full of passengers in Malvern The people in the car reportedly shouted 'Happy New Year' as they sped off, leaving Mr Gill on lying on road. Escaping the hit-and-run with his left leg broken in three places, the Melbourne man is unaware why he was targeted. Nerida Fearnley-Gill said her husband was left with 'heinous leg injuries' after he was 'struck down' on High Street as the car turned from Murray Street, Malvern, in a post online. While there were no witnesses at the time, Ms Fearnley-Gill said 'someone, somewhere must know something'. Victoria Police are investigating CCTV footage taken at about 12.15am when the incident took place. No arrests have been made. '[I saw] car headlights from over my shoulder and a hard revving engine,' Mr Gill told 9 News from his hospital bed (pictured) White House policy adviser Stephen Miller has gone on Fox News' Tucker Carlson show insisting he was not escorted by security from a fiery and 'extraordinarily biased' CNN interview with Jake Tapper on Sunday morning. 'Like many things CNN says, this story has the most important virtue of all CNN stories, of being not true,' Miller told Carlson. 'It's an amusing story, but not a true one.' Feeling he was on safer ground at the Fox News studios, Miller laid into CNN saying the network had been 'extraordinarily biased, extraordinarily unfair to the president, and is not giving viewers honest information.' Scroll down for video Tucker Carlson had White House policy adviser Stephen Miller on his show on Monday night Carlson asked Miller what happened after the cameras stopped rolling on CNN's Sunday show The saga began when Miller was Tapper's guest on his State of the Union Sunday show. The segment saw the Trump aide going after CNN's White House reportage, saying it was 'negative, anti-Trump, hysterical coverage' and resulted in Tapper shooting back, labeling Miller 'hysterical' and a 'factotum,' before cutting the interview short. 'This is the reason they don't put you on TV. OK? This is the reason,' Tapper told Miller as he left the studio, according to a transcript given to CBS News. The CNN anchor said on air: 'I've wasted enough of my viewers' time,' when the two men couldn't come to an on-camera agreement over Michael Wolff's controversial anti-Trump book. Carlson wanted to address rumors Miller was forcibly removed from the CNN set by security Miller said he left CNN studios on his own and that security was not required for him to leave Fox News had previously reported that once Sunday morning's CNN interview was over, Tapper and Miller continued their spat off-camera while the show was running commercials. Miller and Tapper argued until the commercial break was about to wrap up and the live set had to be cleared. Two CNN sources have stated that security then had to be brought in to usher Miller out off the set. One CNN source told CBS, 'The segment was over and Mr. Miller was politely asked to leave the studio multiple times after refusing to leave, he was escorted out by security.' However, CNN is not commenting on the quarrel and has yet to release an official statement. Miller said on Fox on Monday night that the leak of the post-interview exchange is evidence of CNN's 'low journalistic standards.' Seizing an opportunity to mock CNN, host Carlson asked if Miller would have been escorted out by security if he were an MS-13 gang member and living illegally in America. Miller joked that if he were part of the criminal group 'they would be clamoring to get me into the voting booth.' After the interview between Stephen Miller (left) and CNN's Jake Tapper (right) concluded on Sunday, Tapper reportedly told Miller that, 'This is the reason they don't put you on TV,' as Miller told the journalist he was 'offended' The White House is saying that aide Stephen Miller (pictured) was not escorted off Jake Tapper's set, though several unnamed CNN sources say security was called on the Trump aide after the contentious back-and-forth The president tweeted that he loved what he saw, telling supporters that the 32-year-old Miller 'destroyed' the CNN newsman. Trump also called Jake Tapper a 'flunky!' Later, on Air Force One, Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told reporters that Miller wasn't escorted off-set, but left on his own volition. The transcript given to CBS has Miller huffing that he wasn't given three minutes to 'tell the truth about the president of the United States.' 'You had plenty of time,' Tapper responded. 'I let you give like a three minute filibuster at the very very top.' Miller didn't buy it. 'You gave me two minutes,' he said. At that point, Tapper seemingly tried to get Miller off the set by saying, 'OK. Thanks for coming in.' 'You should be ashamed of yourself. Honestly,' Miller shot back. Tapper talked back, pointing to Miller's attitude being the reason the White House seldom puts the aide on TV. Miller said he was supposed to be talking about the Camp David Summit and he charged Tapper with only wanting to talk about the 'salacious.' Tapper said he had plenty of questions ready to go on topics like immigration, but didn't get to them because Miller had been repeating himself. Miller was also angry Tapper referred to him as a 'factotum' often used as a synonym for servant. 'I had plenty of questions but you kept on repeating yourself and kept on not letting me ask my questions .... after your entire interview attacking CNN ... OK, so don't act so offended,' Tapper said. Miller had one more response before the tape cut off. 'I'm not acting offended, I am offended,' he said. 'I'm offended by you and I'm offended by your network.' CNN hasn't responded to an inquiry from DailyMail.com about the authenticity of the transcript. When Tapper returned from commercial break, Miller was gone and the journalist began the second part of his show by saying, 'Welcome back to State of the Union and planet Earth.' President Trump applauded the back-and-forth between 32-year-old Miller and Tapper as the aide had accomplished a two-part goal of tarring and feathering former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon and CNN as well. 'Jake Tapper of Fake News CNN just got destroyed in his interview with Stephen Miller of the Trump Administration,' Trump wrote. 'Watch the hatred and unfairness of this CNN flunky!' The interview, however had began courteously enough, with Tapper wishing Miller a 'happy new year.' It went downhill from there. Tapper asked Miller about allegations laid out in the new book, 'Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,' by Michael Wolff. Bannon, Tapper reminded Miller, had criticized the Trump Tower meeting between Russians and campaign staff, saying, 'The chance that Don Jr. didn't walk these Jumos up to his father's office on the 26th floor is zero.' Tapper wanted to know if Miller had any first-hand knowledge of the now-president meeting with the Russians who visited in Manhattan office building in June 2016. Miller took the cue to lash out at Bannon. 'Steve Bannon's eloquence in that description notwithstanding, it's tragic and unfortunate that Steve would make these grotesque comments, so out of touch with reality and obviously so vindictive,' Miller said. 'And the whole White House staff is deeply disappointed in his comments, which were grotesque,' he said, using the adjective again. Bannon, Miller said, wasn't even there. 'It reads like an angry, vindictive person spouting off to a highly discredible author,' Miller continued, pivoting to lash out at Wolff too. 'The book is best understood as a work of very poorly written fiction,' Miller added. 'And I also will say that the author is a garbage author of a garbage book.' Miller tried to counter Wolff's portrayal of what Trump is like to what the aide personally encountered when traveling with the candidate and now president. When Tapper tried to get him back on track to talk about the meeting, Miller replied, 'I have no knowledge of anything to do with that meeting.' From there, the conversation was more about CNN. Miller charged that the cable news network was going '24/7 with all the salacious coverage.' 'And I know that it brings a lot of you guys a lot of joy to trying to stick the knife in,' he said. Tapper pushed back on that claim, noting how many people from the White House are quoted, on the record, in Wolff's book. The newsman also got into a tussle with Miller over who hired him, suggesting it was Bannon who helped bring the young aide on board. Miller said the credit goes not to Bannon, but to Trump's first campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski. He also said Bannon had nothing to do with the writing of Trump's controversial travel ban. Throughout the interview, Miller repeatedly praised Trump's political prowess, knocking the 'so-called political geniuses in Washington' who didn't predict the populist Republican's ascent. 'The only person who has called himself a genius in the last week is the president,' Tapper uttered. Miller said that point was true, calling the president a, 'A self-made billionaire who revolutionized reality TV and who has changed the course of our politics.' 'I'm sure he's watching, and he's happy that you said that,' Tapper shot back. Miller called Tapper's comment 'condescending' and said it was a 'snide remark,' broadening that point to the whole of CNN. 'You get 24 hours of negative, anti-Trump, hysterical coverage on this network hat led in recent weeks to some spectacularly embarrassing false reporting from your network,' Miller said. Tapper countered by saying, 'I think the viewers right now can ascertain who is being hysterical.' The conversation further devolved as the CNN newsman tried asking the aide about Bannon's role in the White House and also about a letter Miller helped draft that articulated reasons to fire FBI Director James Comey, a move Trump made in May. When Tapper got to the president's mental fitness, Miller turned it into a full-on slap of CNN, saying there was a 'crisis of legitimacy' and a 'toxic environment' at the network. Miller also argued that the president's Saturday tweets, in which he boasted about his 'mental stability' and IQ, were helpful in arguing the point that he had the fortitude to do the job. 'The president's tweets absolutely reaffirm the plainspoken truth: A self-made billionaire revolutionized reality TV and tapped into something magical that is happening in the hearts of this country,' Miller said. With that, Tapper scoffed. 'The president has an approval rating in the 30s,' the journalist said. 'I don't know what magical you're talking about.' The two squabbled for a minute more, before Tapper had had enough. 'I get it,' the veteran journo said. 'There is one viewer that you care about right now. And you're obsequious, you're being a factotum, in order to please him.' Tapper meant Trump. Miller tried to protest, but Tapper quickly said, 'Thank you Stephen.' The camera panned away from the White House aide as Tapper started reading from the teleprompter, readying his audience the next segment. One of three women who have publicly accused Gold Logie winner Craig McLachlan of inappropriate behaviour has attended a police station in Sydney's north. Former Australia's Next Top Model host Erika Heynatz, 42, appeared at Mona Vale Police Station with her husband Andrew Kingston on Tuesday morning. It came a day after Heynatz and fellow actresses Angela Scundi and Christie Whelan Browne went public with allegations McLachlan inappropriately touched them or exposed himself to them during the 2014 tour of the Rocky Horror Show musical. McLachlan, 52, said the allegations were 'utterly and entirely false' and 'baseless'. Actress, singer and model Erika Heynatz (pictured) appeared at Mona Vale Police Station on Tuesday morning Heynatz detailed a series of encounters where McLachlan allegedly behaved inappropriately toward her in interviews with the ABC and Fairfax published on Monday Her husband, Andrew Kingston, was seen accompanying Heynatz to the station The 2014 cast of the Rocky Horror Show musical - including Craig McLachlan (centre front) and Erika Heynatz (centre back) 'They seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety,' McLachlan was quoted telling the ABC and Fairfax. 'These allegations are ALL made up.' But Victoria Police has confirmed it is investigating 'allegations of sexual offences dating back to 2014'. It's understood Heynatz - who appeared to be carrying legal documents - had spoken to police about her complaint prior to today. She detailed a series of alleged encounters with McLachlan to the ABC and Fairfax Media. 'He's a larrikin, up for a laugh and certainly, when we all first met him, that's indeed how he came across,' Heynatz was quoted saying. 'But there is another side to this man that he has very, very craftily and cleverly disguised from people for so long.' Accuser: Erika Heynatz - who has made serious allegations against McLaughlan - rose to prominence hosting Australia's Next Top Model and played Magenta in Rocky Horror Christie Whelan Browne (pictured left) and Angela Scundi are among the three women to accuse Australian actor Craig McLachlan of sexually inappropriate behaviour and bullying McLachlan - who played the lead character - has denied all the allegations against him A representative for Heynatz said the model had nothing further to add to her remarks. It's understood she was attending police for an administrative matter and the NSW Police Force itself has not received a complaint. On Tuesday, the ABC reported a man and woman who worked as part of the 2014 crew had also gone to police this week. Meantime, McLachlan has agreed to stand down from the current Rocky Horror Show production. He will be replaced in Tuesday night's show at the Adelaide Festival Centre by his understudy. He won a Gold Logie for playing Kylie Minogue's on-screen brother in Neighbours. State Senate Republicans unveiled a plan Tuesday to eliminate school property taxes for New York seniors over the next decade. The proposal was mentioned in the conference's 2018 legislative agenda released Tuesday. Republicans want to make the property tax cap permanent, increase property tax rebate checks and a new freeze on school property taxes for seniors at current levels. The new freeze would be a precursor to eliminating school property taxes for seniors over the next 10 years. "From the seniors being forced to choose between paying their property taxes or medical bills, to the harried, hardworking parents who must juggle two or three jobs to stay afloat, to every cash-strapped person in between, they are our priority," said state Sen. Catharine Young, who chairs the Senate Finance Committee. The state has programs in place to reduce the property tax burden for seniors. The Enhanced STAR program provides an exemption for seniors ages 65 and older with incomes of $86,000 or less. The benefit applies to the first $66,800 of the value of a home, according to the state Department of Taxation and Finance. Municipalities also have the option of providing a senior citizens exemption on property taxes. Local governments and school districts can reduce the assessment of a senior-owned home by up to 50 percent. Seniors are eligible if their incomes are no more than $29,000 a year. Smaller exemptions can be granted for seniors whose annual incomes exceed $29,000. But the Senate Republicans' plan would go further by completing eliminating school property taxes for seniors. Scott Reif, a spokesman for the Senate majority, said the proposal would save $48 million statewide. Seniors who are at least 70 years and are eligible for the enhanced STAR program would have their school taxes eliminated. Lisa Green, business manager at the Auburn Enlarged City School District, said she is not opposed to helping seniors. One question she posed is whether the state would make up for the lost school property tax revenue, which is a major source of funding for districts across New York. "If that's the case, then I don't think we would have any issue with it," she said. Reif said the state would provide funding to ensure schools don't lose revenue as a result of the change. The Senate Republicans' plan was criticized by E.J. McMahon, research director of the Empire Center for Public Policy, an Albany-based think tank. McMahon offered a harsh assessment of the possible elimination of school property taxes for seniors. He said it could be viewed as "a perverse way of stemming the out-migration tide by bribing young homeowners to hang around in New York until they're old enough to pay nothing. Or bribing seniors to come back to New York." He added, "Either way, it's unfair to anyone else and it's by no means fair to assume that couples with an income of $86,000 a year, many living in a fully paid-off house, are uniformly unable to pay their property taxes." The proposal faces an uncertain fate in the state Legislature. While Republicans hold the majority in the state Senate, the Democrats are in control of the state Assembly. And it would have to receive the support of Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat. The state Senate acted on parts of its 2018 agenda Tuesday. The GOP-led chamber passed bills to make the property tax cap permanent and codify a state spending cap into law. Even in Hollywood, you couldn't make this up. A day after her barnstorming speech on the #MeToo movement at Sunday's Golden Globes when she accepted the Cecil B DeMille award, a boomlet took off to have Oprah Winfrey run for president in 2020. And while the media mogul has not announced a run, some have ideas of who could be in her Cabinet should she win. Meryl Streep appeared on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' on Monday night where she joked about potential picks for Winfrey's staff: Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson as Commander of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Harrison Ford as Secretary of Defense. 'Somebody from the stage [mentioned] Tom Hanks, and he seemed ready to go,' she told Kimmel of potential Vice-Presidential picks. 'That would be a pretty good ticket...You could just keep it in Hollywood, you know, you could have The Rock as the Joint Chief of Staff, Harrison Ford running defense.' Meryl Streep appeared on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' (pictured) on Monday where she joked about potential picks for Cabinet should Oprah Winfrey run and win a presidential election in 2020 'You could just keep it in Hollywood, you know, you could have The Rock as the Joint Chief of Staff, Harrison Ford running defense,' the veteran actress (pictured) said The boomlet began a day after Oprah's barnstorming speech on the #MeToo movement at Sunday's Golden Globes when she accepted the Cecil B DeMille award (pictured) Even though Winfrey has made no announcements on a presidential run, Johnson has said in the past that he's 'seriously considering' a shot in 2020. But 'this actually never came from me,' the actor told USA TODAY. 'It started (with) a piece in The Washington Post, and there was this kind of groundswell.' The report mentioned that Johnson 'could actually win'. People got excited about the prospect, which pushed the film star. If they were to serve, Ford's (pictured in Air Force One) title would be United States Secretary of Defense and Johnson's Commander of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Even though Winfrey has made no announcements on a presidential run, Johnson (pictured, left, with Bruce Willis in GI Joe) has said that he's 'seriously considering' a shot in 2020 'So I can tell you with all honesty that the consideration comes at the desire from a large amount of people who would like to see this happen,' Johnson - who has attended both Republican and Democratic conventions, but says he is currently a registered Independent said. 'But I mean, honestly, there are so many different variables that have to come into play when you think about this. Politics is not my business. So the consideration is there. And we'll just have to see. I'll continue to watch and learn as much as I can.' His reasoning for the run, however, is simple: 'To serve the people, and create a better environment for them.' Paddy's owner, Liz Gasson, was able to get help and get the boy out of the pool Ross Parry, 8, was swimming in a New Zealand pool when he got his foot stuck An assistance dog has been hailed a hero after leaping to action to save a little boy from drowning in a New Zealand pool. Eight-year-old Ross Parry was swimming in Wellington's Thorndon pool on Monday, when his foot became stuck in the handrail. As the little boy struggled to keep his head above water while laying on his back, Paddy the Labrador alerted his owner, Liz Gasson, to Ross' situation. 'All of a sudden, he pulled forward, and then he sort of started nudging me towards the direction of where the little boy was,' Ms Gasson told stuff.co.nz. Eight-year-old Ross Parry was stuck in a New Zealand swimming pool before Paddy the assistance dog raised the alarm to save him Paddy, who helps Ms Gasson cope with her multiple sclerosis, was sitting poolside when Ross became trapped. After alerting his owner, Ms Gasson was able to help free Ross, with the help of her husband and the little boy's mum, and get him out of the pool. Ross and his sister had been calling out to the lifeguards for help, who were dealing with another bunch of children at the time. Once he was free, Ross admitted it was 'really scary', but a few cuddles with Paddy helped settle him down. 'He's a superhero,' Ross said of his new found best friend. 'He's just an amazing dog. He knew something was going on far before anyone started shouting or anything like that,' Ms Gasson said. A woman has survived a life-threatening allergic reaction after she was left 'frying' in hospital - despite two doctors telling her to go home, she has claimed. Julie Mitchell, 63, went to the emergency department at Christchurch Hospital in New Zealand on October 28 with a swollen tongue, throat and glands and unable to swallow, Stuff reported. After showing up at the emergency department a doctor allegedly told her she did not have an infection and could go home. Julie Mitchell, 63, went to the emergency department at Christchurch Hospital in New Zealand on October 28 with a swollen tongue, throat and glands The high school teacher then went to two GPs, who prescribed her with pills and skin cream before she returned to Christchurch Hospital. One of the doctors she saw allegedly told her to look up her condition on the internet, despite her not owning a computer. Now covered in a hot, painful rash with large blisters, Mrs Mitchell was readmitted on October 31. She was unable to talk or swallow as her tongue and throat were so swollen. Her eyes were red and she could not walk or eat, and after six days in hospital she was diagnosed with rare Stevens-Johnson syndrome. The disease can cause death, and sufferers endure a loss of skin and mucus. Her eyes were red and she could not walk or eat, and after six days in hospital she was diagnosed with rare Stevens-Johnson syndrome She has described the pain as excruciating but said she was left in a general ward as she believes doctors weren't sure what to do with her. 'The burning and the welts... like sunburn if you can imagine on your face, down through your fingers and over your scalp, mouth and back,' she said. 'Everywhere it's just burning and you're just lying there frying and you can't do anything.' Two months later, she said her body is scarred, her nails are falling off, she is partially deaf and her speech has been affected. She has lashed out at doctors for her 'despicable' treatment She has lashed out at doctors for her 'despicable' treatment. 'I'd rather suffer at home than go back to hospital... it just makes my hair curl to think that I would ever be treated the way I was on that ward, it was horrible.' Canterbury District Health Board acting chief executive Mary Gordon said Mrs Mitchell should contact their customer service team so they could investigate her complaints. Daily Mail Australia has contacted the Canterbury DHB for comment. Toby Young has announced he is standing down from the universities regulator Toby Young has announced he is standing down from a new universities regulator after just eight days, saying his appointment has 'become a distraction'. His position on the board of the Office for Students (OfS) watchdog was put into jeopardy after criticism over a string of sexist and obscene tweets, including a sick sexual 'joke' about starving children on Comic Relief. Announcing his resignation this morning, the right-wing journalist apologised 'unreservedly' for his past remarks, labelling them 'ill-judged or just plain wrong'. It comes two days after Prime Minister Theresa May voiced her 'distaste' for Mr Young's online posts. His 'misogynistic' Twitter messages had threatened to undermine Mrs May's attempts to rebrand the Tories as a women-friendly Party with the promotion of several female MPs to the Cabinet yesterday. She had been under growing pressure to scrap Mr Young's appointment, with two senior female Conservative MPs saying his position was 'untenable'. And a petition calling for Mr Young to be sacked from the board of the OfS attracted nearly 220,000 signatures. Writing for The Spectator today, Mr Young said: 'I have decided to stand down from the Office for Students. My appointment has become a distraction from its vital work of broadening access to higher education and defending academic freedom. 'The caricature drawn of me in the last seven days, particularly on social media, has been unrecognisable to anyone who knows me. 'But some of the things I said before I got involved in education, when I was a journalistic provocateur, were either ill-judged or just plain wrong and I unreservedly apologise. 'I would like to thank the Prime Minister for standing by me, and drawing a distinction between my earlier life and my subsequent record in education.' Mr Young a close friend of Cabinet Ministers Boris Johnson and Michael Gove was a self-confessed pornography addict who had watched thousands of adult films. But his tweet 'joking' about performing a sex act over scenes of starving African children in a BBC Comic Relief segment fronted by Simon Cowell proved to be the final straw for some. Before his announcement this morning, former Education Secretary Nicky Morgan said: 'In continuing to defend Mr Young when the Party needs to appeal to women and young people, we risk alienating those we need to re-engage with to win the next Election.' Fellow Tory MP Sarah Wollaston, chairman of the Commons Health Select Committee, added: 'I feel deeply uncomfortable about someone who says things like this being appointed to a high profile public role.' The tweet that threatened to end Mr Young's appointment stemmed from 2009, when Cowell was filmed in Kenya with children scavenging from a rubbish dump to survive. The pop mogul called it 'hell on Earth'. A female Twitter user tweeted she had 'gone through 5 boxes of Kleenex' watching the harrowing scenes. Minutes later, just after midnight, Young tweeted a sarcastic and sick response, saying: 'Me Too, I havn't [sic] w***** so much in ages.' Mr Young told The Mail on Sunday he had 'no recollection' of posting the tweet. He said he had been a 'provocative journalist' for 30 years, whose stock in trade was saying 'controversial, sometimes outrageous things' so it was no surprise people were able to 'dredge up' material to embarrass him. All the offending messages date back at least five years and most much longer. Mr Young insisted he was a changed man, saying: 'I'm a more serious person now.' Some of the tweets which sparked calls for Toby Young to step down from his role He spent three months in Kenya in 2013 to help a friend who was trying to establish a primary school and added: 'I've helped set up four free schools and have been running a charity for more than a year, helping other people set up schools.' If 'anyone who has said anything offensive on Twitter' was to be banned from public life, it would 'become even more homogenous and anaemic than it is at present,' said Mr Young. But Ms Morgan disagreed, saying Mr Young seemed 'determined to live up to the title' of his comedic memoir, How To Lose Friends And Alienate People. She said: 'More seriously, many people will find it hard to understand how someone who expresses the kind of views in Mr Young's tweets can be appointed to a body responsible for universities. 'There must be someone else better suited to the position.' Ms Wollaston added: 'Initially, I thought this was a confected explosion of rage against Toby from people opposed to him for political reasons over free schools. But it is increasingly clear that someone did not do due diligence when they appointed him to this post. Former Education Secretary Nicky Morgan said Mr Young's appointment risked alienating voters 'His Trump-esque tweets are wholly inappropriate.' Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg said: 'These tweets are revolting and impossible to defend. But I am a huge admirer of Mr Young's pioneering work in free schools and do not believe he is unsuitable to work with young people in universities.' Education select committee chairman and Conservative MP Robert Halfon, who has cerebral palsy, attacked the 'dark' and 'dangerous' articles written by Mr Young in the past during an urgent debate in the Commons on the issue. He said: 'What I'm more concerned about is some quite dark articles where he talks about the disabled, where he talks about the working classes, and much more significantly in 2015 - and I have the article here - on what he calls progressive eugenics. 'Now, I find this incredibly dark and very dangerous stuff.' Mr Young's resignation from the newly-created post of universities regulator - much like his appointment - quickly provoked debate among senior politicians. Mr Halfon said Mr Young had 'done the honourable thing' in quitting. But shadow education secretary Angela Rayner said: 'The Toby Young saga has cast great doubt on the judgment of the PM, who failed to sack him in the first place.' Universities minister Jo Johnson, who was forced to defend him in the Commons on Monday night, stood firm in his support of Mr Young, who is a champion of free schools, which were introduced by David Cameron's administration. Mr Johnson, who is Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson's brother, dismissed Mr Young's detractors as 'armchair critics'. He wrote on Twitter: 'Toby Young's track record setting up & supporting free schools speaks for itself. 'His decision to stand down from the OfS board and repeat unreserved apologies for inappropriate past remarks reflects his character better than the one-sided caricature from his armchair critics.' Australia's first openly gay Islamic imam is planning to open a mosque for same-sex attracted Muslim teenagers. Nur Warsame, who publicly revealed his sexuality in 2010, wants to set up a haven in Melbourne for young Muslims whose socially-conservative families have shunned them. The Somali-born imam, who was married with a daughter, say he is dealing with an 'avalanche of misery' and is in talks with philanthropists to build a refuge mosque in an undisclosed inner-city location for Muslims who have experienced violence from their families and their community. Scroll down for video Australia's first openly-gay imam wants to build a mosque for same-sex attracted Muslims 'I had seven people housed at my one-bedroom apartment ... because it was life or death for them,' he told the ABC, adding they had to leave their family home 'that day, then and there'. 'One of the most essential things that our young people need is safe, affordable housing. 'For young people to transition safely they cannot be in the environment that is causing them the trauma.' Mr Warsame is in talks with Victoria Police to build his gay-friendly mosque. Nur Warsame is hoping to built a gay-friendly mosque in Melbourne for teens fleeing families Homosexuality is forbidden under Sharia law, a strict Islamic legal system that proscribes the death penalty for gay sex, also known as 'lut'. Sunni Muslims, in particular, derive their teachings from Abu Hurairah, a companion of the Prophet Mohammad, who said: 'If you find someone who is committing an act of the commitment of lut, kill the one on the top and the one below.' While fundamentalist Christians denounce homosexuality as a sin, Australia is also home to several fundamentalist Muslim groups that graphically condemn same-sex attraction. They include the Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah Association, a Sunni group, whose Wollongong-based sheikh Jamil El-Biza in September described gay marriage as 'evil' and described same-sex attracted men as 'f****ts' to his 3,700 Facebook followers. The areas of Australia with the highest Muslim population voted overwhelmingly against gay marriage in last year's postal vote survey, with the western Sydney seat of Watson, which includes Lakemba, returning a 70 per cent No vote. Advertisement Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle put on a touching display of affection today while undertaking their second engagement as a couple. The royal pair went to the studios of Reprezent 107.3 FM in Brixton, a 24-hour underground music station and the only one in the UK presented by people under 25, arriving to tumultuous cheers from the adoring crowd. Helen Wiltshire, 69, from Crawley, West Sussex, was overcome with emotion and broke down in tears as she thanked the pair for their visit, telling Meghan she 'loved her'. She clasped hands with Miss Markle and Prince Harry when they left Pop Brixton and said she has a special connection with the Royal Family which dates back to the early 20th century. Ms Wiltshire told MailOnline: 'It just means so much. In 1900, my grandfather signed the 1900 Uganda Agreement with Queen Victoria. Because of the royal connection we've always felt close to them.' She wept as she held their hands and told Meghan: 'Thank you, thank you for all you've done.' Speaking afterwards, she said: 'I just love Prince Harry. For him to have found someone who he really loves it is amazing. You can feel their love I wish them all the best. Ms Wiltshire ran a shop for 25 years from across Pop Brixton and added: 'I just want to say it was a dream to meet them. I wish them all the best and thank you so much for coming to Brixton.' Scroll down for video Helen Wiltshire, from Crawley, holds her hand out to Meghan as well-wishers gather to say hello to the royal couple in South London today The radio station offers accredited training and support in topics ranging from audio and radio production and editing They stopped to chat to people waiting in the crowd - who eagerly took the opportunity to take pictures of them With just 122 days to their wedding, Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle are undertaking their second engagement as a couple The couple are inside the radio station chatting to youth workers, volunteers and people who have been helped by the great cause Inside Reprezent's studios, the couple, who got engaged in November and will wed in May, met presenter Gloria Beyi, 17, host of radio show Glory Talks, who was on air, and her producer, Finn Whitehead, 27 Helen Wiltshire, 69, (right, with her 39-year-old daughter Sandra) from Crawley, West Sussex, was overcome with emotion when she met the royal couple They chatted animatedly to people from the station, laughing and joking as they heard about how it helps youngsters The prince and Ms Markle were greeted by Mr Carey and an enthusiastic Harry told him in an apparent reference to the station: 'All this is amazing' Harry told the station's founder Shane Carey, 46, the work he was doing was 'amazing', while Meghan made everyone laugh when she told them: 'I must tune in.' And down-to-earth Meghan beamed as she waved to the crowds while wearing a 600 coat by Smythe, Burberry trousers and a 45 sweater by high street giant Marks & Spencer. Rather fittingly, the pair listened to the track 'Flirt' by the artist Pote and Meghan praised teenage presenter Gloria Beyi, 17, telling her: 'I can see why your show is so popular. You're so thoughtful and your approach is so engaging.' With just 122 days to their wedding, this is the first engagement of the year for the happy couple. Afterwards they greeted well-wishers who had waited for hours in the freezing cold and even stopped to pose for selfies. Foster carer Sharley Watson, 55, waited out in the cold for hours to catch a glimpse of the couple and said she was excited to welcome them to Brixton. She said: 'It's good to see Meghan in Brixton, a black community - it's the first time we've had a royal visit here. 'Hopefully she will want to help areas like this. I hope she liked it - I think she would like it even better at night .. she could try out the nightlife.' American students Jennifer Martinez, 20, and Millicent Sasu, 19, from Baltimore, US, were also in the crowd. Jennifer said: 'She's black, she's white, she's an actress, she's American .. she brings a bit of everything and has so many different qualities and brings such a lot to the table.' Millicent added: 'I feel like she's the new face of America, which is great for our country.' John Loughrey, 62, set up camp opposite POP Brixton at 6am this morning but despite arriving in good time, the patriot said he never believed today would be the day he would finally get to meet Prince Harry and Miss Markle. The royalist from Streatham, south London, told MailOnline he had attended dozens of royal visits over the years but had only managed to catch Prince Harry's eye once before. This all changed this afternoon however - in part thanks to Mr Loughrey's Great British get up. Dressed in a Union Jack hat, hoodie and trousers to match, he caught the eye of the pair as they left the community radio station. Holding roses with a picture of the happy couple and a heartfelt engagement card, he said Prince Harry and Meghan asked his name and asked the type of flowers he had bought. He told MailOnline: 'I said to Meghan, I've got your favourite flowers! Meghan said thank you and harry came over and shook hands twice with me. He was so excited he forgot to take the flowers off me.' The prince came back for the flowers and the card before he was ushered away into his escorted vehicle alongside his fiancee. Helen (pictured), 69, told MailOnline: 'It just means so much. In 1900, my grandfather signed the 1900 Uganda Agreement with Queen Victoria. Because of the royal connection we've always felt close to them.' The prince also demonstrated that his wife to wear the trousers in their relationship during a discussion about gender equality They chatted to dozens of young DJs - with Harry even carrying off a complicated 'fist bump' with one Meghan and Harry smiled broadly as people cheered and shouted - and in response to Harry's gesticulating to the crowds and comment 'this is so loud, you have to', Meghan turned and blew a kiss, which had everyone screaming even louder The visit to the urban radio station saw the couple don headphones in the studio as they listened to the music Meghan squealed and said she was 'so excited' about her forthcoming wedding to Prince Harry. The visit to the urban radio station saw the couple don headphones in the studio and and chat to dozens of young DJs - with Harry even carrying off a complicated 'fist bump' with one. The prince also demonstrated that his wife wears the trousers in their relationship during a discussion about gender equality. Station manager Adrian Newman told him that they had a question for him to which Harry pointed at Meghan and swiftly replied: 'She answers the questions!' 'Yes talking of gender equality!' Meghan quickly snapped back, with a smile on her face. Meghan and Harry smiled broadly as people cheered and shouted - and in response to Harry's gesticulating to the crowds and comment 'this is so loud, you have to', Meghan turned and blew a kiss, which had everyone screaming even louder. The couple were accompanied by Harrys assistant private secretary, Heather Wong, who also helped Meghan on their first public engagement in Nottingham. Inside the station the couple had a private meeting with the station's founder, Mr Carey, who talked to them about the station's success it has nurtured talent including grime star Stormzy and how its training programme for young talent has helped more than 4,000 young people so far, with another 3,000 on the waiting list. Inside the studio DJ Glory was broadcasting, along with her friend Remi who said she was 'gassed'- excited to meet the couple. Appropriately - but completely by chance - Glory was playing Flirt as loved up Harry and Meghan came in and chatted to her. Meghan confidently introduced herself, 'Hi I'm Meghan, nice to meet you too', followed by Harry, and added: 'I hear your show is very popular. I can see why you are so popular, you are so thoughtful in your approach.' DJ Glory told her that she first came into the station when she was 16 on work experience and explained how much she had learnt about not just radio but the music industry and media in general. 'Reprezent is not just a place you go to work but it's a family, anything you need they are here for you, they nurture you until you are ready and ripe,' Glory said. 'You'll go onto Beat1.' said Meghan. 'And then there are three thousand people on the waiting list and it opens up a space for someone else to have the same experience. It's amazing, it so cool,' said Meghan, who had clearly studied her brief. The couple then donned a pair of headphones each to listen to Glory talk through the next segment, but did not go on the air themselves. 'How did you hear about Reprezent?' asked Harry afterwards. 'You are so professional. Anyone else would have got distracted. ' 'It's been so good to meet you,' said Meghan, 'good luck and take care, goodbye!' Despite the chilly wind in Brixton, the air was abuzz with excitement from the couple and those waiting for them In a particularly touching moment of affection, Prince Harry took Meghan by the hand as he led her along the road Miss Markle was gifted with dozens of bouquets of beautiful flowers from members of the public They made for a handsome couple as they braved the cold in their thick woollen overcoats The couple were even greeted by a plucky DJ who offered to mix the tracks for them at their upcoming wedding The Reprezent training programme was established 10 years ago in response to the rise in knife crime, to help young people develop and socialise through radio - and the couple happily posed with volunteers from the programme Six-year-old schoolgirl gives a pink rose to Meghan and paints a flamingo picture for her Hours waiting in the freezing cold for a chance of meeting Prince Harry and Meghan Markle paid off for six-year-old Davina Coas. The devoted youngster, who stood at the front of the fenced off area, clutched a pink rose and a painting which was made as an engagement present for the royal couple. As the visit to Pop in Brixton appeared to be lasting longer than the 45 minutes allotted, Davina grew tired of asking her mother how much longer it would be to meet the royal couple. But it seems her perseverance paid off as they made a beeline for schoolgirl, dressed in a purple coat and bobble hat, as they left the studio. Davina Coas (pictured) showed the flamingo painting both she and her mother made for Miss Markle after the royal couple came over to speak to her today The newly-engaged pair smiled and chatted to her as she handed over a pink flower and showed them the painting she and her mother had made for them. As others in the crowd began to scream and cry with excitement, Miss Markle leaned in to ask the little Brixton schoolchild her name. Davina's mother Inna told MailOnline it was a dream come true to meet the couple and it made the cold wait worthwhile. She said: 'My children are both mixed-raced, so it means a lot to have someone like Meghan joining the monarchy. They are a beautiful couple.' Jokingly before the couple made their way out to the crowds, Little Davina told her mum she was cold to which her mum replied: 'No pain, no fun!' And it turns out the wait was worthwhile with both Meghan and Harry greeting the youngster. Advertisement Next door the couple meet with some of other young people volunteers, DJs and those on the training programme to hear about their experiences. That was where they met with DJ YV Shells, 24, from Woolwich, who is also studying to be a doctor and juggles his medical degree with his work at the station. He has also become something of a champion of women's rights at the station and said afterwards that he was 'spun' that Meghan introduced herself and said she had heard about his passion for gender equality. He said: 'They were so cool, so down to earth. I couldn't believe it when she spoke to me and said she had heard about my work on gender equality. It was beautiful, if I am honest with you. 'I am firm believer in normal behaviour when it comes to women, not special, just normal, which means respecting people. It spun me that she mentioned it. I was almost embarrassed as it doesn't seems anything special to me. Just normal.' It was then that station manager Adrian said they had a question for Harry. Adrian asked how many times harry had emailed President Obama to persuade him to be interviewed for his guest edit of Radio 4's Today programme. 'There wasn't too many email exchanges, really,' Harry explained. 'We both share a very similar outlook and the main purpose of that was let everybody know that young people in the world matter so much. 'Some of the world's biggest problems that everyone is facing, whether it be in our community or on a global scale. 'If you get good minds together to be able to have that conversation and shine a light on the young people of today and what they are doing then eventually the pendulum will swing and all of a sudden everyone under the age of 30 and all their ideas and creativity and connectivity will explode in a really good way.' Chatting about the issue to gender equality with DJ YV Shells, Meghan said: 'You have to remind yourself that self love is important. 'It think [your attitude] is incredible. Good for you.' Harry added: 'As males we have to do our part or it's not going to work.' Downstairs the couple chatted with some larger group of DJs and volunteers. Jeremiah Asia, 20, said; 'They were very down to earth and didn't want to say much, they just wanted to listen to our stories. How we all came to the station by different routes but have come together as a family. They had a lot of words of encouragement.' DJ Remi Adermi, 24, had only been at the station since August but had already bagged her own show. She said: 'They just wanted to know why we were here and what we have got out of the experience.. They had a lot of words of encouragement.' Remi also couldn't resist getting Harry to have a go at her trademark 'fist pump' - involving a series of complicated hand gestures which she 'had practiced with her brother the night before' in the hope that he would be game enough to do it. 'I just thought it was now or never. He's a cool guy, a sweet guy. And he did it!' Remi showed the prince home to do it once and then Harry carried it off perfectly. 'That's just for us, just between us,' he said, laughing. Harry and Meghan were handed a bunch of flowers by one well-wisher in Brixton this afternoon Harry holds a woman's hand while Meghan chats to another well-wisher outside the radio station in Brixton Meghan puts her arm on her husband-to-be's back as they greet well-wishers after their visit to the radio station The trip today came after Harry and Meghan have already carried out their first official royal visit together last year Harry and Meghan approached the station's founder three days before Christmas asking if they could come and see the station for themselves The pair held hands as they smiled and waved at the adoring crowd, before making their way into Pop Brixton Meghan beamed at the crowd, flashing her stunning engagement ring as she wrapped up against the cold in a grey woollen coat The bride-to-be giggled as she made her way inside the venue, while Prince Harry chatted to volunteers As the couple left the studio after their 45 minute visit, they shook hands with a large crowd of well-wishers inside including Grace White, ten, and her sister, Olive, seven, from nearby Balham, south west London. Grace was carrying a bouquet of flowers and said Harry asked if they were for Meghan. 'Well you had better hang on and give them to her yourself,' he said kindly. When Meghan came along she asked where the girls were from and Grace asked her if she was excited about the wedding. She said: 'Of course I am! And kind of squealed a little bit.' Their mother Helen added: 'She just couldn't hide her excitement when Grace asked her. She was glowing.' Meanwhile, plucky DJ Jevanni Letford handed his business card to the love struck prince as he toured Reprezent radio studio in Brixton on Wednesday afternoon. The local musician told the Prince he would DJ at his reception. Speaking afterwards, Mr Letford, 28, told MailOnline: 'Prince Harry took the card and said 'okay!' And put it in his pocket. He said: 'Prince Harry if you're reading, getting me to dj at your wedding will be the second best decision you've ever made in your life - after asking Meghan to marry you.' Shane Carey, 46, founder and chief executive officer of Reprezent, who hosted the couple, said: 'Since the visit was announced there's been massive excitement in the station - much more than I could have expected.' He added: 'We're having the spotlight shone on us from all the world's media pretty much, we've never had this attention. 'The whole point of this is that the young people learn how to be creative and then shine with it and they're really getting a chance now.' Inside Reprezent's studios, the couple, who got engaged in November and will wed in May, met presenter Gloria Beyi, 17, host of radio show Glory Talks, who was on air, and her producer, Finn Whitehead, 27. Alongside the music, she chats with her listeners about her favourite tracks, tweets and life generally. The couple timed their entrance perfectly as the presenter had just started a track which meant they could talk without the listeners hearing them. The 17-year-old DJ admitted she was the youngest in the station when she was quizzed by Ms Markle. The teenager talked about how she had been given the opportunity to host her own show after doing work experience at the station when aged 16. At one point Harry made Meghan laugh by gesturing towards a CD mixer as if he was about to start 'scratching' a track. As their few minutes with the presenter ended, Meghan praised the presenter, adding: 'I can see why your show is so popular. You're so thoughtful and your approach is so engaging.' Meghan then made everyone laugh when she added: 'I must tune in.' Miss Beyi said there had been 'a lot of shock' around the visit, adding: 'For two people who are making headlines in the news to come to a place where there's usually just a little column in the newspaper (about us) - I think a lot of people thought those two worlds would never collide.' Miss Markle spent time after the visit waving at the crowds and greeting individuals who had waited all day The couple even made people laugh inside the station, as they got involved with mixing and said they would tune into the show Meghan praised the presenter, of the show, telling her: 'I can see why your show is so popular. You're so thoughtful and your approach is so engaging' Miss Markle held on to her husband-to-be, while he led her through the crowds and into Pop Brixton in south London Hundreds of well-wishers made their way to south London, gathering outside Pop to see the couple - who took the time to stop and say hello Harry and Meghan visit Reprezent to see their work supporting young people through creative training in broadcasting The Reprezent training programme was established 10 years ago in response to the rise in knife crime The couple learned about the training programmes in Brixton, and met some of the current and former volunteers Harry and Megan chat to young people on the Reprezent radio programme about their experiences More than 4,000 young people have been through the Reprezent programme, with over 3,000 more on the waiting list Harry and Meghan are at POP Brixton, a temporary project that has turned disused land into a creative space for businesses The couple are meeting presenters and staff from Reprezent FM which trains hundreds of young people each year Prince Harry and his bride-to-be Meghan Markle are visiting the London studios of a youth-orientated radio station today There was a huge applause when Prince Harry and Meghan arrived just in south London shortly 3pm Wearing a grey coat, black trousers and a black top, Miss Markle accompanied her equally smart fiancee as they shook hands with the mayor of Brixton and local dignitaries before beginning their tour The couple were greeted and an enthusiastic Harry said in an apparent reference to the station: 'All this is amazing' Meghan wore a coat by Smythe, Burberry trousers and a sweater by Marks & Spencer The couple were greeted by local dignitaries when they arrived and a huge cheer went up when the crowd first saw the royals Founded in 2003 by former teacher Shane Carey, Reprezent 107.3 FM grew out of a south London community radio project in response to a sudden increase in knife crime in Peckham, south London. In 2011 it won its FM licence and is now known as a hotbed of UK music talent, nurturing stars including the grime maestro Stormzy, who started off as a guest but whose natural persona led to him being offered his own monthly show. Several of its presenters have also gone onto work on stations such as Radio 1Xtra. In the last few months alone, Reprezent has also collaborated with Damon Albarn's Gorillaz, while stars including Noel Gallagher have dropped in to do interviews. Reprezent has become such an urban success story that it now runs its own training and mentoring programme, teaching participants everything from booking guests to presenting and production. More than 4,000 have been through the station's training programme already which offers accredited training and support in everything from audio and radio production to communication skills, confidence building and volunteering - with another 3,000 on the waiting list. According to Shane Carey, CEO and Founder, it was Harry and Meghan who approached him three days before Christmas asking if they could come and see the station for themselves. Apparently they had learnt about its work with The Queen's Young Leaders, which Harry has been particularly involved in, who in turn introduced him to William, Kate and Harry's Royal Foundation, the umbrella group for their own charitable interests. They are visiting a community radio station which trains hundreds of youngsters every year in media and employment skills The bride-to-be was delighted as she smiled and waved at the crowds who lined the pavements to catch a glimpse of her Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's visit to Brixton left the London neighbourhood buzzing with excitement - with hundreds lining the streets to welcome the couple Prince Harry and his fiancee happily stopped to chat to people stationed outside the radio station in south London Dozens of photographers, broadcast cameras and journalists were in place to capture the first moments of the royal visit Inna Coas, 42, and her daughter Davinna have been waiting since 10am to catch a glimpse of the couple. Miss Coas, who is originally from Moscow, Russia, said: 'Like Meghan, my children are mixed race. Meghan is an inspiration and her marrying into the royal family will give them models to look up to' Members of the public eagerly waited for the arrival of Harry and Meghan for their visit to youth-orientated radio station A group of youngsters from station have been excitedly tweeting through the morning, ahead of the couple's arrival Six-year-old Davina Coas helped her mother paint two flamingos in love as an engagement present for the couple Well-wishers took along bouquets of flowers adorned with pictures of the happy couple, and wore their Union Jacks as they waited in the cold Brixton resident of 50 years Jean Carter, 72, has been waiting for the royal couple since midday. She said: 'This visit is a part of history' Harry and Meghan will visit the Reprezent FM studios at POP Brixton, a temporary project that has turned disused land into a creative space for local, independent businesses WHAT IS GRIME? Grime music, which began in London at the turn of the century, has been thrust into the mainstream media in the past year, amid the successful rise of Stormzy. His debut album, titled 'Gang Signs & Prayers', released in February, reached number one in the UK charts - a feat achieved by no other artist in the scene. Stormzy's rise to fame, alongside the popularity of Skepta and J Hus, helped sales of grime to rocket by 109 per cent, according to industry figures. The genre is based around some of the realities of urban lifestyle, including gangs, drugs, violence, guns and negative terms for women. Wiley, considered to be the 'godfather of grime', and other prominent artists such as Kano and Lethal Bizzle have also mentioned cannabis in their songs. Advertisement 'We didn't invite them, they approached us just before Christmas. I was asked to give a major presentation the next day and have been working on this non-stop ever since,' he said. 'The reason they are coming is because we are aligned very closely to their interests, we do a lot of work around mental health. The whole model of Reprezent is peer mentoring, and I know that is something that really interests Prince Harry. 'Reprezent came out of a community station and has been so successful that it has just eclipsed everything else. 'Reprezent is about giving young people a voice and confidence. And radio is probably the way to do it. There are so many jobs that you can do within radio not just the obvious skills, but also getting on with people, turning your hands to all sorts of jobs. ' Mr Carey said a lot of people had been asking him: why Meghan? 'Well, by coincidence 60 per cent of our intake are women, and they become, through their work here, quite strong, confident, opinionated women,' he said, referencing her strong feminist principles, outspoken nature and philanthropic work. Mr Carey said Reprezent's training programme allowed young people to fulfil their potential and to progress into further education and employment opportunity. Many of the young people who complete the training are able to volunteer as presenters and producers on the station. Harry and Meghan were whisked inside Pop Brixton - a community project that houses independent local businesses Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's visit to Brixton left the London neighbourhood buzzing with excitement Well-wishers had been allowed into the building's covered courtyard and they lined barriers as the couple walked past Harry and his bride-to-be smiled after they arrived in a chauffeur-driven car at the studios of Reprezent FM in Brixton Reprezent is known as a hotbed of UK music talent, nurturing stars including the grime maestro Stormzy (left) - while stars including Noel Gallagher (right) have dropped in to do interviews Inna Coas, 42, and her daughter Davinna waited from 10am to catch a glimpse of the couple. Miss Coas, who is originally from Moscow, Russia, said: 'Like Meghan, my children are mixed race. Meghan is an inspiration and her marrying into the royal family will give them models to look up to. 'I think it's brilliant and beautiful. We have made a poster and my daughter has brought a painting to give to them as a gift.' Pam Simmons, 60, even bought a camp chair especially so she could wait in comfort for the newly engaged couple while enjoying a cup of wine. She said: 'Harry and William are down to earth, there is only one way to find out what the problems are in life and that's to come to the grass roots which is what they do.' Accompanied by her husband of 41 years Paul, they said they were hoping to catch the pair to wish them a happy marriage. Crowds braved the chilly weather to catch a glimpse of Harry and his bride-to-be in Brixton this afternoon Excited members of the public wait outside as the pair learn more about the training programmes, and meet some of the current and former volunteers who benefited from their time on the station's courses At one point the couple turned to acknowledge the well-wishers lining crash barriers behind them Reprezent 107.3FM already has a sizeable audience outside of London and is growing in America, where it is streamed online. 'London is seen as pretty cool when it comes to music at the moment,' Mr Carey said. 'When it comes to what we do here, only 20 per cent go on to be presenters - there is so much more to the industry.production, artist liaison, social media management. 'A lot of young people who come through us, don't even go into the music industry. They go into customer facing jobs, because they have great CVs packed with work experience. 'That is as much as a success for us as anything else. ' Royal fan who sobbed as she met Meghan and Harry has a historic connection with the family The woman who was overcome with emotion when she met Prince Harry and Meghan Markle today has a long-standing connection with the royal family, MailOnline can reveal. Helen Wiltshire, 69, from Crawley, West Sussex, travelled to Brixton with her 39-year-old daughter Sandra to meet the royal couple today. She was photographed embracing Miss Markle on the streets in south London and told the actress she 'loved her'. Ms Wiltshire, who used to run a shop in Brixton for 25 years, later revealed her special connection with the royal family which dates back to the early 20th century. Helen Wiltshire (right) travelled to Brixton wit her daughter Sandra (left) to see the royal couple on Tuesday She told MailOnline that her grandfather signed the 1900 Buganda Agreement and said she has a 'always felt close' to the family. The Buganda Agreement, also knows as the Uganda Agreement, formed the relationship between the British Uganda Protectorate and the subnational kingdom of Buganda. It was signed in March 1900 by Buganda's prime minister Sir Apolo Kagwa and British explorer Sir Harry Johnston. Ms Wiltshire revealed her family's connection to the agreement when both Meghan, 36, and Harry, 33, visited the underground music studios of Reprezent 107.3 FM in Brixton. Helen Wiltshire, from Crawley, holds her hand out to Meghan as well-wishers gather to say hello to the royal couple in Brixton They arrived to tumultuous cheers from the adoring crowd and the Suits actress beamed as she waved to people who had lined the streets. Ms Wiltshire said: 'It just means so much. In 1900, my grandfather signed the 1900 Buganda Agreement with Queen Victoria. 'Because of the royal connection we've always felt close to them.' She wept as she held their hands and told Meghan: 'Thank you, thank you for all you've done.' Speaking afterwards, she said: 'I just love Prince Harry. For him to have found someone who he really loves it is amazing. You can feel their love I wish them all the best. British explorer Sir Harry Johnston (left) signed the 1900 Buganda Agreement while Queen Victoria (right) was on the throne 'I just want to say it was a dream to meet them. I wish them all the best and thank you so much for coming to Brixton.' Meghan squealed and said she was 'so excited' about her forthcoming wedding to Prince Harry. The visit to the urban radio station saw the couple wear headphones in the studio and and chat to dozens of young DJs. Harry even 'fist bumped' with one DJ and demonstrated that his wife wears the trousers in the relationship after he was asked about gender equality. Station manager Adrian Newman told him that they had a question for him to which Harry pointed at Meghan and swiftly replied: 'She answers the questions!' Images showing the final moments of the Thai bar girl who fell to her death from a balcony while allegedly having 'extravagant sex' with a former British Army soldier have emerged. Waitress Wannipa Janhuathon, 26, had been working at a bar in high-risk holiday resort Pattaya, Thailand, for several months while helping to support her family who live in the country's northeast. She was found dead at 5.30am on Saturday morning after falling from a fifth floor balcony while allegedly having 'extravagant' sex with former British Army soldier Reece Vella, 25, from Birmingham. Heart-breaking pictures show Wannipa just weeks before plunging to her death - shopping, posing in make-up and fooling around with friends. Surveillance images show the pair walking next to each other before arriving at the Cosy Beach View condominium at 3.13am - some two hours and 15 minutes before she mysteriously fell to her death Left: Thai bar girl Wannipa Janhuathon, 26, posing on the beach in Pattaya on October 26 - just weeks before she fell to her death. Right: Wannipa with her best friend, Tmod Om, in the autumn of last year Wannipa, in black shorts and white top, is seen standing, bent forward slightly, in a lift looking up at the number display as Vella. wearing a black shirt, army pattern shorts and trainers, stands behind her Pictured left: Thai bar girl Wannipa Janhuathon just weeks before plunging to her death. Right: Arrested British tourist Reece Vella served as a private in the Royal Logistics Corps, headquartered at Deepcut Barracks in Surrey, until he left nearly five years ago British tourist Reece Vella, 25, is interviewed by Thai police today after being arrested over Wannipa's death Devastated friends led tributes to petite Wannipa - nicknamed Joy - as chilling CCTV emerged of her final moments - walking next to Vella, towering over her tiny frame after paying around 1,500 baht (34) to have sex with her for the night. Surveillance images show the pair walking next to each other before arriving at the Cosy Beach View condominium at 3.13am - some two hours and 15 minutes before she mysteriously fell to her death. Wannipa, in black shorts and white top, is seen standing, bent forward slightly, in a lift looking up at the number display as Vella. wearing a black shirt, army pattern shorts and trainers, stands behind her. Hours later she was dead, having suffered severe head injuries after falling alongside a packet of sex drugs while Vella fled on a motorbike allegedly with her phone. Police are still investigating the exact circumstances surrounding the fall, with Vella - who had been staying illegally in the country on an expired visa - facing up to ten years in prison or a fine of 200,000 baht (4,580) on a charge of causing death by negligent or reckless behaviour. Police claim that the reckless and negligent behaviour was the sex on the balcony that directly caused her death. Wannipa (left) on December 28 with bar owner Gaz Hart (right) and friend James Potterton. Hart, boss of the Sky Bar on the city's Soi 6, said all the staff had been devastated by the loss as Wannipa 'was part of the family' Hart added: 'I keep trying to remember this happy girl. Her smile and attitude always made me happy even when I 'yak yakked' at her'. Left and right: Wannipa in October Wannipa (right) joking with friends in late October, just months before she fell to her death Officers also claim that Vella had used a motorbike as a getaway vehicle having fled the room in panic and that he had been staying in the country illegally for 59 days after his visa had expired. He was arrested on Sunday afternoon at 4pm at a nearby bar and admitted having sex with with Wannipa in the bedroom and on the balcony. But Vella denies that he was having sex on the balcony when the girl fell. A police source close to the investigation said today: 'The area that's being investigated more is what happened that caused Wannipa to fall. 'Was she alone or was she having sex at that moment. We think that this kinky sex on the balcony caused her to fall. This is what we are trying to build the evidence to prove. The suspect then ran away.' As officers continued to question Vella today while gathering evidence, heartbroken friends paid tribute to Joy who was 'the sweetest angel who was always smiling'. Vella has been arrested after a prostitute fell five floors to her death as they had 'very strange, extravagant sex' on a balcony at a Thai hotel Video of Wannipa shows her playfully dancing, hiding in the supermarket and pouting as she puts on make-up. While at work with friends she poses in Halloween costume and cheekily slaps her friend's bottom while they go out shopping together. Best friend Tmod Om, 18, said: 'Joy was my best friend. We had so many good times together. So many memories. She was so happy, so lovely, such a beautiful, fun, person. 'It hurts so much. I miss her so badly. I just can't accept it and I want her back so much. I wish that right now she can know how much we love her and miss her.' Gaz Hart, boss of the Sky Bar on the city's Soi 6, said all the staff had been devastated by the loss as Wannipa 'was part of the family'. He said: 'I keep trying to remember this happy girl. Her smile and attitude always made me happy even when I 'yak yakked' at her. 'I just couldnt be angry with her even when I wanted to be. I had to try my best not to laugh and be serious but she could see I was holding my smile back so hard and it made her laugh more. 'My last memory of her is her running over to me laughing, giving me one of the 20 big Joy hugs she gave me every day and yelling 'Gazzzzzzz what youuuu doooooo!' 'And showing me a picture of her I posted that she didn't like while laughing her head off. Myself and the Sky Bar family will truly miss her. And it wont be the same without her here. 'I cant imagine how her family are feeling right now. A beautiful happy young girl's life taken too soon.' Reece's family, meanwhile, said they were 'extremely upset' following his arrest in Thailand, saying he had left Britain months earlier after suffering from PTSD. The family were concerned for his health, revealing the 25-year-old had not had anything to eat or drink since he was taken into custody. The former soldier, who followed his two older brothers into the military, quit the army after suffering from PTSD. Vella served for one year and three months as a private in the Royal Logistics Corps, headquartered at Deepcut Barracks in Surrey, and was medically discharged in 2011. During his service, his brother Andrayoss claimed he was one of the top 100 shots in the British Army. Andrayoss said after leaving the army, he suffered with depression and 'fell into the wrong crowd', serving a stint in prison. Vella, from Birmingham, West Midlands, was arrested yesterday (pictured) afternoon at the nearby Route CC Roadhouse bar. The former soldier, who followed his two older brothers into the military, quit the army after suffering from PTSD But it has transpired this stretch was for the rape of a teenage girl he was convicted of in 2012. Vella was jailed for almost five years after he admitted raping the girl in Worcester having punched her twice in the face and hit her with a bin lid. He was in Worcester Crown Court accused of being concerned in the supply of heroin and crack cocaine. He was due to appear on October 12 last year - but he failed to turn up. An outstanding bench warrant was issued and, according to the Crown Prosecution Service, it is still outstanding. A spokesperson for the Foreign Office said: 'Our staff have offered support to a British man following his arrest in Thailand, and are in contact with the Thai authorities.' Reece was briefly allowed to make contact with his family yesterday and, according to Andrayoss, said he was being asked for 12,000 to ensure he is given food and water. Reece also claimed he did not steal a motorcycle, as the police said, but that he had hired it and was due to return it on the day he was arrested. Andrayoss said: 'I was able to speak to him very briefly. He obviously very stressed. The authorities are going to transfer him to the city's main jail soon. 'When you are in the military you have a family around you to support you, and when he left he fell into the wrong crowd. He was exploited really.' He also said his brother had struggled with drugs in the past and had served a stint in prison. 'But he had turned his life around,' he added. 'He was going to Thailand to make a fresh start.' The prostitute suffered severe head injuries and multiple fractures after falling naked along with a half-empty packet of sex drugs from an apartment in the notorious tourist resort. In custody: Vella, 25, is interviewed by Pattaya Police Chief Apichai Krobpetch, far right, after the incident on Saturday morning Police searched the empty room - finding clothes and used condoms - then began a manhunt for the Briton amid suspicions that he had fled the scene. Vella, from Birmingham, West Midlands, was arrested yesterday afternoon at the nearby Route CC Roadhouse bar and was filmed in possession of two mobile phones - one of which police claim was Wannipa's handset. He moved from the semi-detached family home in Worcester to Thailand to start a new life four months ago. Vella's brother Andrayoss said his family had been devastated by the news and were sure he was innocent. 'We are in pieces. Extremely upset. My gran is terrified, mum has been crying and dad can't bring himself to talk about it. 'He was in the military for a while. All three of us were. He did service for his country. The bar girl, also known by the nickname Joy (pictured), had moved from her home town in Sakon Nakhon province, and was working at Sky Bar in the city's bustling Soi 6 street which is lined with hundreds of prostitutes working in bars and massage parlours 'When he left he had some mental health issues and so he fell in with the wrong crowd here in England. He got into a bit of trouble. 'He didn't have anything to do and people were talking in his ear when he was just sat around. 'Reece decided to move to Thailand to start a new life. He's not a bad character, he just made some mistakes. 'He was a great, loving guy to have around in our family. We are very close and he would take my son to play in the park. 'He wanted to get away from here. He was going to train in Muay Thai and sort his head out. Reece flew to Thailand for a new start four months ago, they said. His family rarely heard from him. 'It was a horrible shock when we were told he had been arrested. 'It was an accident. We know it was. People said he ran away after the crime but we don't know anything about that. 'We feel really sorry for the girl and her family. What has happened is horrible. 'What we are going through is horrible too. We face losing Reece. That's something that could happen. 'We haven't been able to speak to him yet, but we have been told he has not had any food or water since he was arrested. He is starving and we have been asked for money to make sure he is fed. It's awful.' In footage from the arrest, the tourist - who arrived in Thailand between three and four months ago - is heard asking to be un-cuffed before laughing as he says: 'Can I have a cigarette now?'. The prostitute suffered severe head injuries and multiple fractures after falling naked along with a half-empty packet of sex drugs from an apartment in the notorious tourist resort. Paramedics arrived and performed CPR on Wannipa - who was still alive - but she was later pronounced dead in hospital In footage from the arrest, the tourist - who arrived in Thailand between three and four months ago - is heard asking to be un-cuffed before laughing as he says: 'Can I have a cigarette now?' Thai police said that Vella arrived at the venue earlier in the evening before agreeing a fee of around 1,500 baht (35) then leaving with Wannipa (pictured) and going to a room at the nearby Cosy Beach View condominium block He later admitted to police that he had taken the prostitute back to his rented room and 'had sex in the bedroom then on the balcony before she fell'. He then said he was 'distraught' and returned to a different hotel. Police Lieutenant Narong Chantra, deputy head of investigations at Pattaya Police, said Vella had been arrested on suspicion of 'negligence causing others to die' and fled the scene knowing that he was staying in the country illegally on an expired visa. He said: 'CCTV from the incident was examined and after checking evidence at the hotel the suspect was found to be Mr Reece Vella, a British citizen, aged 25 years. 'An arrest warrant was issued after evidence was presented to the court. The police case is that on the day of the incident Mr Vella visited the bar and paid to take Miss Wannipa away. 'Miss Wannipa and Mr Vella were having very strange, extravagant sex on the balcony until she fell down below and died. 'Mr Vella was in shock and knowing that he had overstayed his visa ran away and kept her mobile phone in his bag and left the room. Vella was filmed in possession of two mobile phones - one of which police claim was Wannipa's handset Police claim Vella (pictured on his arrest) and Wannipa had been having what translates as 'fancy or extravagant' sex on the balcony before she fell to her death But police claim that the pair had been having what translates as 'fancy or extravagant' sex on the balcony of the hotel (pictured) before Wannipa fell to her death A packet of a Viagra-related gel was found next to Wannipa Janhuathon, 26, after she plunged five floors from a hotel balcony 'Mr Vella has been arrested on suspicion of negligence causing others to die, overstaying his visa in excess of 59 days and stealing a motorcycle at night. 'The foreign suspect will be processed and prosecuted in accordance with the law.' The bar girl, also known by the nickname Joy, had moved from her home town in Sakon Nakhon province, and was working at Sky Bar in the city's bustling Soi 6 street, which is lined with hundreds of prostitutes working in bars and massage parlours. Thai police said that Vella arrived at the venue earlier in the evening before agreeing a fee of around 1,500 baht (35) then leaving with Wannipa and going to a room at the nearby Cosy Beach View condominium block. But police claim that the pair had been having what translates as 'fancy or extravagant' sex on the balcony before Wannipa fell to her death - along with a packet of Kamagra oral jelly which was found next to her body at around 5.30am local time. Sources close to the investigation said that the packet of Viagra-related gel which fell along with her body, gave them the first clue that Wannipa had not been alone - and had actually been mid-way through sex when she plunged naked to the ground. The building's security guard Kriengsak Khamchachai, 23, described hearing a 'loud crash' as Wannipa hit the floor. Pictured: The Cosy Beach View apartment block The building's security guard Kriengsak Khamchachai, 23, described hearing a 'loud crash' as Wannipa hit the floor. He then walked over and saw her body in a pool of blood before raising the alarm. Paramedics arrived and performed CPR on Wannipa - who was still alive - but she was later pronounced dead in hospital. Devastated staff at the venue said Wannipa was one of the 'happiest, friendliest girls anybody could wish to meet'. They added in a statement: 'As many of you know we lost our beautiful Joy [on Saturday] morning. 'The place will not be the same without Joy's big cheeky smile and sense of humour. 'She really was a very special girl and left a lasting impression on all of us. She will remain in our hearts forever.' Patrons who bought tickets to see Craig McLachlan perform in The Rocky Horror Show are demanding their money back after he cancelled his live stage appearance. The former Neighbours and Home and Away star has gone to ground since three former cast members of the musical accused him of indecent assault during the 2014 tour. With Australian actor Adam Rennie replacing McLachlan in his role as transvestite mad scientist Dr Frank-N-Furter, in the Adelaide leg of the tour, punters have flooded the musical's Facebook page to express their dismay. Some patrons had paid up to $145 for premium tickets. 'I want my money back. I don't want to go if he's not there,' one woman wrote on Tuesday. 'That's why I bought the tickets in the first place.' Scroll down for video Craig McLachlan (pictured left with Bert Newton) has cancelled his Rocky Horror Show gig One woman expressed her dismay at not being refunded for Craig McLachlan's cancellation However, another woman she said looked forward to Adam Rennie replacing Craig McLachlan However, another woman said she looked forward to a younger actor replacing McLachlan. 'He will do a fantastic job. Also for people complaining and booing, give other actors a chance in roles,' she said. The Gordon Frost Organisation, or GFO, confirmed on Tuesday McLachlan would withdraw from the show, following allegations against him aired as part of a joint ABC-Fairfax Media investigation. Ticketing company BASS told the ABC it would not be offering refunds, as the 52-year-old actor vehemently denies all accusations against him, describing them as 'made up'. The current production is in Adelaide until January 13 and will continue to Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne regardless of who plays the leading role. Actress Christie Whelan Browne alleges McLachlan ran his finger along her panties during a sexually-charged scene where he had to kiss her body under a bed sheet during a stage performance in front of 2,000 people in 2014. Craig McLachlan's withdrawal from the Adelaide leg of The Rocky Horror Show upset fans Craig McLachlan has withdrawn from The Rocky Horror Show amid sexual assault allegations Adam Rennie (pictured right with his brother Shaun) is replacing Craig McLachlan on stage Another cast member, Angela Scundi, alleges McLachlan threatened her backstage when she refused to engage in an unscripted kiss. 'He had his finger in my face and he definitely said, "You are nothing. Don't you dare talk to me like that. I will end you",' she alleged, before being moved to tears. 'In that moment I believed him.' Fellow actress Erika Heynatz alleged she witnessed McLachlan put his hand up another actress' skirt as she performed behind a partition on the stage. Christie Whelan Browne was in tears alleging Craig McLachlan inappropriately touched her Erika Heynatz alleges she saw Craig McLachlan put his hand up an actress' skirt on stage McLachlan announced on Monday he would withdraw from the current production of The Rocky Horror Show in Adelaide after being accused of sexually inappropriate behaviour and bullying by three former female colleagues. McLachlan, who has described the allegations as 'made up', had been until Monday on tour in Adelaide starring in a new Rocky Horror production. GFO said they were not aware of the allegations until Monday, claiming legal correspondence received before Christmas contained no details of the victims or their claims. 'While we clearly cannot comment on the details of this particular case, sexual assault in any form is unacceptable, and we will work diligently within this industry to support the right of all people to be protected in the workplace, and stand by those who are victims of inappropriate behaviour,' it said. GFO added the six remaining shows of the tour will be 'unaffected', and go ahead without the actor, the first of which will be held on Tuesday night. Production company The Gordon Frost Organisation has released a statement confirming McLachlan has stood down, and there would be a 'full internal investigation' into the claims McLachlan said the allegations by Erika Heynatz, Christie Whelan Browne and Angela Scundi are 'baseless'. 'They seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety,' he was quoted as writing. 'These allegations are ALL made up.' Victoria Police has confirmed detectives from Melbourne's Sexual Offences Investigation Team were looking into the accusations. McLachlan said Rocky Horror was a 'confrontational musical oozing with sexuality'. 'As such, as part of the musical the actors have to perform certain actions, all of which follow from the show itself - and indeed ''make'' the show.' Advertisement Theresa May hailed the 'fresh talent' in her team tonight after she culled 'Grey Tories' to promote women and ethnic minority talent. The Prime Minister fought to quell criticism that her reshuffle is a damp squib today as she ejected a series of middle-aged men from government. Despite a storm over her top-tier changes, Mrs May pressed ahead with a shake-up of the lower ranks - sparking complaints that people were not being treated on their merits. Trade minister Mark Garnier - who was recently cleared by a sleaze probe of breaking the ministerial code - was among those axed by the premier. Meanwhile, Caroline Dinenage, Harriett Baldwin and Margot James were promoted, while highly-rated Sam Gyimah has become universities minister. Jobs for the girls: Whips (1) Amanda Milling, (2) Kelly Tolhurst (3) Wendy Morton and (4) Mims Davies, with Theresa May and (5) Parliamentary Private Secretary Seema Kennedy, and whips (6) Rebecca Harris, (7) Nusrat Ghani and (8) Jo Churchill The Prime Minister welcomed her new appointments to Downing Street yesterday as she carried out her reshuffle Caroline Dinenage has been promoted to health minister as Theresa May reshuffles the second tier of government today Ex-defence minister Harriett Baldwin (pictured left today) has been moved to foreign minister, while Margot James is the new digital minister (right) Rising star Sam Gyimah (left) has been promoted to universities minister in the Prime Minister's shake-up, while Robert Jenrick was made Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury Mrs May gathered her team in Downing Street this morning and stressed her determination to press on with domestic priorities such as social mobility at the same time as Brexit Transport minister John Hayes and trade minister Mark Garnier have left the government as Mrs May launches a clearout of the older guard Six women - Kelly Tolhurst, Mims Davies, Amanda Milling, Jo Churchill, Wendy Morton and Nusrat Ghani - were all added to the whips office in what will be seen as a response by Mrs May to the harassment scandal. Robert Jenrick, who only entered parliament in 2014, was handed one of the biggest promotions, becoming Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury. The changes came after senior Tories urged the premier to bring through more fresh blood in the wake of her bungled Cabinet overhaul. In her first comments on the reshuffle tonight, Mrs May said: 'This Government is about building a country fit for the future one that truly works for everyone with a stronger economy and a fairer society. MINISTERIAL MOVES IN THE RESHUFFLE PROMOTED Sam Gyimah, universities minister Robert Jenrick, Exchequer Secretary Margot James, digital minister Harriett Baldwin, foreign minister Caroline Dinenage, health minister Nadhim Zahawi, education minister Rishi Sunak, communities minister Suella Fernandes, Brexit minister Lucy Frazer, justice minister Nusrat Ghani, transport minister and whip Kelly Tolhurst, whip Mims Davis, whip Amanda Milling, whip Jo Churchill, whip Wendy Morton, whip OUT Mark Garnier, trade minister John Hayes, transport minister Philip Dunne, health minister Robert Goodwill, education minister Advertisement 'This reshuffle helps us do just that by bringing fresh talent into Government, boosting delivery in key policy areas like housing, health and social care, and ensuring the Government looks more like the country it serves. 'It also allows a new generation of gifted Ministers to step up and make life better for people across the whole UK.' Senior Tories branded the Cabinet reshuffle - which was derailed when ministers simply refused to be shifted - 'embarrassing' and too cautious. Grandee Sir Nicholas Soames said simply: 'Is that it?' As the shambles unfolded yesterday, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt refused to be moved to the business department forcing Mrs May to back down. After three hours of discussions, Ms Greening then resigned instead of leaving her education brief to take the work and pensions job. The meltdown left Mrs May scrambling after weeks of briefing that she would carry out a major overhaul to make her team less 'pale and male'. In the end just one woman - Esther McVey - was made a full member of the Cabinet, balancing out the departure of Ms Greening. Two more female MPs, immigration minister Caroline Nokes and business minister Claire Perry, will attend Cabinet meetings. Ms Greening, who is in line for a 17,000 severance payment, was seen out for a jog near her London home today as she took advantage of her new found freedom. Mr Garnier lost his job as trade minister just weeks after being cleared by an investigation into allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards a female member of staff, including asking her to buy a sex toy. No 10 sources insisted the incident had nothing to do with his departure. Long-serving ministers John Hayes, Robert Goodwill and Philip Dunne have also been ejected from office. Justice minister Dominic Raab, who has been tipped for the Cabinet, was today elevated to housing minister - a key policy area for the government. He took the job of Alok Sharma, who was shuffled to become employment minister. Jo Johnson - brother of Foreign Secretary Boris - has gone from universities minister to cover transport, with speculation he might be paying the price for rows over tuition fees and the abortive appointment of Toby Young to a new education regulator. Ms Dinenage moves from the junior ranks at the Department for Workand Pensions to become a minister at the Department of Health and Social Care. Ms James moves from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy to become digital minister, and Ms Baldwin has been made a Foreign Office minister. Theresa May held the first meeting of her 'revamped' Cabinet team in Downing Street this morning Brexit Secretary David Davis has been kept in the same job in the bungled reshuffle. Jeremy Hunt refused to be moved from Health Secretary Tory backbencher Philip Davies, who sits on the Commons Women and Equalities committee, said there was 'a legitimate concern that some people may feel they have been hoofed out or not promoted simply because they are a white male'. Who are the women May promoted in her frontbench team? Harriett Baldwin: Foreign Office Minister The 58 year-old was born in Hertfordshire but spent her childhood in Cyprus, and is married with a son and two step-daughters. She studied French and Russian at Lady Margaret Hall in Oxford University before joining the investment bank JP Morgan Chase where she became head of currency management in their London office. She was elected to the safe Tory seat of West Worcestershire in 2010. Margot James: Culture Minister The 60 year-old made headlines by becoming the first openly lesbian Conservative MP in Parliament. She worked for her fathers waste management and property business in Birmingham before entering politics, elected as the MP for Stourbridge in 2010. Caroline Dinenage: Health Minister Another of the 2010 Tory intake, she is the daughter of TV presenter Fred Dinenage. She studied politics and English at Swanage University and was selected the Tory candidate Gosport in the partys briefly trialed open primaries contest. The mother-of-two, 46, split from her first husband, an officer in the Royal Navy, in 2013 and married fellow Tory MP Mark Lancaster in the House of Commons chapel a year later. Advertisement 'It certainly does not do anyone any favours to promote people who are not ready for promotion just because of their gender or race,' he told the Daily Telegraph. But Downing Street rejected the criticism, saying it was 'absolutely not' the case that ministers were being chosen for the axe because they are male and white. Mrs May's official spokesman said: 'This is about the Prime Minister putting in place the right team to tackle the challenges the country faces, whether that is on housing, improving school standards or the NHS.' Following Mr Hunt's reported refusal to move from health to business, the spokesman described him as 'a long-serving and hard-working Health Secretary who has helped deliver an NHS which has been rated the best in the world', adding: 'He has been doing a good job and will continue to do so.' The Cabinet shake-up started shambolically yesterday when Conservative HQ wrongly tweeted that Transport Secretary Chris Grayling had been made party chairman. A subsequent tweet had to be deleted because of a spelling error and then the Tory website was taken offline because of a security problem. Mrs May had already backed away from plans to shift Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Chancellor Philip Hammond for fear of destabilising her top team. Her reshuffle, which was supposed to increase the Government's 'diversity', also left the gender and ethnic make-up of the Cabinet virtually unchanged and led to the departure of Britain's first openly lesbian Cabinet minister, Miss Greening. One senior Tory said: 'Far from asserting her authority, it's just highlighted how weak she is.' Another MP told the Guardian Mrs May had 'given into the boys' while sacking a 'woman born raised in Rotherham who went to the local comprehensive' - pointing out that Ms Greening also 'happens to be in a same sex relationship'. Former Cabinet minister Iain Duncan Smith, who has been strongly supportive of Mrs May, admitted No10 had blundered by talking up the prospects of a major overhaul. New Education Secretary Damian Hinds (pictured left) was grinning broadly as he arrived for his first Cabinet meeting today. David Gauke (right) was shifted sideways to Justice Caroline Nokes has been promoted to immigration minister by the Prime Minister and will attend Cabinet Justine Greening took advantage of her new found freedom today to go for a run (picture right). She left Downing Street last night after dramatically resigning from Government when Theresa May tried to move her from Education Secretary Tory grandee Nicholas Soames could not hide his frustration at the scope of Mrs May's changes last night (left). Mark Garnier confirmed today he had been sacked as trade minister 'I don't think there was ever an intention to make a big, cabinet reshuffle. The intention was to have a very big ministerial shake-up which will happen over the next 24 hours,' he told Sky News. MINISTERIAL CODE TIGHTENED AFTER CABINET SCANDALS The code of conduct for ministers has been rewritten following a series of scandals. The revised code states that inappropriate behaviour, including harassment or bullying of staff and colleagues, 'will not be tolerated'. In the wake of Priti Patel's enforced departure as international development secretary after she met Israeli government officials during a holiday in the country, the new code makes clear that all such contacts must be reported. The code now states: 'Ministers should be professional in all their dealings and treat all those with whom they come into contact with consideration and respect. 'Working relationships, including with civil servants, ministerial and parliamentary colleagues and parliamentary staff should be proper and appropriate. 'Harassing, bullying or other inappropriate or discriminating behaviour wherever it takes place is not consistent with the Ministerial Code and will not be tolerated.' Advertisement 'That is the key to what then happens to the Cabinet in about nine months' time when I think there will be bigger changes in cabinet.' But new Tory chairman Brandon Lewis insisted the party is 'not quite' in a mess. 'What we have seen yesterday is a real influx of new talent, not just my position itself, obviously,' he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. Pressed on whether the party is in a mess, Mr Lewis replied 'not quite' but admitted there was a 'job of work' to be done. The problems yesterday overshadowed a relaunch designed to focus the Government's efforts on domestic priorities such as housing, social care and schools. The reshuffle followed the sacking of Mrs May's deputy, Damian Green, last month over sleaze allegations. The Prime Minister appointed former justice secretary David Lidington as her new right-hand man. He will deputise for Mrs May at Prime Minister's Questions in the Commons, but he will not inherit Mr Green's grand title of first secretary of state. Former immigration minister Mr Lewis and rising star James Cleverly were drafted in to breathe new life into the Tories' moribund campaign machine. And Mrs May appointed a string of young MPs as party vice chairmen to help revive the Tory grassroots. Veteran party chairman Sir Patrick McLoughlin stepped down following criticism of his handling of last year's disastrous snap election at which the Tories lost their majority. The annual conference was also calamitous, with the PM's speech being interrupted by a prankster and letters falling from the party slogan behind her while she spoke. The Prime Minister will try to salvage the situation today with sweeping changes to the lower ministerial ranks. Chancellor Philip Hammond and new Northern Ireland Secretary Karen Bradley were among those at Cabinet today Boris Johnson stayed in the Cabinet as Foreign Secretary as Mrs May baulked at the idea of shuffling big beasts Claire Perry has stayed as business minister but will now attend Cabinet. Brandon Lewis was made Tory party chairman Significant numbers of female and ethnic minority MPs are expected to get promotion in a bid to make the government less 'pale, male and stale'. Mrs May will underline her focus on housing by appointing a number of new ministers to serve under Housing Secretary Sajid Javid. But her difficulties in moving senior colleagues underline her continuing weakness in the wake of last year's election. One Conservative member of Parliament said: 'Every time she tries to flex her muscles she is quickly reminded just how weak she is.' Miss Greening, who is a steelworker's daughter, was Britain's first ever comprehensive-educated education secretary. Amber Rudd stayed as home secretary in the reshuffle, while Matt Hancock was promoted to Culture Secretary Conservative central office tweeted congratulations to Mr Grayling, before the message was swiftly demoted. Penny Mordaunt (right) stayed at Aid Secretary in the reshuffle But, after a series of lacklustre media performances, Mrs May concluded she needed a new face to champion the Tories' credentials on education, an issue which cost the party votes at last year's election. MINISTERS NOW MORE LIKELY TO BE PRIVATELY EDUCATED Theresa May's reshuffle left her with a higher proportion of Oxbridge and privately educated top ministers. Despite pledging to boost diversity, 34 per cent of her senior ministers received a private education, compared to 30 per cent in her first Cabinet in 2016. Overall, Cabinet ministers were five times more likely to have gone to a fee-paying school than the wider public, the Sutton Trust analysis showed. Some 48 per cent of the Cabinet went to Oxbridge, more than the 44 per cent in 2016 but still lower than the 50 per cent under David Cameron in 2015. Advertisement Last month, Mrs May's former chief of staff Nick Timothy criticised Miss Greening's social mobility plan for being 'full of jargon but short on meaningful policies'. Miss Greening told the PM her post was her 'dream job' and suggesting she could cause trouble on the backbenches said social mobility mattered 'more than a ministerial career'. Mrs May was said to be disappointed by her decision to quit the Cabinet, but determined to bring in new blood to lead a drive to improve school standards. Some Tory sources said Mrs May had considered appointing Mr Grayling, who ran her leadership campaign, as party chairman. But the plan is said to have met with 'internal pushback', prompting her to switch instead to Mr Lewis. Amid fevered speculation, Tory Central Office issued a pre-prepared tweet congratulating Mr Grayling, only to delete it less than a minute later. The party's new deputy chairman James Cleverly said someone in Tory central office appeared to have got 'a bit over-excited'. Concern about the Tories' online presence was underlined when the party's website crashed and No 10 had to delete a message congratulating new chairman Brandon Lewis because of a spelling mistake. Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire (left) decided to quit on health grounds as the PM kicked off the reshuffle. Justice Secretary David Lidington (right) has replaced Damian Green as Cabinet Office minister CABINET RESHUFFLE: WINNERS AND LOSERS IN Tory Chairman: Brandon Lewis Culture Secretary: Matt Hancock Education Secretary: Damian Hinds Work and Pensions Secretary: Esther McVey Immigration minister: Caroline Nokes (attends Cabinet) Business minister: Claire Perry (attends Cabinet) STAYING Home Secretary: Amber Rudd Chancellor: Philip Hammond Brexit Secretary: David Davis Housing and Communities Secretary: Sajid Javid Foreign Secretary: Boris Johnson Health Secretary: Jeremy Hunt Business Secretary: Greg Clark Defence Secretary: Gavin Williamson Trade Secretary: Liam Fox Transport Secretary: Chris Grayling Aid Secretary: Penny Mordaunt Environment Secretary: Michael Gove Lords Leader: Natalie Evans Scotland Secretary: David Mundell Wales Secretary: Alun Cairns Commons leader Andrea Leadsom Attorney General: Jeremy Wright QC MOVED Cabinet Office Minister: David Lidington Justice Secretary: David Gauke Northern Ireland Secretary: Karen Bradley OUT Patrick McLoughlin James Brokenshire Justine Greening Advertisement May sacks Greening after two-hour stand-off: Education Secretary snubbed new Cabinet job in clash at No 10 Justine Greening (pictured last night) was unable to hold on to her job as Education Secretary Justine Greening was forced out of Government last night after she unsuccessfully attempted to cling on to her job as Education Secretary. In an extraordinary stand-off, Miss Greening remained in Downing Street for two-and-a-half hours as she refused a move to the Department for Work and Pensions. After Theresa May reiterated that this was the only Cabinet job on offer, she was forced to resign. Miss Greening, 48, who was the first openly gay woman Cabinet minister, could now prove to be a thorn in the Prime Minister's side over Brexit and a third runway at Heathrow. In her job at education, where she has been since Mrs May took office, Miss Greening annoyed allies of the Prime Minister with her lack of enthusiasm for grammar schools. Shortly after 5pm yesterday she was called into No 10, where Mrs May told her she had decided it was time for 'new blood' to drive forward her education reforms and offered her a sideways move to become Work and Pensions Secretary. After Miss Greening resisted, Mrs May made the case that the proposed new job would 'have a big role to play in social mobility', which is an issue close to her heart. Miss Greening mulled over the move in a room next door to the Prime Minister's office for a couple of hours, before she rejected it and was told by Mrs May she had to go. At 7.45pm it was announced that Miss Greening had quit Government. Last night a source close to the Prime Minister said: 'She was offered a good job, but she refused to take it.' Miss Greening tweeted last night: 'Honour and privilege to serve in Govt since 2010. Social mobility matters to me and our country more than my ministerial career. I'll continue to do everything I can to create a country that has equality of opportunity for young people and I'll keep working hard as MP for Putney.' She was the first minister solely educated at a comprehensive to hold the post of Education Secretary. She will be replaced by Damian Hinds, the former employment minister, who attended a Catholic grammar school in Cheshire. Former grammar school boy is the new Education Secretary Former grammar school boy Damian Hinds is the new Education Secretary. The 48-year-old, who was employment minister, faces pressures over school funding and decisions about university tuition fees. Mr Hinds attended St Ambrose grammar school in Altrincham, Cheshire, before studying politics, philosophy and economics at Oxford. Shortly after entering Parliament as the MP for East Hampshire in 2010, he was elected to the education select committee. He served as assistant Government whip from July 2014 until March 2015 and as exchequer secretary to the Treasury from May 2015 until July 2016, before taking up his post as employment minister. Married with three children, he spent 18 years working in the pubs, brewing and hotel industries. The MP for East Hampshire Damian Hinds (pictured) is the new Education Secretary Advertisement Miss Greening, the daughter of a steelworker, attended Oakwood comprehensive in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, before studying economics at the University of Southampton. She trained as an accountant before becoming an MP in 2005, entering the Cabinet as Transport Secretary in 2011 and then International Development Secretary. Two days after the Brexit referendum in June 2016, Miss Greening, who had supported the Remain campaign, announced she was gay. Miss Greening said she had been persuaded to come out by her partner, a university lecturer named Tess, and announced that the decision was 'the best thing I've done in many, many, many a year'. Miss Greening, who only held her staunchly Remain constituency of Putney by 1,554 votes at the election in June last year, could turn into a headache for Mrs May if she rebels over Brexit. She is also a fierce opponent of the plan for a new runway at Heathrow as her constituency is under the flight path. In a reshuffle beset with social media blunders, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt was last night forced to explain why he had 'liked' a tweet stating that Miss Greening had left the Government. Mr Hunt later tweeted: 'Like button pressed by accident. Justine was an excellent minister and will be a great loss to govt.' ... but 'unsackable' Hunt defies PM to stay in charge at Health Jeremy hunt (pictured last night) refused a sideways move yesterday Jeremy Hunt joined the ranks of the Cabinet 'unsackables' last night after seeing off Theresa May's efforts to prise him out of the Department of Health. The minister flatly refused a sideways move to the business department after five years in charge of the NHS. Friends say Mr Hunt made it clear he would rather quit than leave the Health Department. After an hour-long meeting in No 10, the Prime Minister backed down and let Mr Hunt stay on to 'finish the job'. She also accepted his request to take charge of the Government's response to the social care crisis. Mrs May had already abandoned any idea of shifting Chancellor Philip Hammond and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson for fear of destabilising her administration. Yesterday's events suggest Mr Hunt is also now all but unsackable. The Health Secretary is highly rated in No 10 and has impressed Mrs May with his loyalty since last year's botched election. In recent days aides had even sounded him out about the becoming Mrs May's effective deputy only for him to make clear he was not interested in taking what is largely a backroom role. The Health Secretary (pictured last night) made it clear he would rather quit than leave the department Downing Street sources acknowledged Mr Hunt had argued 'very passionately' to stay at the Department of Health. A source said: 'He wanted to see it through. He made the case very passionately. He persuaded the PM he's got the best experience to find a long-term solution on social care.' Mr Hunt will now take charge of drawing up the Government's care proposals. His success in resisting a move yesterday is also likely to strengthen his hand in negotiations with the Chancellor on future NHS funding. A far-right French mayor in southern France is accused of being 'anti-Muslim' after he scrapped pork-free school meals, declaring them 'anti-Republican'. Julien Sanchez, the National Front mayor of Beaucaire, a town south of Avignon, abolished the scheme, brought in by his predecessor, on the first day of the new school term. The change affects around 150 - mainly Muslim - pupils out of 600 in total, who opt for the pork-free 'substitution meals' instead of the standard choice. The move was branded 'anti-Muslim' and 'anti-Jewish' by an equality minister. Julien Sanchez, the National Front mayor of Beaucaire, a town south of Avignon, abolished the scheme, brought in by his predecessor, on the first day of the new school term Marlene Schiappa told BFM TV the decision was 'a typical example of someone brandishing secularism as an anti-Muslim political weapon, or anti-Jewish for that matter'. In a newspaper article announcing the policy change in December, Sanchez said the pork-free meals were 'anti-Republican'. The opposition leader in Beaucaire, Laure Cordelet, called it 'an attack on the rights of children' which 'stigmatises the Maghreb (north African) community and can in no way be justified in the name of secularism'. The controversy follows a similar case in 2015, when the Republican mayor Chalon-sur-Saone (south of Dijon) Gilles Platret scrapped the pork substitute menu in the town's school canteens. Dijon's administrative court blocked the decision in August 2017, saying it went against the 'interests of children'. The mayor has appealed that decision to the administrative court of appeal of Lyon. Parents of students opposed to the decision in Beaucaire will gather in front of the town hall for a picnic protest on January 15. Ann Marie Buerkle, an Auburn native and former congresswoman, has been renominated by President Donald Trump to chair the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. The White House announced the renomination Monday. The U.S. Senate must confirm Buerkle's nomination to lead the panel and her reappointment to a seven-year term as a commissioner. Trump's action was necessary after the Senate returned Buerkle's nomination in December. The Senate typically carries over presidential nominations from one year to the next unless at least one senator objects. Buerkle's nomination was one of roughly 100 returned by the Senate in late December. It's unknown which senator opposed Buerkle's nomination to lead the Consumer Product Safety Commission, a five-member panel responsible for regulating children's toys, off-road vehicles and thousands of other consumer products. Buerkle faced criticism at her confirmation hearing in September from Democratic senators concerned about her position on the regulation of portable generators. She supports a voluntary standard instead of a mandatory standard for the agency. Some consumer groups oppose Buerkle's nomination to lead the commission. Remington Gregg, counsel for civil justice and consumer rights at Public Citizen, questioned in December whether Buerkle believes in the agency's mission. "We feel so strongly that she is the wrong person to lead this commission," Gregg said. But Trump isn't budging. Buerkle remains his preferred choice to chair the panel. Buerkle was born and raised in Auburn. She began working as a nurse before earning her law degree from Syracuse University. She was an assistant New York state attorney general for 12 years. In 2010, she left her position to run for Congress. A Republican, she challenged U.S. Rep. Dan Maffei, a Democrat, and pulled off a surprising upset win. Her margin of victory was 648 votes. She served one term in Congress. When she ran for re-election in 2012, Maffei defeated her in a rematch. Not long after leaving Congress in 2013, Buerkle was nominated by President Barack Obama to fill a seat on the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Buerkle was named acting chair in February 2017 after Trump became president. Trump first nominated her for chair and a full-seven year term in July. "After having worked here for four years, I know the issues and I've developed a relationship with the stakeholders," Buerkle said in a phone interview with The Citizen last year. " I think part of that was what led to the nomination and I've had tremendous support from my colleagues here on both sides of the aisle, which I'm also very grateful for that." The White House also announced Monday that Trump has renominated Dana Baiocco to a seven-year term on the commission. If confirmed, Baiocco would join Buerkle as a Republican commissioner on the panel. For now, Buerkle is the agency's lone GOP commissioner. Self-styled gangster Jimmy Tippett is going back to prison for a jewellery theft despite pleading with a judge to allow him to go free so he could make a film about his life A gangster who stole a 50,000 diamond ring was jailed today after a judge ignored his pleas to defer his sentence so he can make a film about his life of crime. Jimmy Tippett, 46, is the son of south London enforcer and boxer Jimmy Tippett Snr, who counted the Kray twins and Mad Frankie Fraser as family friends. Known as the 'governor of Lewisham' from the 60s to the 80s, Tippett Snr ruled his manor with an iron fist, winning every bare-knuckled fight he got into on the cobbles. Tippett Jnr now plans to make a film based on his book 'Born Gangster', about how he 'first got arrested when he was 12 and, by the time he was 16, was visiting Reggie Kray in prison'. But instead he is returning to prison tonight to started a 30-month sentence for stealing a diamond ring not long after he was freed from jail for an almost identical offence. The court heard that in March last year he and an associate tricked the mother of jewellery designer Tatiana Sieff into showing him a diamond and emerald encrusted ring, which he then spirited away while she was in a hotel toilet. The court heard Tippett identifies with his father, once known as the 'guv'nor of Lewisham' The court heard he spirited away this diamond platinum ring from the designer's mother in an identical theft to one he carried out around five years earlier It came after Tippett was freed from a 27-month sentence he was given in 2013 for a near-identical 'confidence trick' theft from another jewellery dealer. In that case, he then distracted a woman and disappeared with the jewellery, in that case worth about 250,000. Thomas Quinton, defending Tippett Jnr, today urged a judge to defer his sentence for the latest offence, insisting he was on the verge of making a film. Mr Quinton told the court: 'Your honour knows that Jimmy Tippett has some small celebrity from the book which has that has been published in relation to his background. Tippett has made great play of his gangster links and even co-authored a book about his past in the south London underworld 'He identifies very strongly with his father, they share the same name, and his father's background as a boxer. It means that he grew up with a sense of growing up in a gangster's world. 'There is no doubt about the fact that this is a man who is unusual before the court because, when one looks at his record, in his teens and mid-twenties he was definitely embarking on a career as a criminal. 'The world in which he grew up had clearly left its mark on him. But something rather odd happens and that the last offence for dishonesty is 1999 until we have a single offence in 2013. 'But then what happens since he appears in that court well that is where his life has taken a turn because that book which your honour has was published in 2014 and it through the successful sale of that book that he has been able to turn those book rights into film rights.' Tippett's lawyer asked for a six-month adjournment before sentence so he can prove to the judge that he is serious about his book and film projects. But Judge Deva Pillay announced: 'That is not going to happen. It is custody today.' The judge told Tippett: 'You are a practiced and experienced fraudster, who exploits the weaknesses of others for your own selfish rewards. 'Despite the eloquent mitigation advanced on your behalf I'm afraid the time has come for the public to receive a respite from your actions.' The court heard of the emotional and financial toll the crime took on designer Tatiana Sieff The judge also wants to ensure Tatiana is paid 10,032 compensation by Tippett - the raw cost of the diamonds she used. Ms Sieff said in a victim impact statement: 'After the theft my mood plummeted, I stopped sleeping and when I did I had terrifying nightmares. 'I was scared of leaving the house and was prescribed anti-depressants - I was admitted to hospital. 'Not only did I lose an expensive ring but I feel that I have lost six months of my life.' Speaking after Tippett was jailed, Ms Sieff told MailOnline she is pleased the case is finally over and the thief is going back to prison. She said: 'It doesn't make sense to commit crime and write books about it and then be surprised when you get arrested and sentenced. 'The judge said he was grateful that someone stood up and allowed him to be locked away and off the streets.' A 17-year-old girl fighting for her life after developing brain cancer has been told her tumour is becoming more aggressive and faces risky surgery. Ciara Nelson of Pakenham, Victoria has a high grade glioma which doctors said could not be removed due to the risks of brain damage, stroke or death. Her mother Colleen initially thought Ciara had suffered a delayed concussion when she started vomiting and complaining of headaches after a fall during a netball game at the end of May 2016. But after receiving the 'devastating news' that the tumour had progressed, she now faces surgery as the only option to save her life. Ciara Nelson of Pakenham, Victoria has a high grade glioma which doctors said could not be removed due to the risks of brain damage, stroke or death The surgery will be performed by neurosurgeon Charles Teo Ms Nelson - a single mother-of-three - started a Go Fund Me page for her daughter, which has raised more than $112,000 dollars for surgery and treatment. On an update on the Go Fund Me page Colleen Nelson said they were choosing between radiation and chemotherapy or surgery for Ciara. 'We have chosen the surgery to give Ciara a fighting chance against this very rare tumour. 'We only have a two-month window to get Ciara operated on before the tumour grows more making the surgery even more risky than it already is,' she said. 'We are shattered that it has come to this.' Ms Nelson told Channel Nine her family 'thought we would have longer'. 'It's really hard because if you didn't know, if you didn't see pictures of what is in her brain, you wouldn't know that this kid is facing life and death,' she said. The surgery will be performed by neurosurgeon Charles Teo. Ciara is pictured in a wheelchair, alongside her sister Rylee, before her operation 'She had a fall and hit her head quite severely on the court,' she told Daily Mail Australia early last year. 'A couple of days later, she was vomiting and had headaches. Doctors had Ciara undergo a CT scan and then an MRI as well. 'While she was in there, the radiologist came out to talk to me and said if she has any more vomiting and headaches, to bring her straight back to hospital.' A lesion was found on Ciara's brain and her GP referred her to Monash Medical Centre in Clayton, Victoria. 'They admitted her so quickly. By the afternoon, the neurosurgeon told us she had a glioma in her brain,' Ms Nelson said, adding her daughter had emergency surgery that day to redirect fluid in her brain. Colleen Nelson (second from left) is pictured with her daughters Ciara (left), Jaime (second from right) and Rylee (right) 'They drilled a hole at the base of her brain so the fluid had a different way to go out,' she explained. 'The tumour was blocking the natural path. After that they told us that it was a low grade glioma and most people can live with it for years without symptoms. 'I was quite happy to know that.' But a follow-up MRI in November found Ciara's tumour had grown significantly and was now considered high grade. The family have set up a GoFundMe page to raise money to help Ciara. Pictured from left, Jaime, Colleen, Ciara and Rylee Nelson Her mother said it had gone from nine by 10mm in June to 14.2 by 12.5mm in just six months. 'The tumour had grown quite a lot which it wasn't supposed to do. It had into a high grade malignant tumour,' she said. 'It's in a place that no one can get to. The doctors keep telling me there is not much they can do except watch it grow. 'They're telling me I have to wait to watch it grow in my daughter's brain. The first thing they say that will go is her eyesight, then her ability to walk. Mark Cardwell, from Darlington, who has been handed an 18-month prison term after admitting charges of attempted grooming, had been taken in by fake profiles created by three different vigilante groups A police commissioner has accused paedophile vigilante hunters of undermining investigations as a 39-year-old was caught by three different groups. Mark Cardwell, from Darlington, who has been handed an 18-month prison term after admitting charges of attempted grooming, had been taken in by fake profiles created by three different vigilante groups. Following his conviction Durham's Police, Crime and Victims' Commissioner Ron Hogg said he felt there 'wasn't a place for vigilante groups in policing...as too many times they can undermine police inquiries'. There are currently around 75 paedophile vigilante groups in existence. Cardwell thought he was engaging in explicit messages via an app with different girls, one of them aged just 12. But he was in fact speaking to adult members of three different vigilant groups: Dark Light, Net Justice and Hunters 24/7. The 39-year-old boasted how he had a van with a double bed and encouraged one of the 'girls' to lie to her parents about having a sleepover with friends so they could meet. Cardwell told one of the 'girls': 'I can teach you all sorts.' The members of one of the groups eventually confronted him at his home and alerted members of his family, leading to his arrest by police. Robin Turton, for the prosecution, told Teesside Crown Court that conversations between Cardwell and the 'girls' would start innocuously, before he started asking questions such as whether they were wearing a bra and for their breast size. Cardwell would then request naked pictures, as well as sending them, and encouraged the girls to commit sex acts. Durham's Police, Crime and Victims' Commissioner Ron Hogg (pictured) said: 'Obviously I'm grateful for the evidence which has led to a conviction in this case, but I don't think there's really a place for vigilante groups in policing' Mr Turton said Cardwell, who also pleaded guilty to attempting to engage a child in sexual activity, arranged to meet one of the girls at a supermarket but never went through with it. When he was arrested Cardwell told police he was in 'self-destruct mode' and claimed to have no sexual interest in children. His barrister Chris Baker said he had not fully come to terms with his motivation for wanting to contact children aged under 16. He said Cardwell suffered from depression, low self-esteem and alcohol problems. Mr Baker said: 'It is clear that as a result of these groups he has lost his partner, his house, his job and his good name...and he has only himself to blame.' Cardwell was also made subject to a lengthy sexual harm prevention order and will have to register as a sex offender. Half of paedophiles convicted of grooming children for sex online are let off jail by 'lenient' judges Nearly half of paedophiles found guilty of grooming a child online before trying to meet them for sex are let off jail by 'lenient' judges, new figures show. Criminals who have been spared time behind bars include a 56-year-old man who attempted to meet who he thought was a 15-year-old girl for sex before being arrested by police, who then found 1,673 indecent images of children at his home. He was among 56% of those convicted under the charge of attempting to meet a child following grooming to dodge prison in 2016, compared to 33% in 2015 and 57% in 2014. Over the three years, 88 paedophiles 49 per cent - were spared an immediate jail term, versus 91 who went straight behind bars, according to a Freedom of Information request by MailOnline. Dark Justice, a two-man operation based in Newcastle that has caught dozens of paedophiles by posing as children online, insisted 'every' child groomer should go to jail. Advertisement The judge, Recorder Amanda Rippon said she was familiar with vigilante groups, but added: 'I didn't know there were so many.' This led Mr Baker to remark: 'I think they call it a cottage industry.' Durham's Police, Crime and Victims' Commissioner Ron Hogg said: 'Obviously I'm grateful for the evidence which has led to a conviction in this case, but I don't think there's really a place for vigilante groups in policing. 'Too many times they can undermine police enquiries. I know that the public feel confident to submit evidence to the police so that they can do their job thoroughly and professionally.' His comments come as new figures revealed by MailOnline found nearly half of paedophiles found guilty of grooming a child online before trying to meet them for sex are let off jail by 'lenient' judges. Durham Police said it did not wish to comment. Other forces have raised concerns about paedophile vigilante groups. Last September in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, a man aged in his 50s was confronted at his home by the Silent Justice group and footage of the incident was published online. He was named on Silent Justice's Facebook site before being arrested and interviewed - but he took his own life days later. Following his death, the group faced criticism including comments from Deputy Chief Superintendent George Clarke who slammed Silent Justice, saying it was 'not accountable'. He said: 'They are not the police. They are not accountable, they don't have the legitimacy, or the transparency, or the structures that underpin the police service.' Hungary's controversial Prime Minister has said refugees arriving in Europe are 'Muslim invaders' who have created 'parallel societies that will never unite'. Viktor Orban insisted his country had not taken in migrants because Hungarians were not in favour of opening their borders. The hard-line leader oversaw the construction of an electronic fence along Hungary's border as a refugee crisis hit Europe in 2015 while the country's treatment of migrants has been slammed by the UN and human rights groups. Asked about the country's reluctance to accept refugees like other European nations, Orban told the German newspaper Bild: 'I can only speak for the Hungarian people, and they don't want any migration.' Hungary's controversial Prime Minister Viktor Orban (pictured) has said refugees arriving in Europe are 'Muslim invaders' who have created 'parallel societies that will never unite' He claimed that most refugees were not fleeing to Europe to escape danger, but rather were 'economic migrants in search of a better life.' The 54-year-old then said Hungary regarded them instead as 'Muslim invaders' and insisted that this will lead to the appearance of 'parallel societies. Christian and Muslim communities would 'never unite', he added. Hitting out at German Chancellor Angela Merkel for her 2015 open-doors refugee policy, Orban said: 'The reason why people are in your country is not because they are refugees, but because they want a German life. 'I've never understood how chaos, anarchy and illegal border crossings are viewed as something good in a country like Germany, which we view as the best example of discipline and the rule of law. Asked to explain why Hungary accepted no refugees while Germany took in hundreds of thousands, Orban told Bild: 'The difference is, you wanted the migrants, and we didn't.' The hard-line leader oversaw the construction of a fence along Hungary's border as a refugee crisis hit Europe in 2015 (pictured) while the country's treatment of migrants has been slammed by the UN and human rights groups Orban has faced a wave of criticism over his controversial stance and once described immigration as a 'poison' and the 'Trojan Horse of terrorism'. Earlier this month, Orban claimed that the EU's migration policy had failed as and his Polish counterpart demanded a bigger say in the bloc's future. Orban and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki lead conservative governments under fire from Brussels over their refusal to take in migrants under a quota system and over their efforts to tighten state control of their courts and media. 'In terms of migration and quotas that were to be imposed on (EU) member countries we strongly reject such an approach as it infringes on sovereign decisions of member states,' Morawiecki told a joint news conference after talks with Orban in Budapest. Echoing that line, Orban said: 'The EU's migration policy... has failed.' 'We want to have a strong say, as these countries (in Central Europe) have a vision about the future of Europe,' added the Hungarian leader, who is expected to win a further four years in power in an election due in April. Orban led criticism in ex-communist central and eastern Europe of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's decision in 2015 to open Germany's doors to more than one million, mostly Muslim migrants and refugees fleeing conflicts in Syria, Iraq and beyond. 'At times we feel as if someone was shooting us in the back for defending the interests of the entire Europe,' Orban told Poland's public broadcaster TVP of Hungary's efforts, which included a barbed-wire fence on its southern border, to stop the flow of migrants through its territory towards western Europe. David Davis today accused the EU of shutting out British firms from crucial contracts in an effort to force them to relocate after Brexit. In a leaked letter to Theresa May, the Brexit Secretary said there were a 'growing number of instances' where Britain was being treated differently in a way that is 'frequently damaging'. He said Brussels was preparing for a 'no deal' Brexit by writing clauses into contracts that would cause them to collapse if Britain and the EU fail to strike an agreement. David Davis (pictured in Downing Street today) has accused the EU of shutting out British firms from crucial contracts in an effort to force them to relocate after Brexit In a leaked letter to Theresa May (pictured), the Brexit Secretary said there were a 'growing number of instances' where Britain was being treated differently in a way that is 'frequently damaging' Mr Davis said legal advice suggested the Government had little chance of bringing a successful court challenge to the action before Brexit takes place. He advised the PM: 'We cannot let these actions go unchallenged.' Mr Davis said political representations would be made to the EU Commission 'at all levels' and greater communication would be made with business groups. The letter, revealed today by the Financial Times, suggests Mr Davis believes the EU is ignoring hopes of a two-year transition period both sides have suggested they want. But Mr Davis was accused of hypocrisy by critics who said it was Britain who had publicly threatened to walk away from the negotiations without a deal. Pat McFadden, a Labour member of the Brexit select committee, said: 'The government is implicitly threatening a no-deal scenario. 'It should come as no surprise that the EU is also preparing for this possibility.' SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon said the letter was 'extraordinary'. Britain hopes that budgetary pressures will create splits in the EU bloc that it can exploit in the next phase of negotiations (pictured are Brexit Secretary David Davis and Theresa May head to head with Mr Juncker and EU negotiator Michel Barnier last month) She said: 'A government intent on leaving EU and continually talking about prospect of ''no deal'' moaning about EU preparing to treat UK as a non member and for the possibility of ''no deal''. 'Unbelievable - or rather, increasingly believable from this inept UK government.' Official negotiations are due to resume shortly with a goal of agreeing a transition arrangement by the March summit. Talks on the future relationship will then finally begin with a view to striking an agreement on the principles of how Europe will work in future by October. Eloise Todd, chief executive of the Best for Britain, said: 'President Juncker is completely wrong to say Brexit is a dead certainty. 'We have until March 2019; the government wants the date set in stone because every day that goes by exposes their strategy of pretending Brexit is all things to all comers. 'The government think the wool can be pulled over the British public's eyes: Ireland isn't sorted, the kind of Brexit we will end up with isn't sorted, and all the public announcements made by Theresa May about pick n' mix Brexit are impossible.' Accused wife killer Borce Ristevski will not pursue charges after he was bashed in jail. Mr Ristevski, 53, was attacked just a day after he was charged with his wife Karen's murder. He was attacked in the yard of the Melbourne Assessment Prison in December, as a 'welcome' to the prison. Accused wife killer Borce Ristevski (pictured centre) will not pursue charges after he was bashed in jail Mr Ristevski, 53, was attacked just a day after he was charged with his wife Karen's (left) murder Mr Ristevski has decided not to pursue charges related to the attack Another prisoner reportedly hit him in the head, causing minor injuries. Mr Ristevski has decided not to pursue charges related to the attack, Nine News reported. In a statement, Victoria Police said Mr Ristevski did not wish to take action. 'The 53-year-old man that sustained minor injuries as a result of an alleged assault at a Melbourne correctional facility on December 14 does not wish to proceed with a formal complaint regarding the matter. The prison itself may still take internal action through a disciplinary hearing 'No further commentary will be provided in relation to this incident.' The prison itself may still take internal action through a disciplinary hearing. Mr Ristevski has been charged with his wife's murder after she went missing from her Oakley Drive home on the morning of June 29, 2016. Mr Ristevski has been charged with his wife's murder after she went missing from her Oakley Drive home on the morning of June 29, 2016 Her body was discovered wedged between two logs in bushland at Mount Macedon in Victoria in February, 2017. Detectives from the Victoria Police Missing Person's Squad arrested the Avondale Heights father-of-one. Mr Ristevski's lawyer Rob Stary told a court his client intended to fight the charge. 'He will be pleading not guilty,' Mr Stary told magistrate Angelo Bolger. Norwegian Air has warned customers to watch out for a fake competition claiming to offer winners two free flights to a destination of their choice. The scam is being shared on Facebook and claims the airline is giving away tickets to 'usher in 2018'. Hopeful users are clicking on a link to a post where they are transferred to a separate site and asked to fill out a questionnaire. Norwegian Air has warned customers to watch out for a fake competition claiming to offer winners flights to a destination of their choice but are instead having their social media accounts hijacked After completing the survey, users are then told to share the competition on their social media timeline, in order to spread the scam to others. Unfortunately, the website is a fake plagued with malware that can steal personal information from users' social media pages once shared. It also posts from peoples' Facebook page without permission. The Facebook link takes you to a dodgy site with the URL 'norwegian.coms-flights.win'. Norwegian airlines has since issued a warning to potential victims after being alerted to the scam. A spokesperson for the airline said: 'We take cases of fraud extremely seriously and would like to warn against a false offer that is circulating on Facebook that Norwegian has no association with. The scam is being shared on Facebook and claims the airline is giving away tickets to 'usher in 2018'. Hopeful users are clicking on a link to a post where they are transferred to a separate site and asked to fill out a questionnaire Previously, Ryanair warned customers via their Facebook page about a similar scam 'Warning, don't be fooled by this scam page. This is not an official Ryanair account or promotion. Remember, if it doesn't have the "blue tick" verification, it's not the official Ryanair account'. 'We strongly advise people to treat this message as spam and not follow the link while our security teams actively investigate the matter. 'We apologise for any confusion this may have caused.' The budget airline is popular thanks to it's cheap long haul flights to the US with more than one million followers on Facebook alone. Previously, Ryanair warned customers via their Facebook page about a similar scam. 'Warning, don't be fooled by this scam page. This is not an official Ryanair account or promotion. Remember, if it doesn't have the "blue tick" verification, it's not the official Ryanair account'. A Chinese museum claimed that eerie shadows had appeared inside one of their exhibition halls since the beginning of January. The mysterious shadows appeared as if they had come out from the ground as well as the bronze exhibits, according to the curator and his staff. A local university professor said there are no clear explanations of what the shadows were or how it appeared under infrared cameras. Eerie moving shadows are seen under the infrared camera of a museum in Shenzhen, China The usual sightings were reported to have occurred in The Laowantong Museum in Futian district of Shenzhen, southeast China. Chen Haowen, curator of the museum, told Shenzhen News that they had changed all the surveillance security cameras to infrared cameras since the shadows were first spotted. 'The shadows, lines and fluffs only appear in the bronze exhibition area and it cannot be seen with our bare eyes. It's become more obvious after we change the cameras,' said Chen. In the footage, white strips and snowflake-like fluffs appeared in front of the cameras at around 11pm. The sightings are reported to be appearing in the bronze exhibition room since January Snowflakes-like fluffs can also be seen clearly as it falls in front of the camera during night Comparing to other infrared cameras, the phenomenon only appear in the specific room but not the other exhibition areas in the museum Chen explained the white smokey fumes and fluffs were emerging from the bronze figures and on the floor. The museum staff also did a smoke test as they asked one of their colleagues to light a cigarette in the room. But the smokes from the cigarette cannot be seen on the camera. Professor Wang Qingguo, who works at the Department of Chemistry in Shenzhen University, told the reporters that the appearance was not related to white phosphorus. White Phosphorus is a substance that commonly appears in tombs. However, the museum was not built on a grave site. Prof Wang believed the eerie shadows were related to the temperature and the humidity of the exhibition room. There are no exact explanations from the experts and more tests will have to be carried out to confirm. Curator Chen said he hopes the public could help provide a scientific explanation to the mysterious phenomenon. Advertisement Fascinating photographs of warfare at sea during the Second World War have been after expertly colorized for the first time. Among the most dramatic images is a photo of the stricken aircraft carrier USS Franklin after it was damaged by Japanese bombers in the South Pacific in 1945. Another shows sailors firing 40mm anti-aircraft guns aboard the USS Hornet in a desperate attempt to fight off Japanese planes. And the collection of photos also shows the catastrophic explosion of the HMS Barham after it was attacked by a German U boat in the Mediterranean in 1941. 862 men died. Aircraft carrier USS Franklin after being attacked by Japanese aircraft during World War II, March 19, 1945. She was badly damaged with the loss of over 800 crew but stayed afloat becoming the most heavily damaged United States carrier to survive the war The magazine of British battleship HMS Barham exploding after being hit by torpedoes from at German U-boat in the Mediterranean in 1941. A total of 862 men died when the ship was sunk. A bomber banks away after dropping its load on a Japanese submarine chaser off Kavieng, Papua New Guinea . In January 1942, during World War Kavieng came under a massive aerial bombardment by Japanese forces. Smoke billowing from battleship USS West Virginia at Pearl Harbour after the US Pacific fleet came under surprise attack by the Japanese The USS Shaw exploding during the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbour, an event that led to the United States entering WWI. The Shaw sustained major damage from several bomb hits by Japanese forces during the attack Ssailors of the USS Mason commissioned at Boston Navy Yard on 20 March 1944 proudly look over their ship which was the first to have predominately African-American crew. Mason was one of two US Navy ships with largely African-American crews in World War II, the other being a submarine chaser Other striking shots show Troops in an LCVP landing craft approaching Omaha Beach on D-Day, Coast Guardsmen from the cutter USCGC Spencer picking up survivors from the U-Boat U-175 just before it made its final dive and US Army troops examining a one-man submarine that washed up on Anzio beachhead in Italy. The black and white photographs were painstakingly colourised by design engineer Paul Reynolds, 55, from Birmingham, in the U.K. 'I mostly colourise war photos because each photo usually has a story to tell, stories of real everyday people,' he said. USS Missouri unleashing its awesome firepower in the South Pacific. 'Big Mo' was the last battleship commissioned by the United States and is best remembered as the site of the surrender of the Empire of Japan which ended World War II A funeral taking place on a United States Coast Guard vessel at sea during the Second World War. In total the US Navy lost 34,507 men during the conflict HMS Belfast is bound in ice while serving on an Arctic Convoy delivering vital supplies to the Soviet Union 1943. In the Arctic the weather was arguably a greater threat than the Germans, and the special Arctic clothing issued was barely adequate The crew of the cruiser HMS Sheffield facing a huge wave also while serving as an escort for the Arctic Convoys. By 1942 the Arctic Convoy route to Russia via Iceland had become one of the great naval battlegrounds of the Second World War US Army troops examine a one-man submarine that washed up on Anzio beachhead in Italy during World War II. The one man submarines were also known as human torpedoes and were used by Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine between 1943 and 1945. The United States Coast Guard Cutter Spencer dropping depth charges. At the outbreak of WWII, coast guard vessels served under US Navy command. During the Battle of Atlantic she acted as a convoy escort, hunting German U-boats, and was responsible for sinking U-175 in 1943. Coast Guardsmen from the cutter USCGC Spencer picking up survivors from the U-Boat U-175 (left) while right the submarine is pictured just before it sank. The boat undertook three war patrols during which she sank ten merchant ships before being sunk A U.S. Navy Grumman F6F-3 Hellcat fighter makes condensation rings as it awaits the take-off flag aboard USS Yorktown in November 1943. The Hellcat was the United States Navy's dominant fighter in the second half of the Pacific War and redited with destroying a total of 5,223 enemy aircraft US army soldiers cross the Rhine at Saint Goar, in March 1945 (left) while the 17th Regimental Combat Team Lands on Carlos Island, in the Pacific, in January 1944. Sailors with heads clipped in bizarre designs during Neptune party aboard the USS Saratoga February 1944 to mark the ship cross the Equator. According to the US Naval Institute: the ceremony, one of the oldest customs at sea, is a rite of passage for seamen alike who have never before crossed the equator and involves a number 'boisterous ceremonies' The crew of fire 40mm guns firing aboard the U.S. aircraft carrier USS Hornet in February 1945, as the planes of Task Force 58 were raiding Tokyo. Task Force 58 was the long-range naval striking arm of the U.S. Pacific Fleet during the offensive against Japan in World War II. It became the major weapon system in the wartime and postwar U.S. Navy, replacing the battleship. The unusual French submarine 'Surcouf', which in its day was the largest of its kind. Surcouf was supposed to be the first of a series of the submarine cruisers but it was the only one produced.The boat was lost during in February, possibly after a night time collision with an American freighter. German battleship Bismark as seen from her sister ship Prinz Eugen in May 1941. In her first engagement with the Royal Navy, the Bismarck sank HMS Hood, after which she was relentlessly pursued until she was eventually sunk by war by British warplanes and ships The German submarine UC-61 after being beached. The boat was commissioned in 1939 and was scuttled at the end of the war Troops in an LCVP landing craft approaching Omaha Beach on D-Day, 6 June 1944. The landing at Omaha ran into difficulty from the outset as engineers struggled to clear obstacles and surviving troops on the beach struggled to make headway. Eventually survivors making improvised assault took the beach An officer on the battleship USS South Dakota, which in active service from 1942 until 1947. During World War II, the battleship first served a tour in the Pacific theater, where it fought in two battles in 1942 'I think when it comes to colorizing many artists concentrate on the land war, but I like to try and cover all aspects of the war; land, air and sea. 'Adding color to maritime photos makes the content of the photo stand out from the usual grayscale background. 'My personal favorite photo from this set is the ice covered convoy ship. The convoys were the lifeblood of Britain during WWII and their bravery and hardships are mostly forgotten and rarely portrayed in historical films or texts. 'By colourising them I hope it helps for people to remember contribution these sailors made to war effort were every bit as important as the fighting forces.' Pictures like these form part of a new book on iconic colourised photographs called Retrographic by author Michael D. Carroll. The book is currently available to buy on Amazon for 16.85. The holidays are officially over, and now is the time to catch up on all of the things you had to push aside. The Cayuga County Health Department is here to remind you that January is Radon Action Awareness Month. Radon is an invisible, odorless gas that can be a big threat to your health. While going out and getting a radon test kit may not have been the first thing on your to-do list, now is the perfect time. Radon is a naturally occurring, radioactive gas that can enter your home or apartment in a number of ways. Radon is a carcinogen, which means that it causes cancer. When we think of lung cancer, it is likely that radon doesnt come to mind, but exposure to this gas is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the United States next to smoking. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, it is expected that exposure to this gas kills 21,000 people each year. Because radon cannot be seen, smelled or tasted, most people are unaware that it is in their home. Fortunately, there are steps you can take to make sure that you and your family are safe from the danger of radon. Radon gas can leak into your home or apartment through cracks in your basement or slab, the dirt floor in your crawl space or openings around your sump pump. Any home can have high radon levels, whether it is old or new or has a basement or a slab. This gas accumulates in enclosed areas, which makes it of special concern during colder months when homes are getting little fresh air. This makes late fall and winter the best time of year to test for radon. The EPA and the state Department of Health have designated Cayuga County as a high-risk radon county. This is due to the fact that many residences have already been shown to have high levels of radon. Due to this, Cayuga County Health Department is encouraging all residents to test their homes for radon. To make this easy, we are providing free radon test kits at a number of locations. These kits are available for all residents of Cayuga County. Test kits are available at the office of the Cayuga County Health Department, at 8 Dill St. in Auburn, but can also be picked up at the following locations: Sennett Town Hall, 6931 Cherry St., Sennett Aurora Free Library, 370 Main St., Aurora Springport Free Library, 171 Cayuga St., Union Springs Port Byron Library, 12 Sponable Drive, Port Byron Seymour Library, 176 Genesee St., Auburn Powers Library, 29 Church St., Moravia If you prefer to purchase a kit for whatever reason, they can be found at most local home improvement stores. If your home does test high for radon, there are repairs that can be made to fix the problem. Making the necessary improvements is a small price to pay for the health of yourself and your loved ones. In fact, according to the EPA, most homes can be fixed for about the same cost as other common home repairs. For more information on radon, you can visit the Environmental Protection Agency website at epa.gov/radon. If elevated radon levels are found in your home, the Cayuga County Health Department can provide you with information on how to reduce these levels. If you are concerned about other threats to home safety, you are encouraged to take advantage of the Healthy Neighborhoods Program. This program provides free carbon monoxide and smoke detectors, as well as other health and safety items. Residents in Auburn as well as residents in Locke and Moravia are eligible for this program. Call the Cayuga Community Health Network at (315) 252-4212 to schedule a home assessment today! The Healthy Neighborhoods Program is administered by Cayuga County Health Department through the Cayuga Community Health Network, paid for by a grant from the state Department of Health. Let the health department help you put your mind at ease, and keep your home safe and healthy! An ISIS executioner known as 'White Beard' bribed his way to freedom minutes after being captured by Iraqi forces in Mosul, a local official has claimed. Abu Omer, notorious for throwing gay people off rooftops and stoning other victims to death, was caught after being tracked down when locals tipped off police about his hideout. But he was freed almost immediately after paying around 5,500 to the Iraqi officers who detained him in a Mosul police station, according to local official Zuheir Hazzen el-Jaburi. 'I was in Mosul when a force from police intelligence arrested a man. After questioning they were told he was the mufti for the right bank of the [river in the] city an ISIS member,' el-Jaburi said. An ISIS executioner, thought to be Abu Omer, reads out the charges against those about to be beheaded by the terror group's thugs The white-bearded man identified as Abu Omer can be seen looking down at a row of rocks and stones before a public execution On what appears to be a roundabout, members of the public gather the other side of the road as an ISIS executioner brings down the huge blade Omer was freed almost immediately after paying around 5,500 to the Iraqi officers who detained him in a Mosul police station, according to local official Zuheir Hazzen el-Jaburi (pictured) 'We asked people who he was, and they proved he really was ISIS's mufti. After he was arrested, he left a motorbike behind. An hour later we saw the motorbike was no longer there. 'We inquired about it. They said he was released 10 minutes earlier after he paid $7,500,' el-Jaburi added. Famed for his long white beard, Omer was not only an ISIS chief but also one of the terrorists' executioners, reportedly joining in the stoning of homosexuals to death for propaganda videos. His arrest was confirmed on Friday by civilians who told the authorities where they believed the ISIS enforcer was hiding out. Omer, pictured left being picked up by Iraqi forces, was detained by the authorities (right) after civilians ratted him out The terror group has been practically flushed out of Mosul (pictured), though some remain underground The terror group has been practically flushed out of Mosul, though some operatives remain underground. Fewer than 1,000 ISIS fighters are now said to be in Syria and Iraq combined, where they once held many major cities and vast expanses of territory. The hideouts for the likes of Omer are wearing thin, according to AhlulBayt News Agency, and cities like Mosul are now facing the mammoth task of rebuilding. In March 2015, chilling images emerged of three men accused of homosexuality and blasphemy being forced to their knees and publicly beheaded by a sword-wielding ISIS executioner. Photographs of the barbaric murders showed the blindfolded men kneeling in the centre of what appears to be a roundabout with a crowd of people looking on as a masked executioner stands by with a long, rusty blade. After an elderly man uses a microphone to read to the crowd from his notes, the executioner steps forward with the sword poised above the men's heads in the unnamed city in northern Iraq. A blindfolded man is about to be beheaded as the man understood to be Abu Omer talks into a microphone While nearly three million Iraqis have returned to lands reclaimed from the militants, more than 3 million others cannot and remain languishing in camps That elderly man appears to be Omer. While nearly three million Iraqis have returned to lands reclaimed from the militants, more than three million others cannot and remain languishing in camps. In Mosul alone the UN estimates 40,000 homes need to be rebuilt or restored, with about 600,000 residents unable to return to a city which was once home to around two million people. About $100 billion is required to rebuild Mosul and other areas of northern and western Iraq after three years of war devastated much of the area, the Iraqi government has said. The money is especially needed in Mosul, where hardly a single building is intact for more than two miles along the western bank of the Tigris River. Officials have warned of a rebirth of militancy if the cash is not forthcoming. The warren of narrow streets of Mosul's Old City is a crumpled landscape of broken concrete, metal and other debris. Every acre is weighed down by more than 3,000 tons of rubble, much of it laced with explosives and unexploded ordnance. This is the shocking moment a clubber was attacked in a homophobic assault, leaving him requiring reconstructive surgery to his cheek. Gordon Maxwell, 42, was confronted by two men outside the Troxy club in Tower Hamlets, East London, after leaving a drag-themed night wearing a white dress. He had been at an event called Fairytales and Nightmares which featured a Queen of the Night competition judged by Tulisa Contostavlos and Denise van Outen. Gordon Maxwell, 42, was attacked, leaving him requiring reconstructive surgery to his cheek Maxwell left the nightclub on December 3 at about 3am wearing the dress along with Dr Martens boots and a brown jacket. Scotland Yard said the two men were lurking at metal barriers at the club's exit and, as Mr Maxwell passed them, one made a homophobic comment. Suddenly, the other suspect ran at the clubber and swung a fist, hitting him hard in the right-hand side of his face, the footage shows. Mr Maxwell sought shelter in the club, where he was tended to by door staff. He was taken to hospital and found to have a fractured cheekbone, which required reconstructive surgery, police said. No arrests have been made. Mr Maxwell, from Greenwich, South East London, said: 'I fully believe I was targeted that evening because of my sexuality.' CCTV footage released by Scotland Yard showed how one of the suspects (pictured) ran at the clubber and swung a fist, hitting him hard in the right-hand side of his face Mr Maxwell had been at an event called Fairytales and Nightmares which featured a Queen of the Night competition judged by Denise van Outen and Tulisa Contostavlos (front, right) He added: 'I cannot feel the right side of my face, including my right side of my nose. 'The surgeons say I may have permanent nerve damage. My mouth and right eye does not open fully and I have lost my sense of smell through one nostril.' Detectives are appealing for information about the attacker captured in the footage. He is aged between 19 and 28 and described as being of Asian or black appearance. The man was wearing a blue puffer-style jacket with the hood up and a silver or white emblem on the left upper arm, dark tracksuit trousers with white lettering on the left leg, and dark trainers with thick white soles, police said. Mr Maxwell continued: 'I did not see the man that punched me - he ran at me from out of the blue, hit me and ran off. 'This incident has had a massive effect on all aspects of my life. I am afraid to leave the house and to be at home alone. It has totally shattered my confidence.' Maxwell left the Troxy nightclub (file picture) in East London on December 3 at about 3am Mr Maxwell also encouraged his friends to share an appeal on his Facebook page last month He added: 'I would like to urge anyone who saw the attack or thinks they know the people involved to come forward as I fully believe they may strike again - they must be stopped and brought to justice.' The second suspect, who made the homophobic remark, is described as a white man, of medium build. He was wearing a blue coat with the hood up and a white peak coming out of the hood, police said. Detective Constable Alice Tiritas said: 'This was a vicious attack that took place very quickly outside a nightclub and has had very severe effects on the victim, both physically and mentally. 'We take hate crime like this extremely seriously, and will do our utmost to bring perpetrators of this type of unacceptable attack, to justice.' Anyone with any information is asked to contact the investigation team on 020 7275 4601 or call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111. The CIA lined up actress Susan Cabot (pictured, in the 1950s) for a date with Jordan's King Hussein during his state visit to the United States in 1959, a CIA memo reveals The CIA organized the first date between Susan Cabot and the King of Jordan in 1959 that led to their relationship, declassified documents show. The documents from the investigation into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy show the CIA, in a bid to strengthen relations with Jordan, got an ex-FBI agent to arrange the meeting between King Hussein and Cabot, USA Today reports. The pair hit it off at a dinner party in LA arranged by Robert Maheu, who would go on to become a powerful aide to tycoon Howard Hughes. Agents then rented a Long Island beach house for King Hussein as he continued his State visit, and arranged for Cabot to stay at a nearby hotel in New York. Rumors say the relationship went on for a number of years and Cabot gave birth to a son Timothy in 1964, who it is thought Hussein fathered. If he did, indeed, father Timothy, it would have been during Hussein's marriage to his second wife Antoinette Gardiner, who he was married to from 1961 to 1971. Timothy beat Cabot to death with a weightlifting bar in 1986, when she was 59, and during his trial it was shown that Cabot was still receiving $1,500 a month from Hussein. The new information has come to light because the CIA man Maheu was also linked to Castro assassination attempts. He was investigated as part of the FBI's probe into JFK's death, and the notes of that investigation were released late last year after President Trump ordered their declassification. Susan Cabot was a major movie star in the 1950s and starred in films including Gunsmoke, The Wasp Woman, Tomahawk and Machine-Gun Kelly. She starred alongside Humphrey Bogart in The Enforcer. She was dragged into the CIA operation when former FBI agent Maheu - who was a 'cleared [CIA] Office of Security contact' - was asked to find 'female companionship' during the 'official State visit of a foreign Head of State' in April 1959, according to the CIA memo. The CIA memo showed King Hussein (above, with President Eisenhower in 1959) wanted 'female companionship' during his visit. It was during this trip that the CIA set up the meeting The recently-declassified memo reveals that ex-FBI agent Robert Maheu arranged for Cabot to meet Hussein at a dinner party in Los Angeles. It then flew Cabot to the East Coast to continue to be with Hussein Susan Cabot was a major movie star in the 1950s and starred in films including Gunsmoke, The Wasp Woman, Tomahawk and Machine-Gun Kelly (left) She is pictured in Ride Clear of Diablo (right) HOW SUSAN CABOT WAS BEATEN TO DEATH BY SON 'FATHERED BY KING HUSSEIN' - WHO THEN BLAMED HIS DWARFISM DRUGS Susan Cabot was bludgeoned to death with a weightlifting bar by her then 25-year-old son Timothy Scott Roman on December 10, 1986. Born a dwarf, Timothy had been taking drugs to counteract his dwarfism and pituitary gland problems - which brought him to his height of 5ft 4 ins. Timothy claimed he had hit his 59-year-old mother in self-defense after she attacked him with a bar, but his repeated clubbing caused her death. Exactly who was Timothy's father is unclear but it was rumored to be Hussein. He took Cabot's husband's name after she married in 1969. His defense attorneys said his overly aggressive reaction was due to the drugs - thrice-weekly injections of a hormone derived from the pituitary glands of cadavers, the Los Angeles Times reported in 1989. Cabot was beaten to death in her Los Angeles home in December 1986 and her son Timothy Scott Roman (above, at his 1987 arraignment) was charged with murder A former attorney once called him a failed human experiment, the report added. Roman told initially police that his mother had been murdered by a burglar, who he described as a tall Latino man with curly hair, dressed in the robes of a "Japanese Ninja" warrior, who had fled with $70,000, the LA Times reported, but the true story emerged later. During his trial, Roman testified that his mother - whose mental health had deteriorated considerably in her final years - had awakened him with her screams and didnt recognize him. He claimed that when hed tried to call for help, she had attacked him with the bar and a scalpel and in a bid to defend himself, hed grabbed the bar from her and clubbed her repeatedly on the head. Roman was charged with her murder, the charge was later changed to voluntary manslaughter. However, after deliberating for 10 minutes, the judge convicted him of involuntary manslaughter. Roman who had already spent more than two years behind bars was sentenced to three years probation in November 1989. She had been suffering from depression and suicidal thoughts in the final years of her life and was unable to care for herself. During the trial, Roman's defense attorney also produced evidence that showed his mother received $1,500 a month from the King of Jordan. 'There is written indication in the handwriting of Susan Roman this money is from a trust... For better or worse, it looks like child support,' the lawyer wrote. But the Jordanian government, the Times reported, declined to comment on the claims about Roman's paternity. Advertisement The document redacts King Hussein's name, but the memo's timeline coincides with times the 23-year-old monarch was in the country. Hussein's first wife Dina bint Abdul-Hamid had died in 1957 and he didn't remarry until 1961. The agency tasked Maheu with this job who then contacted a 'prominent Los Angeles attorney and Hollywood figure' whose name is redacted. Mr Maheu was asked to arrange a party for King Hussein on April 3, 1959, the report states and it was during this party that he was introduced to a woman. A story published in the Los Angeles Times a few days later said King Hussein and Cabot met at a party at California oilman Edwin Pauley's house. The pair became 'intimate friends' after meeting in Los Angeles, the memo states, and the King was so enamored with her that he 'wished to meet with her during his stay in New York' between April 14 and 18, 1959. Actress Susan Cabot (pictured in Duel At Silver Creek) was beaten to death by her son Timothy King Hussein was so enamored with Susan Cabot (above, in 1953's Gunsmoke) that he wanted her to meet with him in New York after he left Los Angeles King Hussein is pictured with his third wife Alia Baha ad-Din Touqan, circa 1972. She was killed in a helicopter crash in 1977 The CIA then rented a house in Long Beach on Long Island for the time King Hussein was in New York while Cabot stayed at the Hotel Barclay in Manhattan under 'an assumed name,' the memo adds. During her stay in Long Beach, Cabot spoke of the publicity surrounding her relationship with King Hussein, the memo says. She 'discussed the publicity in the case at some length with the Security representatives,' the memo said. King Hussein and his fourth wife Queen Noor are pictured together on March 28, 1984 Press reports had discussed whether her Jewish background she was born Harriet Shapiro would be a concern for the Muslim monarch. 'She speculated about the possible sources of certain personal information that she felt had been leaked to the press,' the memo said. 'Additionally, she spoke of her deep feeling for the foreign official.' She also mentioned that she had been unclear about the role she had to play when asked to attend the party, but had been told: 'We want you to go to bed with him.' Cabot said she had rejected the proposal, but had decided to go to the party and ended up being 'quite taken' with the kind, who she described as 'most charming.' King Hussein ruled Jordan until his death in 1999 from cancer. He married four times, with his son Abdullah from his second marriage succeeding him to the throne. Susan Cabot was born Harriet Pearl Shapiro to a Russian Jewish family in Boston in 1927 - but was raised in eight different foster homes. It was at high school in Manhattan that she discovered her love for acting. While trying to choose between a career in music and art, she worked as a childrens book illustrator by day and sang at Manhattans Village Barn at night. Susan Cabot in 1954's Ride Clear of Diablo! By 1960 during her relationship with Hussein she had stopped working in films and appeared on television and in plays Cabot once described King Hussein as the most charming man I have ever met' Around this time, she made her film debut in 1947's Kiss of Death in an uncredited role before going on to star in a series of films throughout the 1950s. She landed her first role as a leading lady in 1950s On the Isle of Samoa after a casting director for Columbia Pictures spotted her at the Village Barn. She went on to starring roles in a number of other low-budget films, including Tomahawk, The Enforcer, Machine Gun Kelly and Gunsmoke. Cabot married to her first husband, Martin Sacker, from 1944 but the pair separated in 1951. Her relationship with King Hussein who she met at a party in Los Angeles in 1959 provided fodder for many gossip columnists at the time. She described him as the most charming man I have ever met and the pair dated often after their initial meeting, a Los Angeles Times report in 1989 said. King Hussein (pictured during a visit to Sandhurst in 1952) ruled Jordan until his death in 1999 King Hussein (pictured in 1995) ruled Jordan until his death in 1999 from cancer. His son Abdullah succeeded him to the throne By 1960, Cabot had stopped working in film and instead split her time between roles on television and in stage plays. Her only child, Timothy Scott Roman, was born on January 27, 1964, and his question of his paternity remains unclear. Cabot reportedly told friends that he was the son of an English diplomat she was married to for a short time in a bid to cover the fact he was illegitimate. King Hussein was rumored to be Timothys father. Another possibility is actor Christopher Jones, who has claimed paternity. However, Timothy bears the surname of businessman Michael Roman. Cabot married him in 1968 and he later adopted Timothy. She didn't remarry after his death in 1983. THE STRANGE LIFE OF SUSAN CABOT: SCREEN SIREN KILLED BY HER ONLY SON Susan Cabot was born Harriet Pearl Shapiro to a Russian Jewish family in Boston in 1927 - but was raised in eight different foster homes. It was at high school in Manhattan that she discovered her love for acting. While trying to choose between a career in music and art, she worked as a childrens book illustrator by day and sang at Manhattans Village Barn at night. Around this time, she made her film debut in 1947's Kiss of Death in an uncredited role before going on to star in a series of films throughout the 1950s. Susan Cabot starred in a series of films in the 1950s, but in her final years, her mental health had deteriorated to the extent that she was unable to care for herself She landed her first role as a leading lady in 1950s On the Isle of Samoa after a casting director for Columbia Pictures spotted her at the Village Barn. She went on to starring roles in a number of other low-budget films, including Tomahawk, The Enforcer, Machine Gun Kelly and Gunsmoke. Cabot married to her first husband, Martin Sacker, from 1944 but the pair separated in 1951. Her relationship with King Hussein who she met at a party in Los Angeles in 1959 provided fodder for many gossip columnists at the time. She described him as the most charming man I have ever met and the pair dated often after their initial meeting, a Los Angeles Times report in 1989 said. By 1960, Cabot had stopped working in film and instead split her time between roles on television and in stage plays. Her only child, Timothy Scott Roman, was born on January 27, 1964, and his question of his paternity remains unclear. Cabot reportedly told friends that he was the son of an English diplomat she was married to for a short time in a bid to cover the fact he was illegitimate. King Hussein was rumored to be Timothys father. Another possibility is actor Christopher Jones, who has claimed paternity. However, Timothy bears the surname of businessman Michael Roman. Cabot married him in 1968 and he later adopted Timothy. She didn't remarry after his death in 1983. In the years before her death, her mental health had deteriorated to the extent that she and her son lived in filthy conditions - surrounded by newspapers that were years old and spoiled food. She was reportedly plagued with suicidal thoughts and suffering from depressing and unable to care for herself. Cabot was found dead in a blood-soaked nightgown, lying across the bed in her ranch-style home in Encino, California, on December 10, 1986. Her son, then 22, initially told police that a burglar had killed his mother, but later revealed he had beaten her with a weightlifting bar after she attacked him a rage. Timothy was initially charged with her murder, but the charge was later changed to voluntary manslaughter. Ultimately, he was convicted of involuntary murder. His 1989 trial also heard that his mother had been receiving $1,500 a month from the Keeper of the King's Purse in Jordan described by Timothys defense attorneys as appearing to be child support. Advertisement KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN'S MANY WIVES AND CHILDREN King Hussein of Jordan was married four times and had 11 children during his life. 1. Sharifa Dina bint Abdul-Hamid 1955-57 -One daughter: Princess Alia bint Hussein (1956) 2. Antoinette Gardiner 1961-71 -Two sons: Abdulah II (1962), Prince Faisal bin Hussein (1963) -Twin daughters: Princess Aisha bint Hussein and Princess Zein bint Hussein (1968) 3. Alia Baha ud-din Toukan 1972-77 (her died) -One daughter: Princess Haya bint Hussein (1974) -Two sons: Prince Ali bin Hussein (1975), Abir Muhaisen (1972, adopted by the couple in 1976) 4. Lisa Najeeb Halaby 1978-99 (his death) -Two sons: Prince Hamzah bin Hussein (1980), Prince Hashim bin Hussein (1981) -Two daughters: Princess Iman bint Hussein (1983), Princess Raiyah bint Hussein (1986) Advertisement In the years before her death, her mental health had deteriorated to the extent that she and her son lived in filthy conditions - surrounded by newspapers that were years old and spoiled food. She was reportedly plagued with suicidal thoughts and suffering from depressing and unable to care for herself. Cabot was found dead in a blood-soaked nightgown, lying across the bed in her ranch-style home in Encino, California, on December 10, 1986. Her son, then 22, initially told police that a burglar had killed his mother, but later revealed he had beaten her with a weightlifting bar after she attacked him a rage. Timothy was initially charged with her murder, but the charge was later changed to voluntary manslaughter. Ultimately, he was convicted of involuntary murder. His 1989 trial also heard that his mother had been receiving $1,500 a month from the Keeper of the King's Purse in Jordan described by Timothys defense attorneys as appearing to be child support. Rabbnawaz Ali (pictured) made the threats to a group of cadets, aged between 12 and 16 A man has been jailed after threatening to kill a group of army cadets and blow up their barracks after they had been selling poppies for the Royal British Legion. Rabbnawaz Ali made the threats to a group of youngsters, aged between 12 and 16, who were left frightened by the comments made. The group were returning to the barracks in Sheepscar, Leeds, West Yorkshire, after selling poppies in Leeds city centre. Leeds Crown Court heard how Ali approached the group and said: 'Where are you off next lads, Iraq?' He added: 'Better be careful because me and my Isis brothers will kill you all. Your day will come.' The court heard some of the boys were shocked by the comments and went inside the barracks before the instructor challenged Ali and threatened to call police. Ali then said to the instructor: 'Your time will come. We are going to bomb your compound.' Ali was arrested over the incident, which occurred in November 2016, after he carried out an arson attack at a betting shop on January 18 last year. The court heard Ali assaulted a member of staff and set fire to waste paper bins after losing 60 on a roulette machine. Ali, of Chapeltown, Leeds, pleaded guilty to racially aggravated threatening behaviour, arson, assault and criminal damage. The court heard Ali had been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic. He was made the subject of an indefinite hospital order under the Mental Health Act, combined with a 19-month prison sentence. Recorder Christopher Smith said Ali would be detained in hospital but he could be transferred to a prison if it was no longer considered necessary. Rocky Horror Show thespians are begging Australians to buy tickets after sexual harassment allegations forced Craig McLachlan to cancel his live stage performance in Adelaide. Amanda Harrison, an actress who plays Magenta in the musical, has taken her plea to Twitter, as theatre patrons demand a refund. 'Please come and support Adam and the whole cast and crew,' she said. Scroll down for video Actress Amanda Harrison is begging Australians to buy tickets to The Rocky Horror Show Craig's list: McLachlan's pulled out of The Rocky Horror Show following a series of allegations McLachlan has pulled out of playing transvestite mad scientist Dr Frank N Furter in Adelaide after three cast members from the 2014 Rocky Horror tour went public with allegations of indecent assault, sexual harassment, intimidation and bullying. A man and a woman who worked as part of the crew have also gone to Victorian police who are investigating the 52-year-old former soap star. McLachlan has denied the allegations but agreed to withdraw from the show after speaking with producers on Monday and hasn't been seen in public since. He described all the allegations as 'baseless'. Amanda Harrison continues to include a picture of Craig McLachlan as her Twitter picture The actress who plays Magenta wants Australians to buy a ticket to The Rocky Horror Show 'They seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety,' he said. McLachlan has been replaced by understudy Adam Rennie for the remaining Adelaide shows, with a decision on a longer-term replacement to be made before seasons in Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne. The show's producers, the Gordon Frost Organisation, said they were taking the allegations against the former Gold Logie winner very seriously. They have vowed to co-operate fully with authorities and will also conduct an internal investigation. Christie Whelan Browne alleges Craig McLachlan touched her inappropriately on stage GFO said it was shocked to learn of the allegations from actresses Erika Heynatz, Christie Whelan Browne and Angela Scundi and said it was not aware of any details until they were published in the media. But Scundi told the 7.30 Report on Tuesday that was 'untrue'. 'There were two people in management that I spoke to directly and I can't imagine that they could look me in the face and say that those conversations never happened,' she said. Christie Whelan Browne said she spoke to the managing director of the production company, John Frost, after alleging McLachlan indecently assaulted her on stage during a 2014 production. Angela Scundi has also come forward to accuse Craig McLachlan of forcing her to kiss him 'I went to John, which he says he doesn't recall, another cast member also spoke to him that day. So, that's two people who spoke to him and if he doesn't recall it, we do,' Whelan Browne said. But several fans were upset McLachlan had pulled out. 'I want my money back. I don't want to go if he's not there,' one woman wrote on the show's Facebook page. 'That's why I bought tickets in the first place.' This woman is upset that Craig McLachlan has pulled out of the show and wants a refund In her allegations, Whelan Browne said McLachlan, who played transvestite Frank N Furter to her character Janet, indecently assaulted her on stage during a sex scene. Scundi alleged McLachlan kissed her passionately onstage even after she had asked that it not be done. The fallout from the allegations also continued on Tuesday with the ABC withdrawing all episodes of The Doctor Blake Mysteries from its iView service and dumping a planned repeat screening of the Doctor Blake telemovie on January 25. Earlier the producers of popular series, which features McLachlan in the title role, put production of a new season on hold. A tiny baby boy has been rescued after he was found abandoned under a banana tree on Christmas Day. Shocking footage shows the moment passerby Aping Ping, 21, found the newborn in a wooded area of a park. He heard the baby's cries through the trees before finding him wrapped in blankets and dumped on the ground. Aping scooped up the child and rushed him to the Mai Rim district hospital in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand. Shocking footage shows the moment passerby Aping Ping, 21, found the source of cries coming from the wooded area of a park where the newborn had been wrapped in blankets and dumped The authorities have still been unable to trace the infant's family and he has been passed to an orphanage, where he will go through the system and be put up for adoption. Pictured: The tiny baby being treated The boy was then treated for a chest infection while the authorities tried to trace his parents. Aping said: 'My brother and I found a small baby that was abandoned under the banana tree on the 25th last month. He was about two or three days old. 'We sent the baby to the hospital and he was put in ICU. He recovered from an infection and he's safe. I think he is in everybody's heart. 'I really hope the boy's family, whoever left him, can know what's happened. I believe the baby can have a bright future. His parents are the best people for that. 'Even though this was a cruel thing to do they should get to their child and make things right.' The authorities have still been unable to trace the infant's family and he has been passed to an orphanage, where he will go through the system and be put up for adoption. Aping, who found the baby, said: 'I really hope the boy's family, whoever left him, can know what's happened. I believe the baby can have a bright future. His parents are the best people for that'. Pictured: The newborn under the tree Hospital spokesman June Ou said the youngster was 'healthy' and that he had been given over to the authorities. She said: 'The baby's case has been recorded and he is healthy. Only the parents are allowed to visit him. He is not in hospital anymore and has been taken so a social care home.' Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who is accused of warning a prostitute that he'd have her killed, also threatened to stab a man's penis in an outburst at an upscale restaurant, the alleged victim of the remark has claimed. Jamie Antolini, 48, said he was with potential business partners at Avra Madison Estiatorio on the Upper East Side on January 2 when he saw the disgraced Spitzer. Spitzer, 58, 'lost his mind' when he heard Antolini praise longtime rival, Home Depot founder Ken Legon, as an 'amazing guy', Antolini said. Jamie Antolini (left), 38, said he was at Avra Madison Estiatorio on the Upper East Side on January 2 when he says Eliot Spitzer (right) threatened to stab him. Spitzer, 58, is said to have 'lost his mind' when Antolini praised his rival, Home Depot founder Ken Legon The alleged outburst took place at the upscale Greek restaurant, Avra Madison Estiatorio, on New York's Upper East Side 'I'll get a f****** knife and stab you right in your f****** c**k!' Antolini recalled Spitzer, who resigned from the governorship in 2008 after being outed as a prostitution patrion, saying, according to the New York Post. At one point, he recalled Spitzer saying: 'He leaned into me, got right in my face, screaming - yelling - 'I don't know who the f*** you think you are! I'll f****** have you killed!' Antolini said the confrontation lasted about 20 minutes until security dragged Spitzer out of the upscale Greek restaurant. 'All I said was, "Ken Langone would have been the best President ever",' Antolini told the New York Daily News. Antolini said that through the entire outburst, he remained in his seat, holding a glass of wine. He added that he never saw Spitzer brandish a knife and that he doesn't plan on filing a police report. Spitzer's spokeswoman, Lisa Lindon, blamed the outburst on Antolini and said the former governor was at the restaurant to celebrate his mother's 90th birthday. 'The patron persisted in making aggressive remarks, which Mr. Spitzer initially ignored. An argument ensued, but at no time did he make any threats,' she said in a statement. Former escort Svetlana Travis Zakharova, 27, released a 2016 recording on Saturday which she claims is of disgraced former New York governor Eliot Spitzer threatening her life The outburst came three days before an escort accused of extorting Spitzer for $400,000 released a recording she says is of him threatening to kill her. Svetlana Travis Zakharova, 27, was charged with extorting Spitzer, who she said she had a long-term relationship with after a 2016 bust-up at The Plaza Hotel during which she said he tried to choke her. Zakharova was charged with extorting Spitzer for $400,000 by threatening to take their relationship public. She is pictured in court in 2017 Zakharova denied extorting him but pleaded guilty to stealing from another lover to for rent money last year. She has always argued that Spitzer ought to have been arrested for assault after their Plaza fight. On Saturday, The New York Post published a recording of a phone call she provided them in which a man is heard telling her: 'You're going to die a slow and painful death you f****** b****'. She claims it is of Spitzer and that it demonstrates his violent streak. In a statement to DailyMail.com, Spitzer's lawyer refused to say whether or not it was his in the recording. 'This is a woman who has been extorting and threatening Mr. Spitzer and his family for years. The record in her criminal case speaks for itself,' he said. Zakharova alleges that the phone call took place in February 2016, shortly after the incident at The Plaza. It is not clear who initiated the call but the recording begins with her saying: 'You never helped me, you ruined my life.' In response, the man fires back: 'You f**king bitch! You piece of s**t. And then you f**king destroyed my life!' the man exploded. Spitzer, showna bove with girlfriend Roxana Girand, has not commented on the recording 'You know what's going to happen to you? You're going to be f**king dead. 'You're going to die a slow painful death and your family is going to look at you and laugh because you're a f**king bitch.' Spitzer and the woman were found inside a suite at The Plaza Hotel on February 13, 2016. She had called 911 from the bathroom on her cell phone, claiming they had been fighting. When police arrived, he answered the door, said all was fine and she was nowhere to be seen. They went back not long afterwards and saw broken glass and blood spatter on the floor inside. Zakharova was then found injured in the bathroom. Her version of what happened changed several times during police questioning. At first, she claimed he had choked her after she refused her sexual advances, alleging that he said: 'What am I paying you for?' In another story, she said he was angry because she'd told him of her plans to go back to her native Russia and called her a 'whore'. He was never charged and she left the country, but five months later, he sued her claiming she was ruining his life by trying to extort him. He claimed that their relationship was not a business one, that they were dating, but that he had given her money to keep their liaisons quiet. In February 2016, the NYPD responded to a 911 call at The Plaza Hotel where Zakharova and Spitzer were staying and had had a fight. They photographed this evidence which included a sex toy, condoms, massage oil and a leather leash which the woman says Spitzer liked to be walked around on Spitzer wanted to keep them secret, he said, because of his use of prostitutes in the past which led him to resign in 2008. Their civil case was settled but the NYPD investigated and arrested Zakharova afterwards. In October last year, she accepted a plea deal which saw her plead guilty to petit larceny for stealing from another ex-lover to get rent money. The deal meant that she would not have to serve time for extorting Spitzer but it also stopped her from being able to speak publicly about it. In November, her lawyers filed a motion to lift that ban. As part of it, she was able to describe his alleged fetish for being walked around on all fours while wearing a leather leash. 'The fact that Spitzer was paying young girls to insert sex toys into his anal cavity and walk him around the floor on all fours with a leash is conduct that he made a conscious choice to engage in. 'If these facts are embarrassing to Spitzer and his family then shame on Spitzer for engaging in the conduct in the first place and shame on the Bronx DA for catering to Spitzer by trying to suppress [Zakharova's] right to free speech,' her lawyer said. Zakharova was sentenced to three months in jail but was released on time served, having already spent a year behind bars. In 2008, Spitzer resigned after it was revealed he had spent $10,000 on prostitutes from the agency Emperors VIP. A Jewish supermarket in Paris is believed to have been attacked by arsonists, three years to the day since the terror attack on another kosher shop in the city. The store in the southern Paris suburb of Creteil caught fire overnight and prosecutors believe it to have been arson. The attack on the kosher shop, which caused 'severe damage', took place just days after its facade was sprayed with swastikas. Arson: The store in the southern Paris suburb of Creteil caught fire overnight, days after it was daubed swastikas and anti-Semitic graffiti 'The damage is believed to be very severe,' Creteil prosecutor Laure Beccuau told AFP. A source close to the police probe said it was 'too soon to discuss motives' though Beccuau said investigators do not believe the fire was an accident. The Promo & Destock store was one of two neighbouring kosher shops in Creteil that were daubed with anti-Semitic graffiti last Wednesday. Israel's ambassador to France Aliza Bin Noun called the fire a 'shameful provocation' on the third anniversary of the January 9, 2015 attack at the Hyper Cacher kosher supermarket in eastern Paris. Jihadist gunman Amedy Coulibaly killed three customers and an employee in an attack that triggered deep concern over growing anti-Semitism in France. On the day: The suspected attack took place on the third anniversary of the attack at another Paris kosher shop by a jihadist gunman, who killed three customers and a Jewish employee Hate campaign: The Promo & Destock store was one of two neighbouring kosher shops in Creteil that were daubed with anti-Semitic graffiti last week Damage: Debris are pictured outside a kosher market after a fire broke out in Creteil The back of a kosher market is pictured after a fire broke out causing 'severe damage', in what prosecutors believe to be an arson attack That attack came two days after Coulibaly's close friends Said and Cherif Kouachi gunned down 11 people at the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, kicking off a wave of jihadist attacks in France. That year, a record 7,900 French Jews emigrated to Israel, many of them citing increased fears over anti-Semitism. Though the exodus has since slowed, a string of anti-Semitic crimes have continued to worry France's large Jewish community. In April 2017, a Jewish woman was murdered, pushed from a third-floor window by a Muslim neighbour, while a Jewish family was beaten, held hostage and robbed in what rights groups said was a hate crime. Former prime minister Manuel Valls told Europe 1 radio that more needed to be done to tackle anti-Semitism, which he said had become 'deeply rooted' in France. 'What has changed over the past three years is the awareness of this level of anti-Semitism,' he said. Anniversary: French police vehicles are seen outside the Hyper Cacher kosher grocery store near Porte de Vincennes in eastern Paris on January 9, 2015 A forensic police officer works next to the bullet-riddled windows of the Hyper Cacher kosher grocery store after the 2015 terror attack Remembrance: French President Emmanuel Macron takes part in a ceremony outside the Hyper Casher supermarket paying tribute to those killed in the 2015 attack Valls said French society as a whole had failed to mobilise in support of Jews following attacks such as the 2012 Islamist shooting at a Jewish school in Toulouse in which four people were killed, three of them children. 'These are crimes that must be prosecuted and condemned, we need to do more,' he said. Abdelkader Merah, the brother of the jihadist who carried out the school attack, was handed a 20-year jail sentence in November in a trial that reopened wounds for French Jews. He was convicted of encouraging his brother Mohamed to carry out a shooting spree targeting Jews and French soldiers, though he was cleared of having a direct role in the attacks. Labour was hit by fresh splits on its Brexit position last night when Jeremy Corbyn said Britain cannot stay in the EU single market - sparking anger among many of his backbenchers. The Labour leader told a meeting of his MPs that quitting the Brussels club meant Britain must also leave the single market. But his comments prompted anger among arch-Remainers in his party who are desperate to keep the UK in it. Labour MP Chuka Umunna - who was once tipped for the leadership - stormed out of the meeting last night sighing and shaking his head in frustration. The fresh divisions have emerged as Mr Corbyn was 'empty-chaired' by the Lib Dems and the SNP after refusing to attend a summit on Brexit with them. Jeremy Corbyn told a meeting of his MPs that quitting the Brussels club mean Britain must also leave the single market (file photo from last September's Labour Party conference) Ian Blackford, SNP Westminster leader, Vince Cable, Plaid Cymru leader Liz Saville-Roberts and Green Party leader Caroline Lucas held talks on Brexit. But Mr Corbyn snubbed the invite. The Labour leader has been accused of facing both ways on Brexit - refusing to commit his party to a clear position in a bid to paper over the deep party splits on it. Many traditional Labour voters in the party's heartlands backed pulling out of the bloc in the historic referendum. But most Labour MPs and members are Remainers who are desperate to keep the UK either in the EU or as closely bound to it as possible. And these deep divisions were on show again last night when Mr Corbyn ruled out staying in the single market at a meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party. Jeremy Corbyn was 'empty-chaired' by opposition leaders after refusing to attend a summit on Brexit in Parliament today. Ian Blackford, SNP Westminster leader (pictured centre right) Vince Cable (pictured centre left), Plaid Cymru leader Liz Saville-Roberts (pictured far left) and Green Party leader Caroline Lucas (pictured far right) held talks on Brexit One Labour Mp told The Guardian after the meeting: 'The key thing is about keeping all the options on the table when it comes to the single market and customs union. 'It is clear from recent polling that an overwhelming majority of Labour members, supporters and voters believe this.' Meanwhile, this morning opposition MPs tore into Mr Corbyn for refusing to attend their summit. Liberal Democrat Brexit spokesman Tom Brake said: 'Oh Jeremy Corbyn where are you when it comes to fighting to stay in the Single Market and Customs Union? Represented by an empty chair!' A senior Labour source said: 'The single market is not a membership club that can be joined so we seek through negotiation to retain the benefits of the single market. 'As he said in his letter back to Ian Blackford, the summit rests on the falsehood that the single market is a membership organisation which you can join, which it is not. 'Our approach for a jobs-first Brexit, which involves retaining the benefits of the single market, is through negotiation with the EU.' A former EastEnders star accused of smuggling cocaine into Britain has walked free from court after no evidence was offered against her. Leanne Lakey, 39, was arrested at Gatwick Airport when 6lbs (3kg) of cocaine - with a street value of around 150,000 - was found hidden in the bottom of a suitcase. The actress, who played Belinda Slater in the BBC soap from 2001 to 2003, was accused of trying to sneak the drugs past security with co-accused Dean Shanahan. But after she was cleared, Lakey, who now works at a pub, said on Facebook: 'What an awful year! Thank God it's all over. Thank you for all your support my dear friends.' Leanne Lakey (pictured left outside Croydon Crown Court last July; and right as Belinda Slater in the BBC's EastEnders in November 2003) was arrested at London Gatwick Airport Lakey, pictured in an EastEnders episode in October 2001, has also appeared in Casualty The actress posted on Facebook last month: 'What an awful year! Thank God it's all over' It was alleged that Lakey, of Chelmsford, Essex, and Shanahan, of Kingsbury, North London, were working together in a joint enterprise to get the drug into the UK. They both pleaded not guilty at Croydon Crown Court last July to one count of importing cocaine at Gatwick in December 2016. The case was adjourned for trial. But at the same court last month, Shanahan, 47, admitted the charge and was jailed for five years, while Lakey walked free when no evidence was offered against her. The actress trained at Arts Educational School in Chiswick, West London, and has also appeared in the TV series Casualty, New Tricks, The Bill and Holby City. Lakey is known for being one of the first actresses to star in two soaps at the same time, while appearing in both EastEnders and Family Affairs, as Charlotte Day. Lakey was accused of trying to sneak the drugs past security with Dean Shanahan (above) She also played Charlotte Day in Family Affairs (pictured with David Easter as Pete Callan) Lakey, pictured on holiday at Platja d'en Bossa on the Spanish party island of Ibiza in 2013, is known for being one of the first actresses to star in two soaps at the same time She told the BBC at the time in 2002: 'The work schedule at FA is very hard. I'm up at 4.30am every morning and I'm lucky to get home before 9 or 10pm, so it's difficult. 'On EE they're all household names and they all have their own problems, but the actors on Family Affairs aren't as well known. 'EE is like a holiday, I get to catch up with everybody which is great. It's very relaxed, whereas Family Affairs, the schedule is so tight it's too quick.' Her character returned to EastEnders in 2016, but was she was dropped in favour of another actress, Carli Norris, who has previously appeared in Doctors and Hollyoaks. Lakey's most recent appearance on screen was in the 2011 crime comedy film Big Fat Gypsy Gangster alongside Ricky Grover, Peter Capaldi and Tulisa Contostavlos. Cayuga County may appeal a court decision and order requiring it to pay over $300,000 to a former county jail inmate. Richard T. Andrews, an Auburn resident, was arrested, arraigned and remanded to Cayuga County Jail on May 2, 2009, according to a state Supreme Court decision filed on Nov. 2. Andrews had a prescription for Xanax, a kind of controlled substance called a benzodiazepine. The jail denied Andrews his medication, substituting it with another, the decision said. Four days after being incarcerated, he suffered withdrawal symptoms including multiple seizures, which appeared to have caused shoulder fractures and dislocations. Cayuga County Judge Mark H. Fandrich ruled that the county "breached its duty to provide adequate medical care to plaintiff during his incarceration/detainment," and ordered it to pay approximately $61,000 in medical expenses and about $244,000 for past and present pain and suffering. The Cayuga County Legislature will consider a resolution this month to hire the Law Firm of Frank W. Miller to appeal the Nov. 1 order and judgement. Miller has represented the county throughout the lawsuit, which began as a notice of claim in June 2009. Kevin Kuehner, of the Kevin Kuehner Law Firm in Syracuse, represents Andrews. He said the county had filed a notice of appeal on Nov. 21, but no other action had been taken since. "Twice they've (Cayuga County) tried to get the case thrown out so far, and twice both the local judge, Judge Fandrich, and the appellate division have agreed that it should not be thrown out," he said. Cayuga County Attorney Fred Westphal did not return The Citizen's request for comment Monday. In an email to The Citizen, Cayuga County Sheriff David Gould said because the resolution and appeal are pending, he could not say much. "I can say that I am very pleased that the Legislature is considering the appeal of this decision," he wrote. The resolution will first go before the Legislature's Government Operations Committee. That meeting takes place around 6:15 p.m. following the Legislature's 5:30 p.m. Judicial and Public Safety Committee meeting on Wednesday. Both meetings will be held at the Fire Training Tower, 14 Quarry Road, Auburn. If the resolution passes that committee, it will move to the Ways and Means Committee, and then potentially the full Legislature. Saudi police say they have arrested everyone involved in a 'gay wedding' near the holy city of Mecca. Footage showing two men walking side-by-side while confetti is sprayed over their heads and music is played in the background went viral when it was uploaded last week. The duo can be seen proceeding down what appears to be an aisle while one of the men wears what looks like a wedding veil. Scroll down for video Footage showing two men walking side-by-side while confetti is sprayed over their heads and music is played in the background went viral when it was uploaded last week In a statement posted on Twitter, Mecca Police explained: 'The man said people attending the event were surprised when a few young men entered the place and tried to perform a "gay wedding scene".' Pictured: The ceremony taking place near Mecca Homosexuality is punishable by severe punishment - ranging from lashings to death - in Saudi Arabia. Pictured: The footage that went viral Now police have announced they arrested those involved in the supposed wedding after a man attending a festival at a resort near Mecca reported the incident. In a statement posted on Twitter, Mecca Police explained: 'The man said people attending the event were surprised when a few young men entered the place and tried to perform a "gay wedding scene".' The statement, translated from Arabic by Step Feed, said one of the men in the ceremony was a 'crossdresser'. It went on: 'After the crossdresser and other people involved in the incident were identified, they were all arrested and their case will now be referred to the prosecution.' Homosexuality is punishable by severe punishment - ranging from lashings to death - in Saudi Arabia. It is outlawed on Islamic grounds, as in many other countries in the Middle East and wider Muslim world. In the wake of the video's publication, many outraged Muslims took to social media to express their frustration. One wrote on Twitter: 'In the purest spot on earth... Two homosexuals marry in Saudi Arabia,' according to Al-Araby. Another user blamed the 'phenomenon' of homosexuality on foreigners. Some people praised the country's new leader, Mohammed bin Salman (pictured), for creating a more tolerant society. He has already announced that women will be able to drive in Saudi Arabia from June this year The furious poster wrote: 'Since 2013, the phenomenon of homosexuality has been increasing in Mecca, and perhaps the response for respectable people is to purge Mecca of this corruption, which stems mainly from foreigners.' But others praised the country's new leader, Mohammed bin Salman, for creating a more tolerant society. He has already announced that women will be able to drive in Saudi Arabia from June this year. Arthur Rathburn (pictured) is charged with dealing diseased body parts A body broker who sold human remains for up to $10,000 used a chainsaw to dismember the cadavers and stored the parts in trash cans, his trial has heard. Arthur Rathburn sold or leased donated body parts, including human heads, to medical researchers for two decades. The buying and selling of body parts for research and education is legal under U.S. law, which does not govern the industry. Current regulations only cover body parts intended for transplant, such as hearts and livers. But Rathburn is charged with defrauding customers by selling them body parts infected with hepatitis and HIV, and with lying to federal agents about shipments. Rathburn is charged with defrauding customers by selling them body parts infected with hepatitis and HIV, and with lying to federal agents about shipments Court records also show that a human cadaver is worth between $10,000 and $100,000 if sold in parts, the Detroit Free Press reports. Rathburn is accused of fraud, making false statements and transporting hazardous materials. His ex-wife is expected to testify against him. He turned down a plea deal and a prison sentence of four to five years. Prosecutors allege he bought parts from suppliers in Arizona and Illinois and stored them in Detroit before supplying them to researchers. His warehouse in Detroit, Michigan, was littered with dead flies, dog bowls and human remains 'frozen together in flesh-on-flesh chunks,' a federal agent testified on Friday. Rathburn reportedly stored the parts in Rubbermaid bins and 55-gallon drums as well as in beer coolers and paint cans. During opening statements in his trial, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Neal told jurors that human remains were stored so haphazardly that Rathburn needed a crowbar to separate frozen parts. FBI agents search the premises during a raid on Arthur Rathburn's warehouse in Detroit, Michigan, in December 2013 FBI agent Leslie Larson testified that during the 2013 raid of Rathburns warehouse, officials found a filthy scene, with no running water or heat. 'Body parts were out in the open, in coolers,' Larson testified. 'Some of the freezers had heads and torsos, some had arms and legs. Many were frozen together in flesh-on-flesh chunks.' Rathburns lawyer, James Howarth, urged the jury to focus on the documents in the case, not gruesome photographs. He said that Rathburns ex-wife, Elizabeth, is 'most responsible' for any wrongdoing. She has pleaded guilty to one count of fraud and is expected to testify for the government. Arthur Rathburn is pictured at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, in November 1988 'This case is so sensitive because the nature of the evidence is going to make us all cringe, make us all uneasy,' Howarth told the jury. 'Theres nothing particularly pretty about a deceased body that has been separated into parts, but I would hope no one would have bad feelings toward Mr. Rathburn because of that.' The broker who sold Rathburn body parts, Steve Gore, has pleaded guilty to defrauding customers and is expected to testify against Rathburn. Last month, Reuters reported that federal agents discovered four preserved fetuses during the search of Rathburns warehouse. According to government photographs obtained by the news agency, the fetuses appear to have been in their second trimester. The fetus photographs are not cited in any court filings and it is unclear if they will be presented at trial. The 'Queen of Benefits' has been spared jail despite paying for a luxury holiday to Spain for nine of her children with stolen cash. Mother-of-12 Cheryl Prudham, 35, was given a suspended sentence for spending more than 2,200 of stolen cash on the all-inclusive vacation for herself, her partner and nine of her children. Prudham, who gets 40,000 a year from the state, admitted using 2,241 for her Spanish trip from the 4,788 her now her ex-partner Robert Prudham stole while working for Meteor Parking Ltd, having secured the job by fraud. She was sentenced to four months imprisonment, suspended for two years, with a 35-day rehabilitation activity requirement. Mother-of-12 Cheryl Prudham, 35, was given a suspended sentence for spending more than 2,200 of stolen cash on the all-inclusive vacation for herself, her (now ex) partner Robert Prudham (pictured together) and nine of her children She appeared today at Maidstone Crown Court by video link from Warrington Crown Court in Cheshire, where she now lives. Judge Adele Williams said: 'This offence was in my judgement motivated by greed on your part. 'You used the money to pay for sums due on a holiday.' The court heard Prudham, 35, paid an installment for the 14-day holiday to Menorca with some of stolen money the day after her ex-partner resigned from his job. Robert Prudham, 33, from Maidstone in Kent, swindled almost 5,000 from car park machines (pictured, outside court) The holiday, for which she paid 7,671, was to Victoria Playa in Santo Tomas, flying from Gatwick Airport on May 16 2014. They returned on May 30. Robert Prudham, from Maidstone, was yesterday jailed for 14 months after admitting stealing from Meteor Parking Ltd between January 4 and February 12 2014, as well as for fraud. The 33-year-old obtained the job as a money collector by making a false declaration to Red Eagle Recruitment Specialist that he was of good character and had no criminal convictions, when he had 18 previous court appearances for 29 offences. He stole coins and notes from station car parks across Kent, including from Darent Valley Hospital. Since committing the offences, Robert Prudham had been convicted of harassing his ex-partner, as well as shoplifting. Emma Shafton, for the prosecution, said the 'Benefits Queen' at first claimed she had saved the money and was reluctant to allow police access to her bank accounts. She had eight previous convictions for ten offences, including shoplifting, intimidating a witness and possessing a bladed article in a public place. Her last conviction in 2004 was for possessing cannabis. Prudham had blamed Robert, the father of six of her children, for her crimes. Robert and Cheryl Prudham at home with nine of her children, when they lived in Kent Philip Sinclair, defending, said: 'It was an abusive relationship virtually from the start. 'She was unable to leave it. 'She made a number of complaints to the police, but various assaults were never pursued. When he brought home a lot of money, largely in coinage, she knew it was stolen. 'She panicked. She paid for the holiday herself. He contributed nothing towards it. 'It cost nearly 8,000. She had paid 6,000 at the time of the offence. 'She was able to take up employment working 12 hours a day as a carer. She has now lost that job. 'She was concerned about the stolen money in the house and didn't know what to do, and she foolishly paid off the balance for the holiday.' He added: 'This offence is an aberration. 'She is a good mother. The only reason Social Services were ever involved in this family was because of Robert Prudham's presence. 'She is now doing very well. She presents as a mature and sensible young lady who is deeply ashamed.' Left, Prudham poses for cameras outside Maidstone Crown Court yesterday, and right, swearing at photographers during an earlier hearing Passing sentence Judge Adele Williams said Prudham now appeared to be working with Social Services to ensure the 12 children are being cared for. She said: 'In my judgement, there is now hope you appear to be putting your life in order. 'I take the view this is a serious example of handling.' She added: 'Were it not for the fact you pleaded a very long time ago, and unlike your former partner you have not committed any further offences while on bail awaiting sentence, the sentence would have been immediate custody. 'Please go away and do not commit any further offences.' A man has been arrested in Ohio after beating a dog and stuffing it in the trunk of his car, police said after rescuing the animal. James Combs, 34, was arrested on Friday in Marysville, Ohio, outside of Columbus, and charged with animal cruelty after police rescued the dog from the man's trunk. His arrest came after a man told police that Combs had approached him and asked if he wanted to buy the dog. The man told Combs he didn't want to buy the animal. James Combs, 34, was arrested on Friday in Marysville, Ohio, outside of Columbus, and charged with animal cruelty after police rescued a dog from the trunk of the man's vehicle. The dog was not injured, though there were reports it had been kicked. Police said it appeared to be in good spirits The dog then started to run away from Combs, and when Combs caught up with it, he slammed the dog against the car, kicked it and threw it in the truck of his car, police say. Deputy Chief Tony Brooks told WCMH officers arrived on scene moments later and rescued the dog from the trunk. Combs, 34, was charged with two counts of animal cruelty - one for allegedly kicking the dog and one for putting the animal in the trunk The dog had no visible injuries and appeared to be in good spirits, police said. Combs told police that he had kicked in the dog's direction but had not made contact with the animal. He also told authorities that he 'didn't really see an issue' with how he was transporting or treating his dog. 'In our opinions we do not believe it is not reasonable to transport a dog inside a trunk of a car especially given the condition that was out that night; as cold as it was,' Brooks said. Combs was charged with two counts of animal cruelty - one for allegedly kicking the dog and one for putting the animal in the trunk. Following Combs' arrest, the dog was taken to the Union County Humane Society. New South Wales' Education Minister has called for selective schools to be more 'inclusive' regardless of students' academic abilities. Rob Stokes said selective schools should not create a 'rigid, separated public education system', the Sydney Morning Herald reports. 'While recognising that selective schools have a history and are popular, is it correct that local kids must walk past a local public selective school that is closed to them?' he said. New South Wales Education Minister Rob Stokes has called for selective schools to be more 'inclusive' regardless of students' academic abilities Mr Stokes said public schools should not separate students between those that are gifted and those that are not. 'There may be merit in opening up selective schools to local enrolments and providing more local opportunities to selective classes in comprehensive schools.' The NSW education department is undergoing a review of its policy for gifted students in the state's public schools. The overhaul includes changing the entry test for selective schools, as there are concerns that wealthy parents are able to rig the system by paying for tutors. Rob Stokes said selective schools such as Sydney Boys High School (pictured) should not create a 'rigid, separated public education system' There are 19 fully selective and 29 partially selective schools in the state. Scores from the Index of Community Socio-Educational Advantage (ICSEA) shows top performing selective schools such as Sydney Boys High School are more advantaged than exclusive private schools such as Knox Grammar. ICSEA scores assess the socio-educational background of students based on location, and the education and profession of their parents. The median score in NSW is 1000, with selective North Sydney Boys scoring 1210 compared to Knox Grammar's 1178. Advertisement A pushy Chinese father who became famous after forcing his four-year-old son to jog in the snow in underwear has held a gruelling winter boot camp to help more children grow tougher. He Liesheng, nicknamed 'Eagle Dad', ordered half-naked children as young as four to run and do squats in a blizzard on January 4 in Nanjing, eastern China. The eight boys and three girls were also made to roll in the snow and flip heavy rubber tyres, according to a video on CGTN. A group of 13 children run in heavy snow topless during a winter boot camp organised by the 'Eagle Dad' in Nanjing, China 'Eagle Dad' He Liesheng pours a bowl of icy water over a half-naked boy during his gruelling training session on January 4 Boys and girls as young as four hold toy guns as they cheer during the winter boot camp aimed to sharpen their will Some of the children were also given an 'ice bucket challenge' at the end of the training as Liesheng poured icy water over their naked back. The attendees of the gruelling winter training included He Liesheng's son, He Yide. The boy, now 10 years old, shot to fame when he was four after a video showed him being forced to jog in minus 13 degrees Celsius wearing underpants. Liesheng said children should be trained to have an iron will from an early age and exercising in adverse weather is helpful Liesheng's son, 10-year-old He Yide, salutes during the raining. Yide became famous after his father forced him to jog in snow The boys try to warm them up as they get ready to jog, squat and roll around in snow during the annual winter training Yide has attended his father's winter boot camp for five years in a row. Many young participants during this year's training cried after they failed to cope with the severe weather condition. Liesheng told Jiangsu Broadcasting and Television: 'I cried at the year, but afterwards I barely cried. 'Some of the children are three, four or five years old. They roll around in the snow, just like the older ones. I think they are brilliant.' The man said the children would remember day for the rest of their lives as they got trained to endure hardship and difficulties The children are given ginger soup to drink by He Liesheng during the tough training so they could warm up their bodies According to the report, Liesheng thought children should be trained to have an iron will from an early age. He said training sessions as such could help children endure hardship and cultivate a hardworking spirit in them. Liesheng said: 'They will remember the scenes from today for the rest of their lives. I believe once you plant the seed of determination [in the children], it will grow stronger and stronger in future as time goes by.' The strict father said he had prepared ginger soup and body warmers for the children so they wouldn't catch cold. He also claimed to have started preparing these children six months prior to the training so they wouldn't get injured. An eight-year-old girl has died after a younger child accidentally shot her in the eye with a BB gun in northeastern Indiana, according to local authorities. Deborah Kay Schwartz was taken to a hospital in critical condition on Thursday after being wounded at a home in Grabill, 140 miles northeast of Indianapolis. She died on Friday. An eight-year-old girl was shot in the eye by her cousin with a BB gun at her home in Grabill, Indiana The Allen County Coroner's Office said Monday that Deborah died of a gunshot wound to the head. Her cousin, six, was said to have been the one to shoot the little girl, according to police. Her cousin, six, was said to have been the one to shoot the little girl, according to police She was taken to the hospital from her 8320 Ricker Road home in Grabill, Indiana. The shooting is under investigation by authorities in Allen County, including the sheriff's department, prosecutors and the coroner's office. It is being reported as the first homicide in the county as of 2018. An overheated and smoking iPhone battery forced the evacuation of about 50 people from an Apple Store in Zurich on Tuesday. Zurich police said the incident occurred as the repair worker was removing the battery, which overheated and burned his hand slightly. Seven people received medical treatment but did not need to be hospitalised after the incident at the store near Zurich's central train station. Evacuated: It is believed that a fault with the battery caused it to overheat and smoke, prompting the evacuation of 50 people from the Zurich Apple Store, pictured Staff at called police after noticing the smoke and sprinkled the battery with quartz powder, a statement from police in the Swiss city said. 'There was a slight build-up of smoke, which led to around 50 customers and employees having to leave the business temporarily,' a police statement said. 'The staff responded well and correctly. It sprinkled quartz sand over the overheated battery so that the smoke could be contained and sucked out after switching on the ventilation.' Specialists from the Zurich Forensic Institute were studying the battery to determine the cause of the incident, police said. Injured: Zurich police said the incident occurred as the Apple Store repair worker was removing the battery, which burned his hand (stock image) Apple had no immediate comment beyond the police statement. This is only the latest controversy involving the batteries in Apple's famous smartphones as it was revealed last month that the company are deliberately slowing the handsets down over time to 'extend battery life'. On Thursday, Apple published an apology letter saying 'We know that some of you feel Apple has let you down'. The firm revealed it is slashing the price of a replacement battery, and planning a software upgrade which will show users exactly how much their battery has degraded. Oprah Winfrey's best friend Gayle King, one of the co-hosts of CBS This Morning, said on the program Tuesday that the queen of talk is 'intrigued' by the idea of running for president. 'I don't think she is actively considering it, I don't think she is actively considering it at this time,' King said. Presidential rumors ramped up after Winfrey gave a powerful speech at the Golden Globes Sunday night, proclaiming 'a new day is on the horizon.' Scroll down for video Oprah Winfrey's Golden Globes speech on Sunday night opened the door to rumors that she might be interested in a presidential run On Tuesday, bestie Gayle King said the queen of talk wasn't 'actively considering' seeking the White House Gayle King (left), one of the co-hosts of CBS This Morning, said she didn't believe Oprah Winfrey had changed her mind after saying last fall that she had no plans to run for office Gayle King (left) has been the longtime best friend of Oprah Winfrey (right). Here they attend the Robin Hood Foundation's 2016 Benefit in New York 'And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men fighting hard to make sure they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say, "Me too," again,' Oprah announced from onstage of the glitzy Los Angeles ceremony, where Hollywood's women wore black to symbolically speak out against sexual harassment ans assault. Directly after the speech, her longtime partner Stedman Graham added fuel to the fire by telling the Los Angeles Times a presidential run isn't totally out. 'It's up to the people,' Graham said. 'She would absolutely do it.' Two unnamed pals of Winfrey's added to the speculation by telling CNN Money that the longtime talk show host is 'actively thinking' about a bid. The White House even chimed in, welcoming Oprah as a potential rival to President Trump as well. 'We welcome the challenger, whether it be Oprah Winfrey or anybody else,' Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told reporters aboard Air Force One. Last fall, Winfrey had said she has no intention of running for political office. On Tuesday, King suggested that her best friend's viewpoint remained unchanged. 'No, I absolutely don't think that her position has changed, I don't,' King told her CBS This Morning co-hosts, who were grilling her on the topic. 'I was up talking to her very late last night,' King added. 'I do think this though guys, I do think she's intrigued by the idea, I do think that,' King continued. 'I also know that after years of watching the Oprah show, you always have the right to change your mind,' the CBS anchor added. King noted that there are already people lining up to be Winfrey's campaign manager and volunteers for a potential bid. 'She loves this country and would like to be of service in some way,' King said. King also explained that Graham had misheard the question presented to him by the Los Angeles Times, thinking the reporter had asked 'would she make a good president.' 'And he said, "Absolutely, she would." That's how he interpreted the question,' King said. 'Because, this is the thing, Steadman would never so cavalierly say, "Absolutely she would do it. It's up to the people." He would never do that.' Gayle King (left) said that being in the room Sunday night at the Golden Globes with best friend Oprah Winfrey (right) was 'electrifying' Gayle King (left) and Oprah Winfrey (right) pose on the Kennedy Center's red carpet in Washington, D.C. King said that while Winfrey is 'intrigued' by the idea of a presidential run, she's not 'actively considering' a bid Co-host Norah O'Donnell challenged King on that, pointing to the fact that Graham did indeed say, 'She would absolutely do it.' 'I'm telling you his interpretation of the question was ... he thought the reporter was saying would she be a good president,' King said. 'He is nothing but supportive, he would never throw it out there like that,' Winfrey's best friend noted. King also said that Winfrey was wholly behind her Golden Globes speech, getting some advice from one of her O, The Oprah Magazine editors, but mainly penning it herself. 'She writes her column every month in the magazine. She's a very good writer. We all know she is a very good talker,' King said. 'I think it was a homerun on many levels.' King, who attended the awards ceremony alongside Winfrey and Graham, said being in the room was 'electrifying.' 'It was the right person giving the right speech at the right time,' King said. Australian footwear retailer Diana Ferrari is the latest store to fall victim to the country's retail slump, announcing it will close up shop in coming months. The iconic brand, part of the Munro Footwear Group (MFG), will close all 23 stores and 11 clearance outlets within months, beginning from January 21. The label will continue to have an online store, where sales of 30 per cent are currently underway. Founded in 1979, Diana Ferrari opened their first store in 2000 and said they were proud to have served their customers over the last 17 years. Australian footwear retailer Diana Ferrari is the latest store to fall victim to the country's retail slump, announcing it will close up shop in coming months The label will continue to have an online store, where sales of 30 per cent are currently underway 'All Diana Ferrari stores will be closed over the coming months, but our fabulous footwear will continue to be available through our online stores, Mathers, Williams, wholesale stockists and major department stores,' a company statement read. 'We truly appreciate and thank all our loyal clothing customers over the last 17 years.' Staff who currently work at Diana Ferrari stores will be placed in other shops with the MFG group, Sydney Morning Herald reports. Diana Ferrari stores in Woden in Canberra and the Chatswood, Penrith and Hornsby stores in New South Wales will shut down on January 21, followed by Miranda in NSW and Knox in Victoria on January 28. The brand is the latest to fall victim to the slow retail climate, with Maggie T, yet another Australian brand, entering into administration last week. High end handbag retailer Oroton also entered administration in November, after losing $14.2 million in 2017. Staff who currently work at Diana Ferrari stores will be placed in other shops with the MFG group (pictured: some of the latest season's footwear) AUBURN A Moravia woman with a history of theft will spend time in jail for violating the terms and conditions of her probation. Kimberly Hooper, 46, was initially sentenced to five years probation in 2015 for second-degree identity theft in Cayuga County. At the time, she was ordered to successfully complete Auburn Behavioral Health Court and to avoid further trouble with the law. But last year, Hooper was arrested again this time for petit larceny in the town of Lansing. In court Tuesday, Cayuga County District Attorney Jon Budelmann said Hooper stole several items from a store in Lansing, hiding things like clothes, nail polish and toothpaste in her purse. She recently pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor in Lansing Town Court, where a judge reportedly plans to sentence Hooper to community service. Meanwhile, in Cayuga County, Judge Mark Fandrich had to resentence Hooper for violating her probation. In court Tuesday, Hooper's defense attorney, Norman Chirco, said he felt his client had been improving with mental health treatment before her latest setback in Lansing and asked that her probation be restored. But the district attorney felt otherwise. "To say that probation has failed to stop her (from committing these crimes) is an understatement," Budelmann said, noting that Hooper had been arrested 30 times since the early 1990s. "Probation has not protected the community or discouraged her behavior." When it came time to speak, Hooper apologized to the court. Through tears, she told Fandrich about a past addiction to Xanax and her history with mental illness. "I have definitely had some serious issues," she said, crying. "I'm a bad person ... and I am deeply, deeply sorry." In the end, Fandrich said he would not revoke Hooper's probation, but felt there should be some form of sanction for her behavior. He resentenced Hooper to four months of intermittent incarceration, ordering her to report to Cayuga County Jail every Monday evening. She will serve her time from 7 p.m. Mondays through 6 a.m. Thursdays beginning Jan. 15. Five men and a woman have appeared in court to deny being members of the banned far-right terror group National Action. The six are accused of being members of the organisation - said to stir up racial hatred and promote an exclusively white society - over the course of last year. Joel Wilmore, 24, of Stockport, Darren Fletcher, 28, of Wolverhampton, Nathan Pryke, 26, of March, Cambridgeshire Daniel Bogunovic, 26, of Leicester, Adam Thomas, 21, and Claudia Patatas, 38, both of Banbury, appeared before Westminster Magistrates court this morning. Patatas, a Portuguese national, wept as the charges against the group were read out today. Five men and a woman have appeared in court over allegations they were members of banned far-right group National Action. Pictured: File photo of the group's protest in Bolton in 2016 All six indicated not guilty pleas to a joint charge of being a member of a proscribed organisation contrary to the Terrorism Act. Thomas also faces charges with possessing the Anarchist Cookbook, likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism. Fletcher faces additional charges of five counts of breaching an anti-social behaviour order. Bogunovic is also charged with inciting terrorism by displaying threatening, abusive and insulting written material, namely stickers, at Aston University campus in Birmingham which could stir up racial hatred. Thomas was seen smiling and chatting to Fletcher as the charges were read out. Each defendant, apart from Wilmore, wore a grey prison issue tracksuit and are all British aside from Patatas, the court heard. The six appeared at Westminster Magistrates Court today after their arrests last week Upon indicating a not guilty plea, Bogunovic, who has Serbian heritage, said: 'I intend to clear my good name and fight these charges from start to finish.' Jessica Hart, prosecuting, said: 'There is a deliberate and prolonged involvement with a terrorist organisation immediately after its prescription. 'They have expressed support for the views of that organisation that a racial war is likely and that they need to prepare for that and that they need to create a white only society. 'This was continued involvement of over a year they attempted to continue that organisation under the radar.' District judge Emma Arbuthnot denied them all bail. The six are due to appear for an official plea hearing at the Old Bailey on January 19. Dr. Briane Thicke, 88, has been accused of groping three different patients' breasts while performing medical exams Alan Thicke's elderly doctor stepfather has been accused of groping female patients' breasts while performing medical exams they were required to undergo to get their pilot's licenses. Dr. Brian Thicke, 88, who married the late Growing Pains actor's mother when he was a child and raised him in Elliot Lake, Ontario, was named in complaints filed with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario in December. In those documents, two former patients of his alleged that he insisted on touching their breasts while performing the medical exam in the 1990s. Lisa Fruitman, the first complainant, told how the exams felt more like a 'massages' and said it felt as though he was 'playing' with her breasts when she saw him in 1993 and the second in 1995. Another woman alleged that in 1994, he groped her in a similar way after saying: 'Now we are going to look at your boobies.' She reported her complaint to police and Thicke was questioned but was released without charge when he told police it was merely part of the full body examination. In a review on RateMDs, a popular website where patients leave reviews of doctors, a third woman said Thicke groped her while performing the same test when she was a flight attendant. In her case, the doctor allegedly told her he was trying to find her heartbeat but slid his hand on to her nipple. Ms. Fruitman, now 52, told DailyMail.com on Tuesday that she knew the incident was inappropriate at the time but felt powerless because Thicke was such a prominent member of her flying club. He said, "Oh, I forgot one thing. I've got to do a breast exam Accuser Lisa Fruitman She claimed that when she went to him for the first time in 1993 in order to be given the greenlight to do her first solo flight, he began by showing her photographs of his famous son that were hung around his office. 'One of the first things I remember, when you walked in, it was festered with pictures of Alan Thicke and probably Robin. 'He pointed out to me, "this is my famous son" and "you must recognize him from all his shows". I remember him telling me about his famous connections,' she said. Thicke then carried out the exam and 'nothing seemed out of the ordinary,' she said, until she got up off the table to leave. 'He said, "Oh, I forgot one thing. I've got to do a breast exam,' Ms. Fruitman said. When the woman, then in her early 20s, asked him if it was necessary, he appeared to threaten her, she said. 'He said, "Are you questioning me? Do you want your license?" I was thinking, "this is wrong, this is wrong," but I wanted my license and it felt like he might be able to obstruct that,' she said. In a RateMDs review left in November last year, one woman described how he allegedly felt her nipple while monitoring her heartbeat during an exam. The other accusations were made in reports to police in 1994 and in a 2015 complaint to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario The 88-year-old is the stepfather of late Growing Pains star Alan Thicke (pictured together) who died in December 2016 Reluctantly, the woman said she lay back on the table and lay motionless for 'what felt like forever' as Thicke 'massaged' and 'played with' her breasts. Afterwards, he said they were 'fine' and allowed her to leave, she said. It felt like forever. He was massaging and playing with my breasts. I knew what a breast exam felt like - it was not this Accuser Lisa Fruitman Two years later, when she returned for a mandatory repeat exam, he did the same thing in a 'slightly different' way, Ms. Fruitman said. Shortly afterwards, the woman gave up flying. 'The thought of going back again was part of the reason I stopped. I didn't want to go through that again,' Ms. Fruitman said. In 1994, a year after her first appointment with him and a year before her second, another woman contacted police to report a similar assault. After telling her he was going to look at her 'boobies', the woman said he lifted up her shirt, unhooked her bra and slid his hand onto her bare breast to squeeze it. Thicke was arrested but was released without charge when he said there was no sexual motivation behind the exam. Her report to police was made public in the Health Professionals Appeal and Review Board's recent order for a public hearing on the matter. It was prompted by Fruitman who pursued her case after it was dismissed by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario in 2016. The doctor's grandson, singer Robin Thicke (pictured together), has not commented on the allegations against him In November last year, a third woman described how Thicke allegedly groped her during a visit when she was a young flight attendant. 'Dr. Thicke once did my physical when I first got a job as a flight attendant. To check my heart beat, he slid his hand underneath my bra and touched my nipple. 'There was more inappropriate touching, but I don't have enough space here to list them all,' she said. In her review, which was posted in November last year before the other women's complaints were made public, she said 'everything about him' was 'creepy'. 'Everything about him from his many gold rings, gold chains, unbuttoned shirt and walls plastered with celebrity photos seemed creepy. 'I didn't say anything when he touched me inappropriately because I wanted the job and didn't want him to fail me on my physical. 'Do yourself a favour and find a real doctor who doesn't abuse his position to cop a cheap feel or three on his patients,' she said. Dr. Thicke previously denied any wrongdoing when the matter was first investigated by the college, saying through his lawyer that he may have performed medical exams on the women but that any touching was non-sexual and was part of the full physical. One accuser said she would have come forward sooner but headlines about the doctor's famous grandson Robin Thicke (above with his partner April Love) groping a woman while he was married in 2013 stopped her Transport Canada, which makes pilots and flight attendants pass the very exams he was performing, however dismissed his suggestion that a breast examination was part of the full-physical. He has not commented since the matter was taken back up by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. His lawyer did not respond to DailyMail.com's requests on Tuesday morning. A date has not yet been set for the hearing. Ms. Fruitman, who said she was angered by Thicke's insistence that he had done no wrong, said she was hopeful the board will now side with her. The mother revealed that she wanted to come forward with her allegations several times in the recent past but was deterred when Dr. Thicke's grandson Robin notoriously hit headlines for groping a woman while posing for photograph with her. Ms. Fruitman said she felt as though the timing would undermine her version of events about the Blurred Lines' singer's grandfather and make her look as though she wanted her 'name in lights'. If found guilty of wrongdoing at the hearing, Dr. Thicke will likely lose his medical license. Robin Thicke, did not respond to requests seeking comment on the allegations against his grandfather. Alan Thicke, a beloved TV host and the star of the sitcom Growing Pains, died unexpectedly in December 2016 aged 69. An Atlanta, Georgia area Starbucks was forced to close on Sunday after it became the subject of a horrifying online rumor. Over the weekend, a Facebook user named Shanell Rivers posted a message to a page called 'White People Vs. Black People' in which she claimed to work at the Starbucks in Brookhaven, just north of the city. In the post, she claimed to have defiled the orders of several white customers throughout the week, including putting dried dog poop in a child's hot chocolate and mixing blood in strawberry jam spread over a man's bagel. The Starbucks in Brookhaven, Georgia was forced to close two hours early on Sunday over an online rumor. A woman named Shanell Rivers wrote on Facebook about how she had defiled customers' orders at the location When the post started going viral on Sunday, the store (pictured above) started receiving threats over the phone On Sunday, the post started going viral and the store received phone calls with threats against the alleged employee. The threats were enough for managers to close the store two hours early, according to the Washington Post. On Monday, Starbucks issued a statement saying the post was 'completely false' and that they don't even have an employee named Shanell Rivers. 'We are working with local authorities,' spokeswoman Sanja Gould told the Post. She added that a 'few' threats were made to the store, but she didn't have a specific number. The store has since been reopened. Maj. Brandon Gurley, a spokesman for the Brookhaven Police Department sad that they have launched an investigation into the post. They have also added additional patrols to the area around the Starbucks. A leading gay marriage campaigner says many same-sex couples are too exhausted to organise a wedding. Australian Marriage Equality board member Sarah Midgley made the observation on Tuesday as the first gay weddings were legally held in Australia. 'Many people maybe need a little break since the postal survey but also to relax after the campaign,' she told Sky News. Scroll down for video Australian Marriage Equality campaigner Sarah Midgley says gay couples are too tired to wed Mel Ramirez and Stacey Sorensen wed on Tuesday as Australia held its first same-sex nuptials Dr Midgley, a quantum physicist, said the voluntary postal vote survey which returned a nationwide 61.6 per cent Yes vote in November had 'intensified' their spare time. 'Australia has achieved marriage equality and this is now something that we can all share and enjoy together as a country,' she said. 'Once that's sinking in, over the new year I think we'll see more and more weddings.' Aspiring Commonwealth Games athletes Craig Burns and Luke Sullivan were among Australia's first same-sex couples to get married at midnight on Tuesday. They legally tied the knot under the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017, exchanging vows at the Summergrove Estate, in the Tweed Coast hinterland in northern New South Wales. The accomplished athletes became engaged in March 2016 after a touching proposal set on the rocks in Byron Bay, NSW, with both men dressed in Speedos as Craig popped the question on one knee. Aspiring Commonwealth Games athletes Craig Burns (right) and Luke Sullivan (left) wed on Tuesday Australia has become the 26th nation to legalise gay marriage with ceremonies held Tuesday In a reverse-style wedding event, the couple hosted a pre-ceremony reception for 55 family members and friends until 11.30pm when they prepared for midnight nuptials set to a backdrop of fireworks. Australia in December became the 26th country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage. However, couples were required to give 30 days notice, which made Tuesday the first day they could legally tie the knot in front of their loved ones. A brave surfer in the far north of Michigan braves below-zero temperatures to take on waves in Lake Superior and grow an incredible 'ice beard'. Dan Schetter, 39, wears a wetsuit designed to withstand the freezing temperatures of -24F (-31C) with windchill as he rides waves through Lake Superior in Michigan's cold weather. His face is still exposed to the elements, and by the end of sessions, the Marquette native's eyebrows and beard are often covered in icicles. Dan Schetter, 39, wears a wetsuit designed to withstand the freezing temperatures of -24F (-31C) with windchill as he rides waves through Lake Superior in Michigan's cold weather. By the end of sessions, the Marquette native's eyebrows and beard are often covered in icicles Known as 'Surfer Dan', the extreme athlete surfs year-round, even in Michigan's freezing winters in the Upper Peninsula Known as 'Surfer Dan', the extreme athlete is serious about riding the waves year-round and is always hoping to find others showing off 'ice beards' online. Photographer Devin Hains, 24, held a photoshoot for Schetter, who even got into the water on Christmas day, when Marquette was facing a cold snap. Hains wore a facemask and several pairs of gloves and used hand warmers during the shoot, while Schetter jumped into the water wearing a 9mm XCEL wetsuit, 8mm boots and gloves. Schetter has warned others to be careful around the lake in cold weather. On Christmas, Lake Superior's surface temperature was 36F (2C). 'Even though I know what I'm doing, it was still difficult,' he told MLive. 'My board and body iced up. I had to thaw out underwater.' Schetter, 39, wears a 9mm XCEL wetsuit, 8mm boots and gloves when surfing in Lake Superior Schetter has warned others to be careful around the lake in cold weather. On Christmas, Lake Superior's surface temperature was 36F (2C) Schetter has surfed in Japan and Hawaii but calls the Great Lakes home - he's been surfing on them for 20 years Hains said he and Schetter were by the water all afternoon, from 1pm to 4.30pm, leaving just as the sun set. He said of the shoot: 'Dan was hoping to get an ice beard going since it was so cold outside, -24F (-31C) with the wind chill factor. Perfect conditions to grow an ice beard. 'He's been surfing for well over 20 years on Lake Superior and the surrounding Great Lakes. He grew up in near Marquette and knows the waters well and surfs year round. 'The cold doesn't seem to bother him as much as people would think for a man covered in ice. 'His wetsuit is very thick and made for such frigid temperatures, though his face did numb up and cause him a little pain due to the windchill. It's dangerous to get into the frigid waters surrounding Michigan in the winter, but Schetter has lots of practice, having rode waves on lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron Schetter said the lake is never completely frozen over, so he can find a place to ride the waves even in extreme conditions Schetter isn't the only one who surfs through the winter though, and he's always looking for others showing off their own ice beards 'But it was not enough to discourage him from surfing though. He truly just loves to catch waves.' Schetter has surfed in Japan and Hawaii but calls the Great Lakes home - he's been surfing on them for 20 years. It's dangerous to get into the frigid waters surrounding Michigan in the winter, but Schetter has lots of practice. 'Well, I used to get hypothermia a lot ... You're so cold that you don't feel cold any more,' he told the Detroit Free Press last year. He added: 'And then you gotta go to the happy place in your mind, and remember, "Oh, yeah, there's warmness that way. I'm gonna be OK. Everything's gonna be all right".' Advertisement Images documenting some of the relationship between Native Americans and white settlers in North America have resurfaced, on the 100th anniversary of the last battle between them. The images show several Native Americans from various tribes across America, including members of the Yaqui, Sioux, Apache, Tesuque, and Potawatomi tribes. The last of encounter between native Americans and the U.S Army was the Battle of Bear Valley, which saw one Yaqui commander and nine tribe members captured by American forces on January 9 1918. Ten Native American chiefs are pictured wearing native clothing, at the St. Louis Exposition, in 1904 White Horse, chief of the Kiowa people, in 1894. Most of the pictures were taken between 1865 and 1915 Two Native American men in costumes wearing horns of buffaloes pictured in 1907 The pictures also depict the brutality of the conflict, in this instance a group of six Yaqui Indians who had been lynched Chief Crane of the Potawatomi, holding tomahawk and with unidentified Native American man in a delegation to Washington, D.C, in 1860 Most of the picture were taken between 1865 and 1915, show the Natives fishing, hunting and performing ritualistic dances. Further images from the collection show the lesser-seen side of the relationship between Native Americans and American settlers, with shots showing a group of six Yaqui Indians who had been lynched, as well as pictures of Mormon settlers who were scalped by the Natives. The collection has emerged on the centenary of the Battle of Bear Valley, the last recorded conflict between the United States Army and a group of Native Americans in Arizona, the Yaqui. Though only brief and resulting in just one death, it is seen as potentially being the end of the American Indian Wars which stretch back as far as the 'first settlers' in America in 1540. Conflicts between settlers and the Natives between 1540 and 1774 were often confined to clashes between individual colonies and the tribes that inhabited the same area as them. Yaqui Indians, some with bows and arrows and others with guns, pictured in 1911. The last recorded conflict between Native Americans and the U.S army involved the Yaqui Robert McGee, who was scalped by Sioux Chief Little Turtle in 1864, shows his scar in this photograph from 1890 Three Native American men, in traditional clothing, posing as if performing a snake dance in a 1905 photograph Big Road, a Lakota leader, in 1899. The majority of Native American peoples were forced to accept lives on reservations Such conflicts included the almost complete annihilation of the Jamestown colony by the Powhatan's in 1622, as well as the destruction of the Pequots by Puritan forces in New England in 1637. Native tribes also got pulled in to the battle for supremacy in North America between the French, the British and the Spanish, with tribes often siding with whichever country they happened to be trading with. America's victory in the War of Independence in 1776 saw conflicts on the continent between the two sides taking place over land. One of these was the second Seminole War in 1835 between Americans, who wished to settle in Florida, and the Seminole's, who saw Florida as their ancestral homeland. A huge campaign was launched against the Seminole's after they refused to relocate to a reservation in Oklahoma, with raids against the Natives and laws being passed ordering them to leave. The tribe remained stubborn, costing the Americans an estimated $30 million dollars. Two men, one wearing military uniform and holding reins of horse, kneeling next to a dead man's scalped body, 1868 A white boy and and a Native American boy, wearing headdress, shaking hands, in 1923 Two Native Americans, wearing feather headdresses, looking at photographic film they stand next to a stream with cameras at their feet and tipis in the background, in 1913 A Wascoe Indian sits on a canoe he has fashioned, 1897. The tribe are from the Columbia River area of Oregon As the settlers began to move west of the Mississippi and onto the Great Plains in the 1840s tensions between them and the Natives only heightened. Tribes such as the Sioux, Arapache, Cheyennes and the Arapaho's were all based in this area, which attracted millions of people during the California gold rush of the mid-1800s. Clashes between the two groups intensified during this time, with several regiments using the American Civil War as an excuse to slaughter tribes and force them onto reservations. 1876 saw perhaps the last great battle between Native American tribes and the United States army, with the Battle of Little Bighorn leading to the death of General Custer. He and five troops of his cavalry were annihilated in the battle, which was waged by a loose coalition of Indian tribes led by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse. Persistent raids against Native villages, stockpiles and food sources left its mark on tribes across the country, though. With far inferior technology to the Americans, the vast majority of tribes were forced to accept life on the reservations. This sadly did not end the bloodshed, though, as approximately 300 Natives, mostly old men, women and children, were slaughtered by American forces during the Wounded Knee massacre in 1890. There were still to be a few skirmishes across the continent, as Americans continued to spread across the country and force the Natives onto smaller and smaller reserves. Brussels has admitted that a bad Brexit deal will cost jobs and harm trade in Europe, a leaked document has revealed. The EU report lays bare the many towns and cities across the bloc which rely on Britain for its trade and manufacturing. It reveals the French region of Hauts-de-France - the birthplace of President Emmanuel Macron - is worried a punishment Brexit deal would harm its car manufacturing sector. In Poland the biggest concern lies in the big drop in the EU budget which will result from Brexit, while the province of Lublin is worried about reduced exports 'especially agricultural and agri-food products.' Holland's fishing sector is very worried about the prospect of losing access to UK waters, with the provinces of Flevoland and Overijssel predicting a potential drop of 60 per cent in fishing business. Brexiteer MPs said the findings show it would be calamitous for the EU not to strike a post Brexit free trade deal with Britain. An EU report lays bare the many towns and cities across which rely on Britain for its trade and manufacturing. It found that many member states are concerned that a bad Brexit deal could cost jobs - strengthening Theresa May's (pictured in Brussels in December) call for a post Brexit free trade deal European leaders have been desperate to maintain a rock-solid unity in the Brexit negotiations but are bracing themselves for splits to emerge as countries try to safeguard their economies as the talks move on to trade. Peter Bone, Tory MP for Wellingborough, told the Mail Online: 'The EU needs to do a deal with us much more than we need to do a deal with them. 'That's why it is very surprising to me that we have offered 39billion to allow them to sell 70bn more goods into this country each year than we sell to them. 'There will be a lot of pressure from companies within countries within the EU for their governments to do a trade deal.' He added: 'This points out why the likelihood of a trade deal is there because it benefits them more than us. 'Everything points to doing a proper free trade deal with us, and I'm afraid it is only the posturing of the European elites and their governments that they are actually trying to do something that is against the interests of the people in the EU. 'So if this report helps shove the EU elite to do the right thing for the European Union and trade with us on a free trade basis then that's all the better. The report brings together submissions made by member states to the EU's Committee of the Regions on the possible economic impact of Brexit on parts of the bloc. It highlights fears in Europe that Britain quitting the EU without a free trade deal will cost their countries trade and jobs. Germany is worried a bad deal will harm its trade - pointing out that the UK is Berlin's fifth biggest trading partner while it is Bremen's second biggest. French President Emmanuel Macron, pictured in China yesterday, has called for the EU to stay united in the Brexit negotiations, but the leaked report reveals that his home-region in France is worried the UK's departure from the bloc will be costly for their car manufacturing trade France is also concerned its car manufacturing sector could be harmed by Britain's withdrawal, according to the Politico website. Francois Decoster, an official for the Hauts-de-France region, told Brussels: 'In the automotive sector, there are major concerns regarding future relations with the U.K, particularly on the part of the car maker Toyota, which operates in the region. For example, 13 percent of Yaris exports in 2016 went to the U.K.' Cyprus highlights that the UK is its biggest trading partner in services while Sweden stressed Britain is its third largest foreign investor. Tory Brexiteer Bernard Jenkin told the newspaper: 'It is highly significant that other EU member states' authorities are beginning to engage with the consequences of a no-deal Brexit because it is something that should concern them greatly. 'I think the pressure is mounting on the EU negotiators to deliver a sensible deal which disrupts as little as possible.' A 17-year-old Florida teen is claiming her iPhone 7 Plus burned her, leaving a gruesome scar on her stomach. Tina Pierre, from Ocoee, Florida, was waiting on a text and claims to have started feeling pain where she placed her phone and noted that it was hot to touch. 'It was really painful. It was, like, extremely painful,' Pierre said to News 6. Tina Pierre, from Ocoee, Florida, was waiting on a text and claims to have started feeling pain where she placed her phone and noted that it was hot to touch Pierre, 17, and her father were shocked to discover a burn mark the size of her phone when they went to check under her shirt Pierre and her father were shocked to discover a burn mark the size of her phone when they went to check under her shirt. She added: 'I was like, "Oh my God."' As the days passed, the teen explained that the mark grew darker and even two months later, a bruise still remains. Pierre claims that when she sent the photos to Apple but their employees were more concerned with the phone rather than her health. 'So they just kept asking me, "Well, how's the phone doing? You need to send the phone in,"' Pierre said. 'And I was like, "What's going on with my stomach?"' She claims that when she sent the photos to Apple, their employees were more concerned with the phone rather than her health The teen added that she wasn't offered an explanation from the company about what caused the damage She adds that she was promised an upgrade from an Apple representative but instead was given the exact same type of model as her previous phone. And according to Pierre, this phone also gets warm to the touch, leaving her and her father worried. They both were also alarmed that the company didn't seem to believe the burn was associated with the phone. 'They didn't ask me about my burn,' Pierre added. 'They weren't concerned with it.' The girl hopes to serve as an example to others about what could happen with devices. Above, various images she claims to have taken of her 'burn' marks since the incident Texts Pierre received from Apple include: 'I am sorry to hear about the discomfort you feel,' and 'I hope you get better and start to feel well soon.' The teen added that she wasn't offered an explanation from the company about what caused the damage. 'That's all they wanted to do, just troubleshoot the phone,' Pierre added. And when she sent the phone into Apple, Pierre claims engineers told her they found no defects on the device, something she found hard to believe. The girl hopes to serve as an example to others about what could happen with devices. She added that she was hoping for some assistance from Apple on her medical bills. Sharon Seudat (pictured), 22, who admitted to smothering her newborn daughter in April 2016 after hiding her pregnancy, was sentenced to eight years in prison on Monday A Long Island college student who admitted to smothering her newborn daughter after hiding her pregnancy has been sentenced to eight years in prison. Sharon Seudat was sentenced Monday in court in Mineola, crying while she voiced her regret for her actions. The 22-year-old could have faced 25 years to life in prison if she were convicted of murder at trial. She instead pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter. 'I'm sorry for what happened and thank you to the court,' Seudat, 22, told State Supreme Court Justice Angelo Delligatti, according to Newsday. Seudat's attorney, Edward Lieberman, told the court that 'this is certainly a very difficult situation for everyone involved'. Lieberman had said months before his client's guilty plea that he would present psychiatric evidence at her trial, according to Newsday. He also had said Seudat decided to plead guilty after discussing possible defenses that included dissociative disorder and neonaticide syndrome. Detective Capt John Azzata said at the time that officers had been called to her home in Glen Head and found Seudat bleeding profusely. He said a doctor later realized she had given birth. Police say Seudat, who hid the pregnancy from her parents, initially denied giving birth. Azzata said the child was born alive and was suffocated. Seudat eventually admitted that she wrapped the newborn in sheets and blankets, placed her hand over the baby's mouth and then put her body in a garbage bag. Police found the baby's 7-pound, 5-ounce body on the back deck of Seudat's home in Glen Head. Seudat was a Nassau Community College student and worked part-time at a car wash at the time of the baby's death. Police (at the scene in 2016) say Seudat, who hid the pregnancy from her parents, initially denied giving birth. Seudat eventually admitted that she wrapped the newborn in sheets and blankets, placed her hand over the baby's mouth and then put her body in a garbage bag Authorities said the baby's father wasn't in touch with Seudat for some time - and that he didn't know about the pregnancy. Nassau District Attorney Madeline Singas released a statement on Monday about New York's Safe Haven law. The law allows a parent to leave an infant less than 30 days old at a hospital, firehouse or police station 'anonymously and without fear of prosecution'. Singas said of Seudat: 'Instead of taking advantage of this law, which was designed to support mothers and vulnerable children, this defendant tragically took her newborn's life.' Seudat also faces five years of post-release supervision after her prison sentence. Former Countryfile presenter Miriam O'Reilly has waded into the BBC pay row, accusing the corporation of discriminating against women and urging staff to fight for equal wages. In a series of furious tweets, the 60-year-old claimed male staff at the BBC 'don't like to be challenged by women'. Ms O'Reilly, who won a landmark ageism tribunal against the BBC in 2010, also claimed bosses 'don't like women who win'. Miriam O'Reilly has waded into the BBC pay row, accusing the corporation of discriminating against women and urging staff to fight for equal wages The presenter was speaking out after China editor Carrie Gracie resigned over a gender pay gap at the BBC. The journalist, 55, who was paid 135,000-a-year, quit with a scathing 1,400-word open letter on her blog declaring 'enough is enough' and accusing the corporation of widespread discrimination. Miss Gracie, who worked at the Beeb for 30 years, revealed she turned down a 45,000 pay rise from her BBC bosses, insisting 'its not about more money - it's about equality'. She added: 'I can't collude in my own pay discrimination'. Ms O'Reilly left the BBC a year after winning her legal battle and was thought to have received a six-figure payout from the verdict. She was one of four female presenters in their 40s and 50s, at the time, who were removed from BBC One rural affairs show Countryfile in 2009, when it was being revamped for peak time audiences. China editor Carrie Gracie resigned from over role at the BBC over a gender pay gap The BBC was accused of being obsessed with attracting younger viewers and of 'social engineering' for sacking her because she was seen as too old. Speaking out in support of Miss Gracie and discussing her own fight against the BBC, the Irish presenter posted a lengthy rant on Twitter. She fumed: 'Seven years ago I stood up to BBC discrimination and won. I was the first to challenge through to a tribunal. The BBC tried to pay me to keep quiet. I refused. 'When I won my case the BBC made a big public deal of offering me a three year contact. When the media attention died away BBC exec Graham Ellis broke the contact. The programmes promised did not materialise. 'The fight had been long and hard and Camilla Palmer and I refused to be frightened off by the biggest and most powerful broadcast corporation in the world. #BBC 'We won, when no-one thought we would, because the BBC had not been challenged in that way before. We knew the BBC's treatment of older women was so wrong we had to fight it. MIRIAM O'REILLY Miriam O'Reilly began her career on a local newspaper before joining the BBC 27 years ago. She started out at Radio WM in Birmingham as a news producer and went on to become a presenter and reporter on regional television news show Midlands Today. Over the next decade she worked as a reporter and producer in news and current affairs, including a spell on Panorama, but left to become a full-time mother. She returned to the corporation when she was 40 as a presenter on the series Farming Today on Radio 4. Her appointment coincided with the foot and mouth outbreak which brought her a glut of high-profile work. She also co-presented Radio 4's flagship environmental programme Costing The Earth. In 2001, she was approached to join Countryfile and won a number of awards for a half-hour special she presented on the cost of fishing. Ms O'Reilly also stood in for Jenni Murray on Woman's Hour when she was being treated for breast cancer. In October 2008, she was told she would be axed from the flagship current affairs show when it moved to prime time. The rest of her BBC work also trailed off. Advertisement 'What I have learned from that experience is this: BBC execs [sic], most of them male, do not like to be challenged by women. More than that, they do not like to be challenged by women who won't back down. They don't like women who win. 'I would say to those BBC execs - get used to it or change. You will be challenged and exposed until you do.' Miss O'Reilly also urged other women at the BBC to support Miss Gracie's plight publicly and ordered them to 'be brave'. She said: 'And I would say to those fine women and men at the BBC who have supported Carrie, guard her back. Don't go away and leave her to them. Don't just tweet #standwithcarrie make sure you really do #standwithcarrie even if it means repercussions. Be brave. 'And just a thought.. those #bbcwomen cheering Carrie on from the sidelines - if you want equal pay you will really have to fight for it and that will mean sacrifices - like the one she has made. 'What woman who has fought for equal rights done so without personal consequences - none I know of. In the end it's usually left to brave individuals who stand longer than the rest because they value their integrity @BBCCarrie.' Ms O'Reilly's tirade comes as new Culture Secretary Matt Hancock told the Beeb it must act to address equal pay amid Miss Gracie's resignation. Mr Hancock said much more action was needed from the corporation, with other MPs also attacking the BBC over equal pay in the Commons. The Equality and Human Rights Commission has said it will write to the BBC over claims of unlawful pay discrimination made by Miss Gracie. A BBC Spokesperson said: 'Fairness in pay is vital. A significant number of organisations have now published their gender pay figures showing that we are performing considerably better than many and are well below the national average. 'Alongside that, we have already conducted an independent judge led audit of pay for rank and file staff which showed 'no systemic discrimination against women'. 'A separate report for on air staff will be published in the not too distant future.' Some of Australia's leading suppliers of baby formula have promised to supply parents with their products without the hassle of competing against 'daigou' buyers. Coles and Woolworths have continued to clamp down on foreign customers who purchase the sought-after product in bulk to send back to China at a huge profit. The makers of A2 Platinum, Aptimal and Karicare baby formula have made public guarantees to help parents get their hands on the product. A2 Milk Company boss Peter Nathan told A Current Affair the company promises to provide parents with baby formula. Scroll down for video Some of Australia's leading suppliers of baby formula have promised to supply parents with their products, as supermarkets continue sell out The makers of A2 Platinum, Aptimal and Karicare baby formula have made public guarantees to help parents get their hands on the product Shoppers have been spotted rushing to get their hands on baby formula as furious parents are forced to spend hours searching supermarkets for one tin 'We will guarantee that any Australian mum or dad who wants to buy A2 platinum can do so,' Mr Nathan said. Mr Nathan said the company will aim to have to product at the door of Australian parents within 24 hours, with slightly longer times for regional areas. He assured customers that they were guaranteed three tins within 24 hours when ordering online at A2nutriton.com.au. The move comes as Australian supermarket shelves are constantly stripped bare of baby formula, bought out by Chinese 'daigou' shoppers Daigou buy sought-after products, such as baby formula and vitamins, and sell them to Chinese buyers Similarly, Karicare and Aptamil products can be bought at MumStore.com.au. The move comes as Australian supermarket shelves are constantly stripped bare of baby formula, bought out by Chinese 'daigou' shoppers. Daigou buy sought-after products, such as baby formula and vitamins, and sell them to Chinese buyers via apps such as WeChat. To combat the growing trade, Coles and Woolworths have both tightened their purchase limits. Shoppers can now only buy two tins at a time, down from the previous limit of four. A father has reported his own son to police after finding a photograph of a naked, sleeping toddler on the teenager's phone. Paul Spensberger reported his 17-year-old son Andrew to authorities in their hometown of O'Fallon, Missouri, after finding the photographs on his phone on December 30. The two images were of a two-year-old relative of Andrew's girlfriend and were taken at close range. The little girl was sleeping when she was photographed. Paul found them after confiscating his son's phone as punishment for other bad behavior. He told DailyMail.com on Tuesday that he was 'disgusted' by the images and felt he had no other option than to contact police in the hope that it would finally scare his son, who suffers behavioral problems and is often in trouble for theft, into changing his ways. When questioned by his father, Andrew, who works at KFC, told him he took the photographs with the intention of selling them to a high school classmate who he suspected was a pedophile. Paul Spensberger reported his 17-year-old son Andrew to police after finding two photographs of a naked two-year-old girl on the teenager's phone after confiscating it He said he hoped to get $350 for the photographs and that he needed the money desperately because he owed it to others. Paul still contacted police and his son was arrested on felony child pornography charges. Andrew, 17, is in county jail and faces a Class D felony charge of child pornography possession which carries a maximum prison sentence of four years He remains in county jail on a $10,000 bond which his father, who runs his own construction business, refuses to pay. 'He feels like s***. He feels remorse and he is scared, he's facing time in prison. I could go and get him but he needs to learn,' Paul told DailyMail.com. He admitted that he was torn about whether or not to report his son but felt he had no choice because the phone the photographs were stored on is registered to his brother's name. 'I don't know if I would do the same thing again now. 'I don't know what exactly I was expecting,' the boy's father said, adding: 'It's difficult.' He said he believed his son's story that he planned to sell the photographs and not use them himself for any kind of personal gratification. According to his father, he attends a special needs school where there are 'twisted' students with an appetite for child porn. 'Andrew is a thief but he is not sexual like that.' 'It should never happen': The teenager's father said that while his son was not a predator and intended to sell the photographs, he wanted 'everyone to know' about what he had done in the hope that it will shame him into better behavior. Despite having a job at KFC, Andrew's father said he sold stolen goods like iPhones to make extra money 'He was in a bind [for money]... and I have no doubt there are kids at his school that would buy s*** like that.' Paul has been in contact with the photographed child's family and says they have forgiven his son. He, on the other hand, is torn between teaching his troubled son a lesson and seeing him face up to seven years in prison. Stopping short of advising other parents to do the same as he did if they found similar photographs on their children's phones, Paul said: 'It's disgusting, it's unethical and it should never happen.' Andrew was arrested on a Class D felony charge of child pornography possession. If convicted, he faces up to four years in prison. The teenager remains behind bars in county jail and is awaiting his next court date. His father has not yet decided whether or not he will hire him a lawyer but said he has consulted with several. He said his mother, from whom he is separated, is scared he may be attacked in prison because of the nature of the charge he faces. An 18-year-old high school graduate was stabbed to death on Saturday night by another resident of his California apartment complex, police say. Conner Russell Bickford, 18, had recently graduated from Rocklin High School and was attending Sierra College. Bickford's murder was the first homicide in Roseville city limits since May 2014 when 85-year-old Lonnie Burke was stabbed to death by his son. Conner Russell Bickford, 18, was fatally stabbed Saturday night. Pictured with his mother Laura Tolladay Akiva Israel, 33, was arrested late Saturday night and charged with murder and assault with a deadly weapon. He is also suspected of stabbing another man in the same apartment complex. The three men may have been roommates, according to The Sacramento Bee. Police arrested Israel in his apartment. He did not comply with their demands and needed to be physically restrained. Akiva Israel, 33, was arrested late Saturday night and charged with murder and assault with a deadly weapon The second man was taken to a nearby hospital with non-life-threatening injuries and has since been released. 'Detectives are investigating it and all the circumstances around it,' Roseville police spokeswoman Dee Dee Gunther said. 'Obviously, as they always do to protect the investigation, they're not releasing a lot of information right now.' Bickford dreamed of playing in the United States Marine Corps band and could play almost any instrument he got his hands on. 'He played with emotion,' Rocklin High band director Tom Douglass said to the Press Tribune. 'He played with heart. It was like you knew he was always really into the moment of whatever he was playing.' Bickford had recently graduated from Rocklin High School and was attending Sierra College 'The family appreciates the overwhelming love and support shown to us by friends, family and members of the community,' the family said in a statement provided by Tolladay's former boss. 'We are amazed by how many lives Conner touched.' 'The world is black, the sky is dark. Our beloved nephew Conner Bickford has been taken from this world,' his uncle Eric Tolladay wrote on Facebook. 'Light a candle and hold your loved ones close.' When Oprah Winfrey's partner Stedman Graham said she 'would absolutely' run for the White House if prompted by the people, he misheard the question, Winfrey's best friend Gayle King said. 'Stedman says he thought the reporter said to him, "Would she make a good president?" and he said absolutely she would,' King said Tuesday on the show she co-hosts, CBS This Morning. 'That's how he interpreted the question.' King described Graham as being 'nothing but supportive,' adding, 'he would never throw it out there like that.' Scroll down for video Oprah Winfrey's (right) longtime partner Stedman Graham (left) misheard a reporter who asked him Sunday about a potential Winfrey White House bid, according to best buddy Gayle King Gayle King was peppered with questions about a potential Oprah Winfrey 2020 presidential campaign on CBS This Morning, the show she co-hosts Oprah Winfrey's Golden Globes speech on Sunday night opened the door to rumors that she might be interested in a presidential run 'Because this is the thing, Stedman would never so cavalierly say, "Absolutely, she would do it. It's up to the people." He would never do that,' King said. King's co-host Norah O'Donnell wasn't exactly buying it, pointing to the fact that Graham indeed told the Los Angeles Times, 'She would absolutely do it.' 'I'm telling you his interpretation of the question was ... he thought the reporter was saying would she be a good president,' King said. Tuesday morning's CBS This Morning became a will-she-or-won't-she White House discussion on Winfrey, with co-hosts peppering one of their own with questions, as King has been the queen of talk's longtime best friend. Winfrey has previously said she has no interest in running for office and King said she believed her friend's position was unchanged. 'I do think this though guys, I do think she's intrigued by the idea, I do think that,' King said. 'I also know that after years of watching the Oprah show, you always have the right to change your mind.' That being said, an Oprah for President campaign in King's view, still seemed like a pipe dream. 'I don't think she is actively considering it,' King said. 'I don't think she is actively considering it at this time.' Winfrey's Golden Globes speech on Sunday night prompted many to think she might be pursuing the White House in the future, for its uplifting and political tone. Winfrey, who spent the bulk of her career as a talk show host, proclaimed, 'a new day is on the horizon.' 'And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men fighting hard to make sure they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say, "Me too," again,' Winfrey said. Shortly thereafter, Graham made his comments to the Los Angeles Times and two unnamed friends of Winfrey told CNN she's 'actively thinking' about jumping in. King, however, suggested Winfrey was nowhere near that. 'I absolutely don't think that her position has changed,' she said Tuesday, though later added, ''She loves this country and would like to be of service in some way.' A couple in suburban New Orleans have been accused of luring an Uber driver to their home to rob him - and having the woman distract him by opening the door topless. Anthony Kennedy, 24, and Rayna Fillios, 22, were arrested on Saturday night in Harahan, Louisiana, after the unidentified victim escaped the would-be robbery, Harahan Police Chief Tim Walker said. The victim told officers he gave his telephone number to Fillios when she hailed a ride, and she later called asking him to come over. When he arrived at the home, Fillios opened the door topless in an attempt to distract him while Kennedy tried to rob him, police said. Anthony Kennedy, 24, and Rayna Fillios, 22, were arrested on Saturday night in Harahan, Louisiana, after the unidentified victim escaped the would-be robbery, Harahan Police Chief Tim Walker said The driver tried to leave after he and Fillios exchanged a few words, but the woman then 'pulled him into her bare chest, kissed him and bit his tongue to distract him' as Kennedy moved into position, Walker said. When Fillios let go of the driver, Kennedy pointed a knife of him and demanded he turn over his money. The victim refused, and Kennedy punched him in the face, knocking out a tooth, Walker said. Kennedy then fled the scene and Fillios pretended as though she was not involved in the plot. When police arrived on scene, officers found Kennedy in a nearby shed with the help of a K-9 unit. Kennedy was booked on attempted armed robbery, second-degree battery, resisting an officer and violation of an order of protection that said he had to stay away from Fillios. Fillios was arrested on charges of being a principal to armed robbery and second degree robbery. It remains unclear if they have lawyers. Owen Jenkins (pictured) jumped into the water when he saw his friends Chelsea Holroyd and Jorgie Myers struggling in the Trent at Beeston Weir, Nottingham A popular young schoolboy drowned after rescuing his friends from a deep river when they screamed for help, an inquest heard. Owen Jenkins - who was a talented runner and rugby player - noticed his two friends, Jorgie Myers and Chelsea Holroyd, get into trouble in the water in July last year. Hailed as a hero by his family and the community around Beeston Weir in Nottinghamshire, the 12-year-old, from Beeston, was swept away by the current after lifting Jorgie out of the river at around 6pm. His friends raised the alarm and a huge hunt was launched for the Chilwell School pupil. Emergency crews, including police drivers, three search boats, a helicopter, a drone and more than 30 firefighters, were involved in searching for the youngster. Nottinghamshire Coroner's Court was told that Owen's body was found by the underwater rescue team in the River Trent at 10pm. A post-mortem examination confirmed that he died from drowning and no illicit or prescribed substances were involved. The hearing was attended by Owen's mother Nicola, 42, his father, Gary, 43, who wore a purple t-shirt that read 'for Owen', and Owen's brother, Jordan, among other family members. Speaking to reporters after the inquest, Nicola said: 'Owen will always be someone special to everybody, not just ourselves. 'He was very selfless and a bit silly. 'I just know that hed do it again even if wed said to him not to.' 'We probably wouldnt have known that this had happened had they all survived. 'Theyd all be like, !For goodness sake, dont tell anyone. Oh my gosh, dont tell mums - theyll ground us forever".' Coroner Mairin Casey said he attended Beeston Weir on July 10 with four friends: Jorgie, Chelsea, Paige Haworth and Emma Keeton. Summarising events, the coroner said: 'At some point they got into some kind of trouble in the water and clearly Paige, Emma and Owen became aware of that and perceived Jorgie and Chelsea to be having difficulty. 'It was at that point that Chelsea and Jorgie were in trouble and he took the decision to enter the water himself. Owen undressed and entered the water. 'He managed to throw her some distance (towards the shore) before he himself couldn't resist the current.' The father, mother and brother of Owen Jenkins, Gary, Nicola and Jordan after the hearing A statement from Jorgie, read to the court by the coroner, said: 'Chelsea and I decided to walk out into the water a bit further. We were holding hands. 'She said she could feel the water pulling her. We continued to wade out and the water kept getting deeper. 'I started to panic because I could feel the water pulling me. I didn't know what to do because I couldn't swim. 'I screamed to Owen 'Help us, we're floating away, we need help!' The coroner then told the court how Owen shouted to Emma to get Chelsea while he rescued Jorgie. Hailed as a hero by his family and the community around Beeston Weir in Nottinghamshire, the 12-year-old, of Beeston, was swept away by the current after lifting Jorgie out of the river The statement continued: 'I was pulled out of the water, I saw that Owen had got to me and lifted me up like someone carrying a baby. 'He then dropped me and told me to lay on my back and drift back to the shore.' Giving evidence, Ruth Hyde, of Broxtowe Borough Council, said: 'The most important step that was agreed was that warning notices would be erected in the vicinity of the weir. 'They give a clear message to anyone who is thinking of entering the water that it is dangerous.' The talented runner and rugby player - who was not a strong swimmer himself - jumped into the fast-flowing water but then got into trouble OWEN'S PARENTS PAY TRIBUTE TO THEIR SON WHO 'RISKED HIS OWN LIFE TO HELP SAVE OTHERS' Owen's parents, Gary and Nicola Jenkins, said: 'We have the happiest memories of Owen, who was a loving, caring, lively and affectionate son of whom we are immensely proud, 'He was sweet, innocent and selfless and it is consistent with his character that he risked his own life to help save others who got into trouble at Beeston weir. 'Inspired by Owen's memory, we are determined that his legacy will be greater awareness amongst young people of the risks of open water, and the hidden dangers that lie below the surface. 'Owen tragically lost his own life, but we are so proud of what he did; of the young man that he was; how he lived his life to the full; and how he related to others. He was a wonderful son and he will live on in our hearts forever.' Advertisement The councillor also told the inquest a temporary barrier was erected shortly after the incident along with life-saving equipment stored near the weir. Acting Detective Chief Inspector of Nottinghamshire Police told the court he was satisfied no criminality was involved. Recording a verdict of accidental death, Nottinghamshire Coroner Mairin Casey said: 'I am quite satisfied that there is no criminal component to this case. 'I am very pleased that the response to the tragedy has been a multi-agency approach and that several meetings have been convened to discuss a response to the death. 'I am confident that the changes that have been explained will help to minimise the danger. 'Young people will be tempted to go into areas intending to swim and it's a very tempting prospect. 'It's very understandable that there will always be young children who will not be aware of these dangers. 'There will also be exceptional children like Owen who selflessly help others. 'It's entirely in keeping with this young man's personality that his immediate response was to warn others to help carry those who were struggling and enter the water himself. This was incumbent on his selflessness. Owen's parents Nicola and Gary arrived at Nottingham Coroner's Court today 'My final words are for Owen's family. I have been humbled by the manner in which you have conducted yourself and have worked with agencies to help prevent further accidents. 'It is so impressive that you have been able to participate in the way that you have in order to ensure that other parents do not suffer the same pain that you have.' After the hearing Owen's parents, Gary and Nicola Jenkins, said: 'We have the happiest memories of Owen, who was a loving, caring, lively and affectionate son of whom we are immensely proud, 'He was sweet, innocent and selfless and it is consistent with his character that he risked his own life to help save others who got into trouble at Beeston weir. 'Inspired by Owen's memory, we are determined that his legacy will be greater awareness amongst young people of the risks of open water, and the hidden dangers that lie below the surface. 'Owen tragically lost his own life, but we are so proud of what he did; of the young man that he was; how he lived his life to the full; and how he related to others. He was a wonderful son and he will live on in our hearts forever.' Nicola added: 'Owen will always be someone special to everybody, not just ourselves. He was very selfless and a bit silly. I just know that he'd do it again even if we'd said to him not to. 'We probably wouldn't have known that this had happened had they all survived. 'They'd all be like, "For goodness sake, don't tell anyone. Oh my gosh, don't tell mums - they'll ground us forever'". Jayda Fransen - who gained notoriety when her messages were retweeted by Donald Trump - faces two trials in Northern Ireland for allegedly stirring up religious hatred The deputy leader of Britain First who was once retweeted by the US President hit out at 'trumped up' charges as she arrived in Northern Ireland today. Jayda Fransen, three of whose messages were sent out by Donald Trump, will face two separate trials in Belfast over claims she attempted to stir up religious hatred. The first set of charges against the 31-year-old relate to a 'Northern Ireland Against Terrorism' rally at Belfast City Hall on August 6 last year. But she also faces trial for posting a video online which was filmed at a peace wall in Belfast when she attended her last court hearing in the country. Before a appearance before magistrates in today, she wrote online: 'En route to Belfast, I'm due to appear in court for the second time for simply making a speech and posting a video about a peace wall! Three more trumped up charges from the corrupt British establishment!' In court, the 31-year-old was told that the she will face trial over the first set of allegations on April 6 this year. She was surrounded by followers as she entered and left Belfast Magistrates Court today Defence counsel Richard McConkey confirmed his client is pleading not guilty to both sets of charges. Around a dozen of her followers gathered in the public gallery, while five police officers provided security outside. District Judge Fiona Bagnall agreed to set aside a day for the trial over Fransen's alleged comments on August 6 last year. She ushered into the building by a man in a green bomber jacket this morning Demonstrators had gathered on the same day as a republican march organised to mark the use of internment without trial by the British Army at the height of the Troubles in 1971. Fransen faces two counts of behaviour intended to or likely to stir up hatred in connection with her attendance at that rally. Britain First leader, Paul Golding, is due to appear in court on similar charges arising from the same event. The charges include using threatening language or behaviour with intent to stir up hatred or provoke a breach of the peace, and sending menacing or grossly offensive messages by a public electronic communications network. Police claim she made anti-Islamic comments by urged people to 'rise up against the biggest threat to the entire world' in an incident posted on Britain First's Facebook page. Fransen, who is currently banned from being within 500 metres of any demonstration or procession as part of bail conditions, will face a separate trial over those allegations. The one-year-old girl who was mauled by her family's pit bull and left with life-threatening injuries has been pictured as it's revealed she is now in stable condition. Remmy Goulart was playing in the kitchen at her family's home on Brick Kiln Road in Falmouth, Massachusetts, just before 9am on Sunday when she was attacked. The pit bull terrier turned on the toddler, causing major trauma to her face. Her father, Reece Goulart, tried to pull the dog off but couldn't. One-year-old Remmy Goulart (pictured), who was mauled by her family's pit bull and left with life-threatening injuries, has reached stable condition, according to her family Remmy Goulart was playing in the kitchen at her family's home in Falmouth, Massachusetts, just before 9am on Sunday when she was attacked. The pit bull terrier turned on the toddler, causing major trauma to her face. Remmy is pictured with her father, Reece Goulart Police said Reece retrieved a pistol from a nearby room, but realized it wasn't loaded. He then grabbed a knife and started stabbing the dog (pictured) to save his daughter from its jaws, fatally wounding the animal Police said Reece retrieved a pistol from a nearby room, but realized it wasn't loaded. Reece then grabbed a knife and started stabbing the dog to save his daughter from its jaws, fatally wounding the animal. The Falmouth Fire and Rescue Department and Falmouth Police Department rushed to the home and began treating the injured girl. Remmy was transported to the Falmouth Hospital by ambulance, and subsequently airlifted to a Boston area hospital by helicopter. Shortly after the incident, Falmouth fire Lt Scott Stanbard told WBZ-TV the toddler's injuries were believed to be life-threatening. The victim's relatives later revealed to Fox 25 that Remmy had three blood transfusions and underwent an hours-long surgery overnight to repair some of the damage. The Falmouth Fire and Rescue Department rushed to the home and began treating the injured girl. She was transported to the Falmouth Hospital by ambulance, and subsequently airlifted to a Boston hospital by helicopter. Remmy is pictured with her mother, Stephenie Schauberger The victim's relatives later revealed that Remmy (left as a newborn and right) had three blood transfusions and underwent an hours-long surgery overnight to repair some of the damage Remmy will also require plastic surgeries in the the coming weeks Remmy will also require plastic surgeries in the the coming weeks. Police said the family had owned the pit bull five years and it had no known history of aggression. 'At this time, the attack appears to have been unprovoked,' police said in a statement. A GoFundMe was created to alleviate the costs of Remmy's medical expenses on her road to recovery. Police said the family had owned the pit bull five years and it had no known history of aggression A GoFundMe was created to alleviate the costs of Remmy's medical expenses on her road to recovery. Pictured are first responders at the scene of the incident By Tuesday morning, the GoFundMe account had raised more than $22,000. 'You're all so amazing,' Remmy's father, Reece, wrote on the page dubbed 'Rally for Remmy'. The child had to be airlifted (pictured) to a hospital in Boston shortly after the attack 'This family has been through a lot and we all want to be able to take financial stress away so they can focus on their beautiful baby,' the account read. By Tuesday morning, the account had raised more than $22,000 'You're all so amazing,' Remmy's father, Reece, wrote on the page dubbed 'Rally for Remmy'. 'My heart is full and I have no words. I'd die for my little girl. I can't thank you enough! I love you all,' he added. Speaking to the Boston Herald, Susan Moran, chairwoman of Falmouth's Board of Selectmen, praised the father's 'heroic efforts' to minimize the injuries to his child. Republican investigators are poring over text messages between two FBI officials who worked on the Russia probe and had an affair to see whether they were involved in media leaks in the run up to the 2016 election. Buried among the 10,000 text messages between the pair are several that make reference to specific journalists, parse articles mentioning the bureau, and include language that could indicate advance knowledge of publication of news stories. Peter Strzok, deputy head of counterintelligence at the FBI, got reassigned from the Russia probe after it was discovered he had exchanged anti-Trump messages with FBI lawyer Lisa Page, with whom he was having an affair. Stzrok got reassigned to the FBI's human resources department in August. One pair of messages came just days before the election, The Hill reported. Investigators are examining texts between Peter Strzok, deputy head of counterintelligence at the FBI, and Lisa Page (pictured) to see whether they were involved in media leaks Peter Strzok, deputy head of counterintelligence at the FBI, got reassigned from the Russia probe after it was discovered he had exchanged anti-Trump messages with FBI lawyer Lisa Page 'Article is out, but hidden behind paywall so can't read it,' Page wrote Strzok on Oct. 24, 2016. 'Wsj? Boy that was fast,' Strzok replied. Another message refers to a Washington Post article that laid out a timeline for the Hillary Clinton probe. 'Sorry, Rybicki called,' Page wrote, mentioning the FBI's chief of staff. 'Time line article in the post is super specific and not good. Doesn't make sense because I didn't have specific information to give.' Page was exposed as being the lover of Peter Strzok, deputy head of counterintelligence at the FBI, after it was discovered they exchanged anti-Trump text messages, which led him to be reassigned to the FBI's human resources department in August. Their personal text messages are being investigated by the Justice Department's inspector general and got handed over to congressional investigators. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2017. His investigators are reviewing text messages of two anti-Trump FBI officials who worked on the Russia probe Republicans have been gearing up probes of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigators, as well as those who played a role in the creation of the golden showers dossier compiled by ex British intelligence officer Christopher Steele. Democrats say the probes are an effort to distract from the probes of Russian interference in the presidential election, which President Trump, who is likely to face Mueller's investigators for questioning, has branded a 'witch hunt.' In another email reviewed by The Hill, Strzrok texted Page about an article mentioning the bureau. ''Yep, the whole tone is anti-Bu. Just a tiny bit from us,' he wrote. Page texted in response: ''Makes me feel WAY less bad about throwing him under the bus to the forthcoming CF article,' using an abbreviation that is unclear. Congressional investigators want to know whether the pair had advanced knowledge of articles that appeared, according to the paper. BLUE COLLAR: 'He's TOTALLY schlubby,' Strzok, the FBI's former deputy head of counterintelligence at the FBI, wrote of New York Times reporter Matt Apuzzo, who has produced coverage of the Russia probe Other texts show the pair endeavoring to track down New York Times reporter Matt Apuzzo, then delving into a critique of his outward presentation. 'We got a list of kids with their parents' names. How many Matt Apuzzo's (sic) could there be in DC,' Page wrote. 'Showed J a picture, he said he thinks he has seen a guy who kinda looks like that, but always really schlubby. I said that sounds like every reporter I have ever seen,' she added, before writing she believed she found his address. Strzok responded: 'He's TOTALLY schlubby. Don't you remember?' Dragon's Den star Theo Paphitis has torn into Theresa May's leadership - branding it a 'Whitehall farce'. The entrepreneur behind Ryman said the Government's shambolic performances are like 'The Thick Of It and Yes Minister all rolled into one'. And he warned that businesses are 'getting it right in the neck' thanks to soaring business rates, the plummeting pound and the apprenticeship levy. The scathing attack comes as the Prime Minister's long-awaited reshuffle turned into a shambles when senior ministers refused to be moved from their posts. She is scrambling to get back on the front foot today by appointing a fleet of women and younger faces to the junior ministerial ranks after yesterday's reshuffle was compared to 'renaming the deckchairs on the Titanic'. Theo Paphitis - the entrepreneur behind Ryman - said the Government's shambolic performances are like 'The Thick Of It and Yes Minister all rolled into one' (file pic) Speaking today, Paphitis said: 'It's a Whitehall farce, it's like The Thick Of It and Yes Minister all rolled into one, except that it's not funny any more. It's extremely sad for the businesses that have people to pay. 'It's depressing, all this self-inflicted doom and gloom. This will go down as the 'Government of depression'.' He also accused the Government of hiking taxes on high street retailers while their online rivals escape the heavy charges. He said retailers are 'getting it right in the neck' as they struggle to juggle labour costs, the apprenticeship levy, soaring business rates and the collapse in the pound. Paphitis said: 'Thirty per cent of all sales are online now, the Government can't keep taxing the same people. 'Online is not contributing in the same way as the high street, in terms of business rates and to the local community.' His outspoken attack comes as many top retailers have revealed they had very disappointing Christmas sales figures - plunging the future of some of Britain's best known high street names into doubt. Mothercare and Debenhams have both issued profit warnings, while House Of Fraser has written to landlords to ask for rent reductions and New Look has had credit insurance pulled. Theresa May, pictured with her cabinet today in No10, was accused of presiding over a hopeless government. The scathing attack comes as her long-awaited reshuffle turned into a shambles when senior ministers refused to be moved from their posts Paphitis said Government policy is 'lagging well behind the development of the retail sector globally' plunging the sector into greater uncertainty. He said: 'With very little interest shown by Government in this key economic pillar, it really does feel like retail as we know it is creeping closer and closer towards the precipice. 'We continue to watch this space carefully but are not confident of improvements and see it as the biggest risk to our high street and physical shops.' Asked why the Government has not shown any impetus in helping rejuvenate the high street, Paphitis added: 'Sometimes you have to look at the obvious: incompetence. Someone has to call it like it is.' Paphitis added the high street should 'no question' expect more administrations this year. In better news for the businessman, two of his outlets celebrated a rise in like-for-like sales in the six weeks to December 24. Ryman saw growth of 4.8 per cent and Robert Dyas 2 per cent, although Boux Avenue booked a 2.8 per cent decline. The Department for Communities and Local Government has been contacted for a comment. The village of Moravia has received a $17,278 state grant in December to update its comprehensive plan, which was created and published more than 50 years ago. With assistance from Cayuga County, the village of Moravia received the award from New York states Regional Economic Development Council program for its Moravia Climate Smart Communities Certification and Comprehensive Planning project. This project is administered through the state Department of Environmental Conservation, specifically the Climate Smart Communities Program as adaptability to climate change will be a focus in the village's new comprehensive plan. The original document was created in 1965. The county noticed the villages site plan was out of date, and the county found the grant for us, Mayor Gary Mulvaney said, adding that county staff also helped with the application. Moving forward, the county is continuing to help the village develop the new plan and work towards the Climate Smart Communities Certification, Mulvaney said. The village has a different ... board that is more progressive than it was in 1965, which is just one of many reasons the plan needs to be updated, Mulvaney said. The plan is something that the village needs to have in place if they want to apply for other grants in the future, Mulvaney explained. The plan also lays out rules and regulations that are important for new businesses that may want to come to the village. As for the businesses in the village currently, I dont think it will be a big change, Mulvany said. Although the award is for $17,278 and is a matching grant, Mulvaney is unsure of the total project cost since they just started going through all of the paperwork. The villages Planning Board, which meets at 7 p.m. on the third Monday of each month, hopes to involve the Cayuga County Department of Planning and Economic Development at their next meeting to share more information and begin moving forward, Mulvaney said. To learn more about the Climate Smart Communities Certification program visit dec.ny.gov/energy/96511.html. Britain's first cloned dog is expecting a litter of dachshund puppies - four years after being conceived in a test tube. Rebecca Bourne, 34, from Cambridgeshire, put her elderly dachshund, Winnie, forward to be cloned in a 60,000 competition organised by South Korean tech firm, Sooam Biotech. She won, and the cloned puppy, called Minnie Winnie, was conceived in a test tube and born in Seoul on March 30, 2014. Now Minnie Winnie is expecting children of her own - and the new puppies are not clones. The news comes just a year after the original Winnie died, aged 15, after being hit by a car. Rebecca Bourne (pictured with Minnie Winnie), 34, from Cambridgeshire, put her elderly dachshund, Winnie, forward to be cloned in a 60,000 competition organised by South Korean tech firm, Sooam Biotech Scans (pictured) show that Minnie Winnie is carrying at least two puppies The news comes just a year after the original Winnie (right) died, aged 15, after being hit by a car last year Mrs Bourne told The Sun: 'I can't wait to meet my Minnie Minnie Winnies. I'm over the moon. I'm sure I'll see something of Winnie in them. 'Winnie was such an enormous part of my life and I felt lost without her. 'Minnie Winnie is growing and having cravings for human food, including tacos. To know Winnie's memory lives on is so comforting.' Mrs Bourne, who featured her dogs and son Wilbur, two, in a book The Wilbies Go To The Moon, who her friend's dachshund, Otto, as the father. Scans show that Minnie Winnie is carrying at least two puppies. The process of conceiving Minnie Winnie was filmed by a television company and was aired in 2014. Mrs Bourne told The Sun : 'I can't wait to meet my Minnie Minnie Winnies. I'm over the moon. I'm sure I'll see something of Winnie in them' Dogs were first cloned in South Korea in 2005, by Sooam Biotech scientist Dr Woo Suk Hwang, but this was the first time a British dog had been reproduced. Pictured is Mrs Bourne with Minnie Winnie in 2014 The embryo was then put into a donor animal, and the resulting puppy was born by caesarean section, weighing just over 1lb Dogs were first cloned in South Korea in 2005, by Sooam Biotech scientist Dr Woo Suk Hwang, but this was the first time a British dog had been reproduced. Mrs Bourne, a caterer from west London at the time, said she read about the cloning competition and entered her 12-year-old dachshund, sending in videos of her pet. Winnie made it onto a shortlist of three, and after she won, a sample of her skin tissue was removed, and sent to South Korea in liquid nitrogen. There, the cells were put into eggs provided by a bitch of the same breed, before a spark of electricity fused the two. British quarantine restrictions meant she had to wait six months before she could bring the puppy home to meet the original Winnie Mrs Bourne, who flew to Seoul and watched the puppy being born, said it looked just like her own pet Mrs Bourne, who featured her dogs and son Wilbur, two, in a book The Wilbies Go To The Moon Pictured is Mrs Bourne's son, Wilbur, two, with Minnie Winnie, who is Britain's first cloned dog The embryo was then put into a donor animal, and the resulting puppy was born by caesarean section, weighing just over 1lb. Mrs Bourne, who flew to Seoul and watched the puppy being born, said it looked just like her own pet. British quarantine restrictions meant she had to wait six months before she could bring the puppy home to meet the original Winnie. Former NYPD officer Gilberto Valle, better known as 'the Cannibal Cop', has released an 'extremely violent' horror novel and says he hopes to make a career out of writing. The 33-year-old's new book, titled A Gathering of Evil, explores his cannibalism-themed fetish through a completely fictional plot involving sadists who kidnap two women in New York. Valle has openly defended his fetish in the years since he was acquitted of plotting to kidnap, kill and cook 100 women. The former cop made national headlines when he was convicted on charges of conspiracy to commit kidnapping in 2013 and spent 21 months in jail before a judge overturned the guilty verdict, ruling that the former cop was only indulging his sexual fantasies in a cannibalism chat room. Former NYPD officer Gilberto Valle's new book, titled A Gathering of Evil, explores his cannibalism-themed fetish through a completely fictional plot involving sadists who kidnap two women in New York 'Even though I've been completely exonerated, all this stuff about 'Cannibal Cop' is still there,' Valle told the New York Daily News on Monday. 'Writing the book comes down to me trying to find a way to make a living.' Valle's new book, which he said is 'very graphic' and 'not for everyone' went on sale last week and received a positive review from crimefeed.com. The review said that Valle was 'quite a good writer' and is 'flying his freak flag proudly'. Valle said that if the book sells well, 'there will definitely be a sequel'. The former police officer still defends his cannibalism-themed sexual fetish, saying it's something he 'didn't choose'. 'It's something that I live with and that I'm fine with,' he added. He has previously admitted to still visiting cannibalism-themed fetish sites, saying 'people don't choose the things they're aroused by'. Valle made national headlines when he was convicted on charges of conspiracy to commit kidnapping in 2013 and spent 21 months in jail before a judge overturned the guilty verdict, ruling that the former cop was only indulging his sexual fantasies in a cannibalism chat room Valle was jailed in 2012 for kidnapping conspiracy after his then wife, Kathleen Mangan (pictured right), told the authorities that he was planning to kill and eat more than 100 women, including herself In an interview with Crime Watch Daily last year, he told Chris Hanson that he had 'talked about kidnapping women, putting them in a suitcase' and 'delivering them for gang rape' 'Then killing, them, cooking them and eating them?' Hansen asked, adding, 'This isn't normal.' 'Would it matter if I was a plumber or if I was an accountant?' Valle asked, to which Hansen said: 'But you were a cop'. In 2012 Valle was fired from his job at the NYPD following his arrest and now works at a friend's construction company Valle was an NYPD policeman when he created the account 'Girlmeat Hunter' on a fetish website in 2009. Valle claimed the disturbing fantasies he detailed on the site, such as 'letting her bleed out then butcher her while she hangs', was not something he ever planned on carrying out in reality. Valle was jailed in 2012 for kidnapping conspiracy after his then wife, Kathleen Mangan, told the authorities that he was planning to kill and eat more than 100 women, including herself. She had grown suspicious of his late-night computer sessions and installed spyware on the PC, leading her to make the horrific discovery. Valle said that he was a 'very good husband' to his wife, who he is now separated from. The couple have a young child together. In a tell-all book released last year, Valle wrote about how he tried to hide his dark secret and speaks about the freedom he felt when he found an online community of like-minded people. On publisher WildBlue Press's website, Valle said: 'The issue of thought crimes is one reason I wanted to write this book.' 'Maybe a more important reason for me, personally, is the feeling that I owe it to myself and everyone who wholeheartedly believed in my innocence from the day I was arrested to finally get the accurate, true story out there.' Valle has claimed he is not alone in this desire and stated in 2016 that many women contacted him online because of his cannibal fantasy. In 2012 Valle was fired from his job at the NYPD following his arrest and now works at a friend's construction company. Cortney Bell, 24, was arrested on Saturday in Georgia on a second-degree murder charge A mother whose frantic 911 call alerted authorities to her missing newborn has been arrested three months after the baby was found dead in a duffel bag dumped in the woods. Cortney Bell, 24, was arrested on Saturday on a grand jury indictment for second-degree murder in the October death of her 15-day-old daughter, Caliyah McNabb in Newton County, Georgia. Her boyfriend Christopher McNabb, 27, was arrested and charged with murder at the time of Caliyah's death, after attempting to flee when her body was discovered. Newly released 911 call audio offers a glimpse of how the scene unfolded on the morning of October 7, when Bell said she woke up to find her newborn missing. Bell claimed Caliyah went missing after she was put back to bed following a 5am feeding inside their home at Eagle Point Trailer Park in Covington, about 40 miles southeast of Atlanta. Scroll down for audio The baby, Caliyah McNabb, was found dead in the woods near Eagle Point Trailer Park in Covington, Georgia on October 8, one day after Bell reported her missing Bell claimed Caliyah went missing after she was put back to bed following a 5am feeding inside their home at Eagle Point Trailer Park (pictured) 'My two-week-old is not in her sleeper, her passie's on the floor,' Bell tells the 911 operator. Chris McNabb was charged with murder at the time after attempting to flee Bell says she fell asleep on the couch, and that her two-year-old daughter woke her up to tell her that the newborn Caliyah was missing. 'I didn't mean to fall asleep on the couch, I set down for a minute after being up all night,' Bell says. Later, when asked where her boyfriend had been when the infant went missing, she says 'me and him woke up together'. Police immediately considered the situation suspicious and launched a massive search for baby Caliyah. Volunteers were searching a wooded area near the family home the following day, October 8, when they discovered the infant's body in a duffel bag under a log. Upon hearing that the baby's body had been discovered, McNabb allegedly jumped out of his girlfriend's car at an intersection and ran away. McNabb sports a forehead tattoo reading 'Face Up Or Lace Up', an apparent reference to the life mantra of rapper Machine Gun Kelly. Pictured here is the crime scene where the 15-day-old girl was left in a duffel bag Chris McNabb allegedly jumped out of his girlfriend's car at an intersection and ran away after he heard word that their infant daughter's body had been found in the woods Courtney Bell is seen reacting after the discovery of her infant's body Bell was taken to police headquarters where she gave a statement, and was later released - but the child's father was still missing. Cops tracked him down at a gas station car wash, where they arrested him immediately on a probation violation. Their investigation led to McNabb being charged with malice murder, felony murder, aggravated battery and concealing a death. On Friday, nearly three months after Caliyah was reported missing, a grand jury indicted Bell on charges of second-degree murder, cruelty to children and deprivation of a minor. The indictment accuses Bell of causing the baby 'cruel and excessive pain through infliction upon her of blunt force trauma to the head,' according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. McNabb is seen in court following his arrest. He is charged with malice murder, felony murder, aggravated battery and concealing a death She also allegedly failed to provide Caliyah with 'adequate supervision necessary for such child's well-being,' the indictment states. The accused baby killer was arrested the following day in the parking lot of a Home Depot in Conyers after a nearly 24-hour search. Bell appeared in court Monday morning wearing a bright pink jumpsuit and flanked by sheriff's deputies, video from the Covington News shows. She told the judge she would seek to qualify for a court-appointed lawyer, and had no questions after the judge read her the charges and her rights. Bell and McNabb are both being held without bond in Newton County Jail. They are due in court for arraignment on January 23. The grandmother of Erica Garner, who became a prominent activist after her father died when an officer got him in a chokehold, was barred from attending her funeral. Gwen Carr was not allowed inside the First Corinthian Baptist Church, when she turned up at around 5pm on Monday, resulting in an altercation outside the Harlem church. Erica, the daughter of key Black Lives Matter figure Eric Garner, died on Saturday after suffering major brain damage from a massive heart attack on Christmas Eve. Erica Garner died on Saturday after suffering a massive heart attack on Christmas Eve Gwen Carr was not allowed to attend her granddaughter's funeral, resulting in an altercation outside a Harlem church Doctors said pregnancy had put a strain on the 27-year-old's heart, which was later found to be enlarged. Carr blamed not being able to attend her daughter's funeral on her daughter-in-law, Erica's mother, Esaw 'Pinky' Garner, the New York Post reported. She explained a family rift has been building for some years saying 'she didn't want none of our family in there, on my side the Garners'. Also not permitted to attend the funeral was Erica's cousin Benjamin Lawton. 'I can't say goodbye to my cousin. This is not something that we make into a media even. This is so messed up,' he told AM New York The funeral took place at the First Corinthian Baptist Church in Harlem but Erica's cousin was said he was also barred from entering Erica became a campaigner for police accountability following her father's death The Rev. Al Sharpton, whose National Action Network helped organize the funeral, confirmed that 'Pinky' Garner was in charge of the guest list. 'We would not disrespect Gwen. We don't take sides with that,' he told the Post. He later said in a statement that the National Action Network was asked to help with the funeral by Erica's mother. 'We fulfilled the requests made by Erica's mother Esaw much like we did for Eric's mother Gwen when doing Eric's Homegoing service,' he said. 'We had nothing to do with lists, as we do not know all the members of the family, and as I stated in my eulogy of Erica, I'm not on either side of a family in a civil rights case. I am on the side of justice.' Doctors said pregnancy had put a strain on Eric Garner's heart, which was later found to be enlarged Eric Garner was strangled to death after being stopped for selling loose cigarettes in Staten Island on July 17, 2014. Officer Daniel Pantaleo (circled, left) was seen on video putting him in a chokehold Eric Garner was stopped on Staten Island for selling untaxed cigarettes and died after a white police officer subdued him with a chokehold in July 2014. A grand jury declined to indict the officer though the city agreed to pay a $6 million civil settlement. The 43-year-old's last words were 'I can't breathe' became a slogan for activists and the father-of-six's death sparked widespread protests. He had been accused of illegally selling cigarettes on a sidewalk when an officer put him in the chokehold from behind and brought him down with the help of other officers. The city medical examiner ruled Garner's death a homicide, with asthma and obesity as contributing factors. Erica Garner became a voice for police accountability after his death, criticizing Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio over policing matters. In 2016, she campaigned on behalf of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent, for president. A raging car passenger has been caught attacking traffic police officers before going on an epic rant in the middle of a busy road in east China. Ms Tian, 35, had been stopped by the officers for a regular inspection. The furious woman can be seen slapping one policeman before breaking several body cameras on two officers. She claimed they stopped her rushing to a hospital to visit her ill father. She was detained by police for obstructing public order. Ms Tian complains of being pulled over for a road inspection to the traffic police in east China (left). She snatches a body camera from a policeman and throws it on the floor (right) Footage emerged online showing Ms Tian, who was a passenger on a white mini van, gets onto the road and shouts at the police on the morning of January 8. Beijing News reported the road inspection was carried out in Mudan district of Heze city, Shandong Province. Ms Tian shouted: 'Are you still recording? My father is ill, do you know? My father is still at a hospital, do you know?' She then slapped one traffic police officer in the face and threw his body-worn camera onto the floor. Ms Tian had broken at least two body-cameras as the video shows. She then angrily slaps one officer in the face and destroys another body camera (left). The 35-year-old claims she has to rush to the hospital to visit her ill father (right) The traffic policemen refused to let her go past the road inspection although she claimed she had to rush to visit her ill father in a hospital. Heze Police Bureau confirmed in a press statement that two assistant policemen were assaulted by a 35-year-old woman, surnamed Tian. Ms Tian is detained by the police for obstructing public order act. A Chinatown worker has been filmed standing on a display of fish to reach an electricity box in a shocking breach of health and safety codes. The man was trying to gain access to the electricity box inside The Hung Kee Food Market in Manhattan's Canal Street by a horrified customer Thursday. Standing on what appeared to be red snapper with his dirty workman boots, he seemed oblivious to the problem. When confronted by the customer, he casually dismissed her concerns by saying staff would 'wash' the fish after he'd hopped down. April Davidson, who was a frequent customer, shared footage of the incident on Facebook. A Chinatown worker was filmed standing on fish inside The Hung Kee Food Market in Manhattan's Canal Street on Friday to repair an electrical box 'Help me shut this place down,' she wrote, citing the New York State Health Department. Davidson can be heard in the video shouting: 'Seriously?!' as the man stands on the fish. 'You're going to stand there on the food with your boots?' she said in disbelief. The man, suddenly aware of his faux-pas, turned to her and replied: 'No, we'll wash it.' 'Oh, you'll wash it so it's OK. Now you're going to kick it?!' she pushed on as the man tried to change his footing to avoid the produce. A market worker told Pix 11 the man was not one of their employees and had been called in to fix electrical problems. They insisted that all of the fish he stood on was thrown out afterwards. The Department of Agriculture and Markets sent inspectors to the market after being alerted to the footage. The man was oblivious to his faux-pas until it was pointed out by disgusted shoppers. He then shuffled his feet to try to avoid the fish and only stand on ice but was unsuccessful The man also left his electrical equipment on top of the fish as he worked They found more 'critical deficiencies' while visiting, a spokesman said, but they were not enough to shut the store down. They however ordered staff to display the results of the inspection for customers to see. The department did not respond to questions on whether it had followed up since then. The woman's video, however, led to thousands of complaints on the store's Yelp page. It is now flooded with photographs of the man standing on the fish along with reviews of the store as 'dirty'. This is the shocking moment a teacher was removed from a school board meeting in Louisiana after she complained about a superintendent being awarded a pay rise. Middle school language arts teacher Deyshia Hargrave addressed the board during a public comments section of the meeting about teacher salaries and pay raises. She was heard telling the board that it was a 'slap in the face' for the school superintendent to be handed a new contract that entitles him to performance-based pay rises. 'For a superintendent or any person in a position of leadership getting any type of raise, I feel like it's a slap in the face for teachers, cafeteria workers and any other support staff we have.' We work very hard with very little to maintain the salaries we have. I dont care if the performance targets are met youre making our jobs even more difficult. Were meeting those goals, while someone in that position is getting a raise? Its a sad, sad day to be a teacher,' Hargrave said to board members. When I first started teaching there was like 20 kids in a class and now there are 29 kids in a class, and we have not have been given raises. How are you going to take that money? Its basically taking it out of our pockets,' she continued. A video obtained by KATC shows her appearing to calmly ask questions of the board when she is confronted by an officer, who forces her to leave the room. A middle school language arts teacher in Louisiana was forcibly removed in handcuffs from a school board meeting Board members told Hargrave and other teachers that the meeting is to discuss the superintendents contract and not the employees' salary. 'Is it against policy to stand?' she asks as the officer grabs her arm. 'Sir, do not,' she says as he touches her. He orders Hargrave to leave the premises and she follows him out. 'She wasn't talking to you,' an audience member says. 'It was comments for the superintendent,' Hargrave continues. Deyshia Hargrave addressed the board during a public comments section of the meeting about teacher salaries and pay raises In the hallway the officer then forces Hargrave to the ground and handcuffs her. 'What are you doing?' she yells as he restrains her. He tells her to stop resisting, and she says 'I am not, you just pushed me to the floor.' 'Sir, I am way smaller than you' she cries as he pushes her out the door of the building. In the hallway the officer then forces Hargrave to the ground and handcuffs her 'Sir, I am way smaller than you' she cries as he pushes her out the door of the building Hargrave had asked several questions at the meeting, and board president Anthony Fontana said she was out of order and said that it was not a question and answer session. When she asked another question, the Abbeville city marshal on duty grabbed her and forced her out, as shown in the video. The superintendent of Vermilion Parish schools said they won't press charges against Hargrave, who is a teacher at Rene Rost Middle Schools in Kaplan, Louisiana. Boris Johnson today said the Queen is 'well capable' of taking Donald Trump in her stride as he brushed off calls to scrap the state visit. The US President is said to want to use the promised trip - which will see him hosted by the Royals - to try to 'Trumpalise' the Queen. The reports have renewed calls among some Labour MPs for the 'wretched' controversial state visit to be cancelled. But the Foreign Secretary brushed off the calls pointing out the Queen has occupants of the White House come and 'seen them go' during her 60-year reign. Speaking during Foreign Office questions in the Commons today, shadow foreign minister Liz McInnes said: 'President Trump's biographer, Michael Wolff, has said that the president's only interest in a state visit is the opportunity to, and I quote, Trumpalise the Queen. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson (pictured in the Commons today) brushed off the calls pointing out the Queen has 'seen them go' during her 60-year reign 'Trumpalise the Queen' - I have literally no idea what that means. 'But can I ask the minister to please save Her Majesty from that unpleasant-sounding ordeal and cancel this wretched visit?' Mr Johnson hit back saying the monarch - who has seen 13 US Presidents come and ago during her time in Buckingham Palace - is 'well capable' of handling Mr Trump. He replied: 'I think Her Majesty the Queen is well capable of taking this American president or indeed any American president in her stride, as she has done over six remarkable decades. 'She has seen them come and she has seen them go.' Theresa May invited Mr Trump to come to Britain for a state visit soon after he moved into the White House last January. The US President is said to want to use the promised state visit - which will see him hosted by the Royals - to try to 'Trumpalise' the Queen But the invite sparked widespread anger in this country and the police are bracing themselves for widespread protests amid predictions the demonstrations could be the biggest the UK has ever seen. The trip has been kicked into the long grass after relations between Westminster and Washington soured in recent months after Mr Trump retweeted anti-Muslim propaganda tweeted by far right group Britain First. However, he is expected to visit London next month to officially open the new US embassy in Battersea. While the visit will not be hosted by the Royals and have the pomp and ceremony afforded to a state visit, it is still likely to be hugely controversial and spark protests. Advertisement Herdsmen from China's Inner Mongolia are celebrating their bond with camels at an annual festival on snow-covered grassland. More than 200 camels today took part in the 12th Camel Cultural Fair in Sunite Right Banner, Xilingol League, which includes events such as camel race and camel beauty contest. Stunning pictures have emerged showing the Chinese herdsmen, who are ethnically Mongolian, presenting their beloved animals at the fair while wearing dazzling traditional robes. A herdsman leads camels to take part in a camel beauty contest in China's Sunite Right Banner Camel fair on January 9 More than 200 camels today took part in the 12th Camel Cultural Fair, which has camel race and camel beauty contest Chinese herdsmen, who are ethnically Mongolian, present their camels at the fair while wearing dazzling traditional robes Apparently, the camel beauty contest is held on the site of the festival as well as through internet voting. According to the authority of Sunite Right Banner, the competition is aimed to show their appreciation to the Ships of the Desert, which are an important tool of transportation as well as source of food and clothes in the region in northern China. The camels also competed in a series of races today. Adult camels took part in the 15km race while two-year-old camels attended the 8km race. Apart from the pageant, adult camels took part in the 15km race while two-year-old camels attended the 8km race A girl poses for photo with a camel in Sunite Right Banner Camel fair which celebrates the Ships of the Desert Herdsmen take a camel-sled to attend the camel fair, which is held every year on the vast grassland of China's Inner Mongolia All camels and the jockeys come from the cities of Ordos and Hulunbuir as well as the Xilingol League. Dabuxilatu, a herdsman who won the 15km race, told Xinhua News Agency: 'Camel racing on the snowfield needs courage and perseverance. 'It is a competition for the brave and also a fun sport.' The residents of Sunite Right Banner are praised as the descendants of Genghis Khan (1162-1227), the founder of Mongol Empire and one of the history's greatest warriors. It's said that Sunite was a great-great-grandson of Genghis Khan. Sunite and his clan travelled to the modern day Sunite Right Banner and settled in the region in the 13th century. All camels and the jockeys of this year's races come from the cities of Ordos and Hulunbuir as well as the Xilingol League The winner of this year's 15km race told a reporter from Xinhua that camel racing is a competition for the brave people Mother-of-one, Mykala Sampson (pictured) was arrested last month after she was allegedly found with 17-year-old boy A 22-year-old woman was arrested last month after she was allegedly found with a 17-year-old boy in her car shortly after 4am. Mother-of-one, Mykala Sampson, was parked in the vacuum area of IQ Car Wash in Owasso, Oklahoma, on December 30 when an officer on routine patrol noticed the running vehicle. According to police, the officer said no one was outside using the vacuums, which was suspicious because of the time of day and the frigid temperature. When the officer questioned Sampson and the teen, they reportedly gave conflicting stories about why they were sitting at the car wash, according to Tulsa World. Sampson told the officer that she had driven to Henryetta to pick up the teen. However, Sampson could not provide an explanation for why they were together in the middle of the night at the car wash. According to Facebook, Sampson married her husband, Michael, in October 2017. The pair have one child together When officers contacted the teen's parents, they told police their son was supposed to be staying the night with a friend, according to Tulsa World. His parents told officers that they had not authorized him to be out with Sampson. According to her Facebook, Sampson married her husband, Michael, in October 2017. Sampson was arrested for contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The teen was cited for curfew violation and released to his parents. Curfew in Owasso goes from 12am to 5am everyday. No person under 18 shall be present in any public property within those times. Owasso's curfew violation comes with a $360 fine. Sampson (pictured at her wedding) was arrested for contributing to the delinquency of a minor For far too long, our states infrastructure airports, bridges, roads, and tunnels has been paid for by our hard earned tax dollars, but built with materials and products imported from overseas. That is why I fought to pass the New York Buy American Act to bring manufacturing jobs back to upstate New York. Imports of cheap iron ore and steel of potentially questionable quality are putting American companies at a competitive disadvantage. On major infrastructure projects across the state poor quality, imported steel was used, often having to be replaced soon after. American companies and workers have continued to lose out on contracts and jobs to foreign companies. According to the Economic Policy Institute, American workers and the domestic economy have been devastated by the growth of the U.S. trade deficit with China. Between 2001 and 2011, more than 2.7 million U.S. jobs were lost or displaced. New York alone lost 158,000 jobs. Addressing this issue and bringing our jobs home is a top priority of mine, and I know it is for many of you as well. That is why earlier this year I fought to enact the New York Buy American Act, which requires state contracts of $1 million or more to use American-made iron and steel. It also includes the creation of a workgroup to study the expansion of manufactured products to include American-made concrete, cement, and aluminum. As the daughter and granddaughter of former U.S. Steel workers, supporting the New York Buy American Act was personal to me. It is about supporting American products, made by the American workers and companies. It promotes the production and use of American-made iron and steel. This ensures that New Yorks infrastructure projects will be built with materials that are safe and will stand the test of time. This important change will help drive job creation and economic development in upstate New York not overseas. We need a level playing field for American companies, one that not only relieves them of their competitive disadvantage but also stimulates an economic climate that puts American companies at a competitive advantage. The New York Buy American Act will help support American businesses, drive job creation, and ensures that our tax dollars will stay here in the United States. As state Senator, I will continue my efforts to support our local manufacturers and job creators as they work to level the playing field with foreign competitors. Pam Helming Canandaigua Helming is senator for the New York State 54th Senate District Chrystal Terry was last seen just days before Christmas leaving her home in Summerfield, Florida, around 10pm, according to a press release issued by police Tuesday A pregnant woman who went missing on December 21 has yet to be found, leaving authorities desperate for clues. Chrystal Terry was last seen just days before Christmas leaving her home in Summerfield, Florida, around 10pm, according to a press release issued by the police on Tuesday. The 40-year-old is 20 weeks pregnant and has health issues, and is said to be without any of her personal belongings including her medication, purse or cell phone. It's not clear what her health issues are, but without access to her medication she is said to be endangered. Police describe her as white with blonde hair, blue eyes and 5 feet 4 inches tall, weighing about 126 pounds. When she was last spotted before Christmas she was wearing a black tank top, orange and gray yoga pants, and white shoes, according to the press release. Anyone with information about Terry's location or well-being is encouraged to call Marion County police, or 911. A former US Army medic who pleaded guilty to a hate crime for vandalizing a Colorado mosque committed suicide over the weekend, just one day after his sentencing. Joseph Giaquinto, 36, was found dead on Saturday at a Motel 6 in Fort Collins. Police say he took his own life on Friday, one day after he was sentenced to three years in wellness court and six months of work release for throwing rocks and a Bible through the windows of the Islamic Center of Fort Collins. Prosecutors said the former Army medics actions escalated to a hate crime because they were deliberate. Former US Army medic Joseph Giaquinto, 36 (pictured left and right), who pleaded guilty to a hate crime for vandalizing a Colorado mosque, has committed suicide Hate crime: In this Sunday, March 26, 2017, still image from a video surveillance camera, Giaquinto is shown vandalizing the Islamic Center of Fort Collin near Colorado State University Police say Giaquinto took his own life at this Motel 6 in Fort Collins, Colorado, on Friday and was discovered dead the next day The defense argued Giaquinto was suffering from chronic post-traumatic stress and alcohol abuse disorders, reported The Coloradoan. His lawyer Heather Siegel said the act was a crime of location since he lived near the mosque. She said he was drunk and was later 'horrified' to learn what he had done. Giaquinto pleaded guilty on December 18, 2017, to a felony charge of criminal mischief and a misdemeanor charge of bias-motivated crime, or a hate crime. Soldier: Giaquinto was a combat medic who served eight years in Iraq and Korea The plea deal stipulated that he be sentenced to three years of wellness court, where defendants receive therapy and psychiatric treatment while under supervised probation rather than serving time in prison. The suspect's father, Michael Giaquinto, told The Coloradoan his son was a combat medic who served eight years in Iraq and Korea and moved in 2016 to Fort Collins. On March 26, 2017, police said Giaquinto threw two large rocks through windows of the Islamic Center of Fort Collins, as well as a New Testament Bible. The Bible was found among the shattered glass in the mosques prayer room. The Islamic Center's president, Tawfik Aboellail, said the man also tried to break into the mosque, but he did not get inside. Police had released surveillance footage of the crime in the hopes of identifying Giaquinto. It showed the man, wearing a hoodie, picking up a paving stone and walking away, then kicking a door. Giaquinto hurled two rocks and a Bible through the windows of this mosque, located near his home in Fort Collins, Colorado Final photo: Giaquinto is seen with his defense lawyer after sentencing at the Larimer County Justice Center on Thursday, January 4 According to an arrest affidavit, Giaquinto acknowledged damaging the mosque. Investigators said they also found items at the man's apartment that linked him to the vandalism. Aboellail, the mosque's leader, released a statement to The Coloradoan on Monday expressing condolences to Giaquinto's family. 'As our prophet taught us by example, we grieve the loss of Mr. Giaquinto's life as we sincerely hoped he would have gotten the help he needed and deserved,' Aboellail wrote. 'Our thoughts are with his family and we hope that they might find peace and comfort.' President Donald Trump is heading to Davos for the world's most elite economic conference later this month. The White House said the billionaire would attend the Swiss gathering that's taking place days before his first State of the Union address in a Tuesday statement. 'The president welcomes opportunities to advance his America First agenda with world leaders,' White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said. 'At this years World Economic Forum, the president looks forward to promoting his policies to strengthen American businesses, American industries and American workers.' President Donald Trump is heading to Davos for the world's most elite economic conference later this month The White House said the billionaire would attend the Swiss gathering that's taking place days before his first State of the Union address in a Tuesday statement 'At this years World Economic Forum, the president looks forward to promoting his policies to strengthen American businesses, American industries and American workers,' the White House said on Tuesday Executives at the conference will welcome Trump's corporate tax cut and the regulatory slashes his administration had pursued. His embrace of protectionist policies, however, has made some executives nervous. His repeated threats to withdraw from various international trade agreements has also put off foreign leaders and business chiefs. Trump did not attend last January's conference. It conflicted with his Jan. 20 inauguration. He'll just barely make it back for the State of the Union, his first, this year, if he attends the entire four-day conference from Jan. 23-26. He will deliver his agenda-setting speech to a joint session of Congress on Jan. 30. The White House's announcement on Tuesday that Trump would attend this year came as a surprise. American presidents have not typically attended the high-profile gathering of prominent economists and the world's most wealthy CEOs, financiers and hedge fund heads. According to the Washington Post, Trump will be the first U.S. president to make an appearance in Davos nearly 20 years. Bill Clinton was the most recent U.S. leader to attend. This year, the 48th annual forum, will tackle the challenge of 'Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World.' More than 3,000 people from 100 countries are expected to participate in the conference that will give Trump, whose assets are in a trust while he runs the country, an opportunity to rub elbows with the global, business elite. The White House did not say who might accompany him to the conference, but the chief architects of his tax cut plan, economic adviser Gary Cohn, an ex-investment banker, and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, a former hedge funder, are two White House officials who could join him. Both men are expected to leave the administration early this year to return to their previous occupations. Ann Widdecombe has faced a backlash after labelling Meghan Markle 'trouble' and saying she is 'uneasy' about the American actress joining the royal family. The Celebrity Big Brother contestant said in a discussion with housemates that she is concerned about the 'background' and 'attitude' of Prince Harry's fiancee. She was speaking with Mail On Sunday columnist Rachel Johnson on the Channel 5 show while having make-up applied by Made in Chelsea star Ashley James. Celebrity Big Brother contestant Ann Widdecombe (left) was having make-up applied by Made in Chelsea star Ashley James (right) when she made the comments about Meghan Markle Former MP Miss Widdecombe (left) said in a discussion with housemates that she is concerned about the 'background' and 'attitude' of Prince Harry's fiancee The 70-year-old outspoken former MP put her hand up and said: 'I think she's trouble' The 70-year-old outspoken former MP put her hand up and said: 'I think she's trouble', before Johnson asked her why. She replied: 'Background, attitude, I worry.' Johnson said: 'She's older than him, she's been married before.' And Miss Widdecombe continued: 'Yes, I add it all up and I am uneasy, but there we go.' Prince Harry, 33, and Suits actress Meghan, 36, announced their engagement last November and are set to be married on May 19 at St George's Chapel in Windsor. Some Twitter users were unimpressed with her remarks. One tweeted: 'A rather silly bigoted statement; makes one wonder what background she comes from anyways.' Miss Widdecombe's negative reaction to Meghan was in stark contrast to that of Brixton after her visit there with Prince Harry yesterday (above) left the neighbourhood buzzing Another posted on Twitter yesterday: 'Quite a controversial opinion Ann's got there.' Other housemates this year include Love Island star Jonny Mitchell, Jess Impiazzi from Ex On The Beach and The Apprentice hopeful Andrew Brady. Miss Widdecombe's negative reaction to Meghan was in stark contrast to that of Brixton after her visit there left the London neighbourhood buzzing with excitement. Harry and his bride-to-be visited the studios of community radio station Reprezent FM yesterday as hundreds of people lined the streets to welcome the couple. Former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio said Tuesday that he will run for the U.S. Senate seat in Arizona being vacated by the retiring Jeff Flake. The controversial lawman whom Donald Trump pardoned last year following a federal conviction for criminal contempt in a racial profiling case. Dubbed 'America's toughest sheriff,' he was best known for running a 'tent city' jail in Arizona's populous Maricopa County, and for targeting suspected illegal immigrants for arrest. Arpaio tweeted Tuesday: 'I am running for the U.S. Senate from the Great State of Arizona, for one unwavering reason: to support the agenda and policies of President Donald Trump in his mission to Make America Great Again.' Arpaio will seek the Senate seat currently held by Republican Jeff Flake, who has said he won't run for re-election. Joe Arpaio said Tuesday that he will run for the U.S. Senate 'to support the agenda and policies of President Donald Trump in his mission to Make America Great Again' Arpaio (pictured last summer) is running for a soon-to-be-vacant U.S. Senate seat in his native Arizona after Jeff Flake retires The 85-year-old former sheriff campaigned openly with Trump in Arizona and Iowa during the 2016 primary and general election seasons, and spoke at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio Arpaio, who campaigned for Trump in 2016, was convicted by a judge who ruled he had willfully violated a 2011 injunction barring his officers from stopping and detaining Latino motorists solely on suspicion that they were in the country illegally. The former sheriff was facing up to six months in prison after he admitted to inadvertently disobeying the court order. But he said the prosecution was a politically motivated attempt by the Obama administration to undermine his re-election bid in the race for sheriff. The White House steered clear of saying Tuesday whether the president will support Arpaio or campaign for him. 'As you know, I can't comment on the specifics of any election, voicing support for any candidate in a race like that,' press secretary Sarah Sanders said. 'I'm not going to weigh into the details of that race, or make comments on something that will affect that run.' One man who did weigh in about the Arpaio candidacy was Sen. Flake. 'Write about it fast because it wont last long, he told reporters at the U.S. Capitol. Arpaio said in December that he was 'seriously, seriously, seriously considering running.' Arpaio, dubbed 'America's toughest sheriff,' was known for running outdoor 'tent city' jails that subjected inmates to intense heat and active work schedules Arpaio changed his Twitter avatar and banner graphic on Tuesday to reflect his new campaign The 85-year-old said he would not enter the race for a House seat made available when Rep. Trent Franks resigns in January for asking staffers to be surrogate mothers for his child. While buying meat at a Deli counter in December, he told a Daily Beast reporter : 'No, I would not consider Franks' seat, but I am considering running for the Senate, Flake's seat. I feel like I just gave you a little scoop there.' He faces stiff competition for the seat in the form of Kelli Ward, a former state senator who already has significant financial backing for a re-run. Trump pardoned controversial Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio (above) who was convicted of federal contempt of court last year Trump said in the statement pardoning Arpaio: 'Arpaios life and career, which began at the age of 18 when he enlisted in the military after the outbreak of the Korean War, exemplify selfless public service 'Throughout his time as Sheriff, Arpaio continued his lifes work of protecting the public from the scourges of crime and illegal immigration.' Sheriff Joe Arpaio is now eighty-five years old, and after more than fifty years of admirable service to our Nation, he is worthy candidate for a Presidential pardon.' Arpaio, who lost a bid for re-election in Arizonas Maricopa County in November after 24 years in office, was known for his crackdown on undocumented immigrants and investigating unfounded Trump-supported claims questioning former President Barack Obamas citizenship. Before Trump granted the pardon, the American Civil Liberties Union, which sought the court injunction against Arpaio, said it would be 'a presidential endorsement of racism.' Jeffrey Bevan, 50, and wife Samantha (pictued outside court today), 52, allegedly managed to transfer the money from the official Bermudan government account to their own A husband and wife laundered 2.5million from the Bermudan government to fund their luxury lifestyle complete with cars and additional homes. Jeffrey Bevan, 50, and wife Samantha, 52, allegedly managed to transfer the money from the official Bermudan government account to their own. They used the cash to buy Mercedes cars and properties in Newport, Swansea, Glasgow and Nottingham between March 2011 and February 2014, the court heard. The married couple, Mr Bevan an accountant and his wife a former headteacher, are also accused of using money to pay off their mortgage. Their friend Joel Ismail, 42, and financial advisor Paul Charity, 52, are also in the dock accused of taking part in the fraud. A jury was sworn in today at Cardiff Crown Court with the trial, which could last up to eight weeks, is expected to start tomorrow. Judge Michael Fitton QC said: 'This case involves allegations of fraud arising from work for the Bermuda Government and the purchase of properties, not just in South Wales but elsewhere.' Their friend Joel Ismail (pictured left), 42, and financial advisor Paul Charity (right), 52, are also in the dock accused of taking part in the fraud The couple were arrested following a four-year international police investigation, involving the Bermuda Police Service and Regional Organised Crime Unit. Mr and Mrs Bevan, of Cwmbran, near Newport, south Wales, collectively deny thirteen counts of converting criminal property and three counts of transferring criminal property. Ismail and Charity, both of Leicester, deny converting criminal property. Charity also denies perverting the course of justice after allegedly deleting emails to hide them from investigating police officers. All four were granted bail. The hearing continues. The couple were arrested following a four-year international police investigation, involving the Bermuda (island pictured) Police Service and Regional Organised Crime Unit A Turkish gym has won the hearts of a nation by offering Syrian refugee, 12, a free lifetime membership after a photo of him staring through its window went viral. Muhammet Halit was seen wearing sandals and carrying his shoe polishing gear gazing longingly at the equipment inside in the southeastern province of Adiyaman in a photograph that swept around Turkey. The owner of the gym saw the picture and offered the boy, who works as a shoe polisher, an all-access pass to use the facility. Muhammet Halit was seen gazing longingly at the equipment inside in the southeastern province of Adiyaman in a photograph that swept around Turkey. He is pictured here wearing sandals and carrying his shoe polishing gear Muhammet fled the brutal civil war in Syria and was pictured with the gym owner Engin Dogan. The owner told Hurriyet News: 'A boy, looking through the gym window, wearing slippers in the middle of winter and carrying his backpack. 'Our aim was to find him and offer him a lifetime membership here. And, we did it. He is one of our members now.' The two posed up for a photograph together inside the fitness centre and Muhammet was pictured using the weights machines. The youngster was thrilled when reporters came down to the gym to interview the proprietor and his newest member. Here he is pictured on the weights The youngster was thrilled when reporters came down to the gym to interview the proprietor and his newest member. 'He found me and helped me,' the teenager told the Turkish news outlet. 'I had always dreamed of losing weight and now I believe I can do that by working out.' Radio 4 You and Yours presenter Winifred Robinson has been taken off air by the BBC after tweeting her views on the corporation and equal pay. 'Equal pay for equal work - it's the law,' she posted, while expressing support for Carrie Gracie, who on Monday resigned as the BBC's China editor. Robinson's programme on Tuesday concentrated - without her at the helm - on the issue of gender pay following Gracie's decision to relinquish her role. It is not expected that Winifred Robinson will be absent from the You and Yours presenter's chair for long Several of the BBC's leading female presenters including Gabby Logan, Clare Balding, Emily Maitlis and Kirsty Wark have expressed support for Carrie Gracie (left). The gender pay row which is engulfing the BBC has now made its way to parliament As the BBC grapples with the resignation of its China editor Carrie Gracie over the gender pay gap, it is trying to cut the salaries of some of its male stars to make things more even. Newsreader Huw Edwards (pictured) is earning 600,000 a year She left her position in China citing pay inequality with male international editors earning more than her. The journalist, 55, who was paid 135,000-a-year, quit with a scathing 1,400-word open letter on her blog declaring 'enough is enough' and accusing the corporation of widespread discrimination. Robinson in her tweets linked to Gracie's letter explaining her resignation decision, in one post commenting: 'What a mess to lose her from that post'. The BBC confirmed it had replaced Robinson because of impartiality issues, but a spokesman confirmed she would return to the show on Wednesday. The corporation is under increasing pressure over gender pay - its director-general Tony Hall has been asked to appear before MPs for a grilling about the issue. The Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee extended the invitation to Lord Hall so it can question him over the broadcasters progress in narrowing pay disparities since last year. Could Carrie Gracie take BBC to tribunal? The equalities watchdog is to investigate the BBC over Carrie Gracie's claims of unlawful pay discrimination against women. In her resignation, China editor Miss Gracie claimed the Corporation was 'breaking equality law' and had made a 'botched' attempt to address the gender pay gap. The Equality and Human Rights Commission last night issued a stern warning to the broadcaster over its treatment of women, demanding to see information on its pay policy and the facts of Miss Gracie's case. A spokesman for the watchdog added: 'We will consider whether further action is required based on this information.' And the commission also warned that the duty to report on gender pay gaps brought in last April was likely to expose more instances of unequal pay. Advertisement It is understood that Robinson has only been taken off air for Tuesday's edition of the consumer affairs show only - and will resume presenting the programme according to the Radio 4 schedule. Robinson is among many BBC workers who have tweeted their support for Gracie. The corporation is now embroiled in a censorship after it emerged that other journalists who tweeted support for Gracie have also been blocked from presenting on-air segments relating to the pay row. Some of the most well know names in the corporation have tweeted their support for Gracie, including Today presenter Mishal Husain and Newsnight host Evan Davis - many are using the hashtag #istandwithcarrie. In addition more than 130 female employees at the BBC signed a statement expressing their wholehearted support for the former China editor and calling for action to ensure equal pay for equal jobs. Gracie's resignation on Tuesday also led to an urgent question in the House of Commons on Tuesday over accusations of unfair pay at the BBC. New Culture Secretary Matthew Hancock, told MPs the BBC should "uphold and be a beacon for British values of fairness including equal pay for equal jobs". It also emerged on Tuesday that the BBC has asked newsreader Huw Edwards to cut his near-600,000 salary as it scrambles to fend off a legal row over the gender pay gap. On a day of chaos: Miss Gracie's resignation dominated Radio 4's Today programme but, as a presenter on the show, she was not allowed to discuss it; The Equality and Human Rights Commission said it could take action if the broadcaster had broken the law; The BBC admitted a long-awaited report into presenter pay had been hit by delays; Scores of high-profile women including Scottish first minister Nicola Sturgeon backed Miss Gracie; Former Countryside presenter Miriam O'Reilly said that BBC's male execs 'don't like to be challenged by women who won't back down' in equal pay row O' Reilly accused the corporation of discriminating against women and urging staff to fight for equal wages. In a series of furious tweets, the 60-year-old claimed male staff at the BBC 'don't like to be challenged by women'. O'Reilly, who won a landmark ageism tribunal against the BBC in 2010, also claimed bosses 'dont like women who win'. Lena Dunham (pictured at the HBO Golden Globes after party on Sunday) sparked controversy this weekend by showing up to a Times Up event, even though she wasn't involved in the movement Lena Dunham has found herself mired in controversy yet again, after she was pictured attending a Times Up event this weekend - despite the fact that she hasn't been involved in the movement. The Girls creator posted a picture from the event to Instagram, showing her posed at the fringe of a group of more than two dozen actresses and activists involved in the movement. 'Humbled to stand alongside these amazing women and say #TIMESUP on systemic oppression, underrepresntation, discrimination, abuse and violence in all industries,' she captioned the image. Dunham's attendance at the event was questioned by many on social media, who pointed out how she publicly questioned a rape claimant back in November. 'I support this initiative and the fight for gender justice and am really glad that the movement is growing. I however am perplexed by the inclusion of Lena Dunham, a woman who publicly accused a young sexual assault survivor of color, Aurora Perrineau, of lying about her assault,' one Instagram user wrote. The Girls creator posted this picture from the event to Instagram, showing her posed at the fringe of a group of more than two dozen actresses and activists involved in the movement Tessa Thompson, one of the actresses who attended the event, agreed, saying Dunham's presence at the party was surprising for many. 'Lena was not anywhere present in our group during the countless hours of work for the last two months. We hosted an open house for actresses for red carpet messaging and Lena presence was a surprise to us all,' the Thor: Ragnarok star wrote on Instagram, responding to one criticism. That comment prompted Dunham to speak out to IndieWire, in which she confirmed she was not part of the months of planning that went into the movement. Tessa Thompson, one of the actresses involved in the movement, commented on Instagram that 'Lena's presence was a surprise to us all' Thompson later issued a public apology, saying she in 'no way' wanted to' 'diminish Lena Dunham and her work, her voice, and her importance' 'I was honored to be invited to the meeting by a close friend and to observe the work that these amazing women have been doing the past few months,' she said. 'For highly personal reasons, I've been unable to join previous efforts but being asked to be a part of this celebratory moment was truly beautiful. I've worked with Tessa and respect her artistry and admire her consistent candor,' Dunham added. On Tuesday, Thompson backtracked, issuing a statement saying she regretted her criticisms of Dunham. 'I sometimes lack finesse in navigating social media. Hard to discuss issues with nuance there. 'A response I made to comments on an Instagram became fodder for a piece that I believe was designed to create conflict where there isn't any. It's perhaps more complex than that. 'But I, in no way, want to diminish Lena Dunham and her work, her voice, and her importance. We have spoken and she knows my heart. The Girls star's attendance at the event was called out by many on social media, since she recently publicly doubted a rape claimant So Lena Dunham doesnt help out with the #timesup movement but she shows up for the photo ops! Tessa Thompson spills the tea and yall want Tessa to apologize? pic.twitter.com/kvmjsfILGE TV Rants (@RantsandTV) January 9, 2018 'I feel a responsibility to women that have sometimes felt ignored, dismissed, and underrepresented. They are my beacons. 'I regret that my words were misinterpreted to distract from the most important thing: The Time's Up campaign is for everyone, in all capacities, contributions big and small. It doesn't belong to any one. It is for us all,' she wrote. Many were surprised by Dunham's presence at the event since she had recently come under fire for defending one of her Girls writers, Murray Miller, who has been accused of raping actress Aurora Perrineau. In November, Dunham and her writing partner Jenni Konner released a joint statement in support of Miller, and throwing Perrineau's claims into question. 'While our first instinct is to listen to every womans story, our insider knowledge of Murrays situation makes us confident that sadly this accusation is one of the 3% of assault cases that are misreported every year,' they said in a statement. In November, Dunham issued a statement defending her Girls writer Murray Miller (left) and questioning the claims of Aurora Perrineau (right) who has accused him of rape The backlash was swift, with many calling Dunham -a self-professed feminist - a hypocrite. Just a few months before that, Dunham had even written a tweet talking about how women should be believed in these instances. 'Things women do lie about: what they ate for lunch. Things women don't lie about: rape,' she wrote in August. Just a day after coming out to defend Miller, Dunham issued a new statement, apologizing for their initial defense. 'As feminists, we live and die by our politics, and believing women is the first choice we make every single day when we wake up. Therefore, I never thought I would issue a statement publicly supporting someone accused of sexual assault, but I naively believed it was important to share my perspective on my friend's situation as it has transpired behind the scenes over the last few months. 'I now understand that it was absolutely the wrong time to come forward with such a statement and I am so sorry. We have been given the gift of powerful voices and by speaking out we were putting our thumb on the scale and it was wrong. We regret this decision with every fiber of our being,' the statement read. A hammer-wielding attacker with a 'cone of red hair' has been arrested for beating a man to death outside a San Diego McDonald's. Greg Jennings, 50, is accused of launching the shocking attack at a bus stop outside the fast food restaurant on Monday night. Passengers on a bus which was preparing to stop there say they witnessed it and cried in disbelief as he beat the unidentified victim relentlessly. Some witnesses first described Jenning as wearing a Santa Claus hat. When police arrested him, they learned they had mistaken his hair for the hat. The attack took place on Monday at 6.15pm at this bus stop next to a McDonald's in San Diego By the time authorities arrived at the scene, the beaten man had lost consciousness. They performed CPR but he was declared dead not long after paramedics arrived. Jennings was arguing with the man, according to San Diego Police Department, and launched the attack quickly. He delivered a string of quick-fire blows to the victim's face and head before he was arrested, they said. It is not known what they were fighting over or if they knew one another. Witnesses on a bus watched as it pulled up to this bus stop where they say Jennings (not pictured) was beating the man with a hammer He was booked into the San Diego County Jail on Tuesday on a single murder charge. Victims told The San Diego Tribune the scene was 'traumatizing'. 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In handing down her verdict on Tuesday, a federal judge in Tampa said she has to protect the public - while hoping Brandon Russell doesn't fall in with the wrong group of people while in prison. 'It's a difficult case,' said US District Judge Susan Bucklew to the defendant, who wore orange jail garb. 'You seem like a very smart young man.' Russell, 22, is a member of the Florida National Guard and a dual citizen of both the US and The Bahamas. He pleaded guilty in September to possession of an unregistered destructive device and improper storage of explosive materials. This was his first arrest, something the judge took into account during sentencing. The case came to light in May 2017, when Tampa police were called to an apartment north of downtown. There, they found two dead men. A roommate of one of the men sat outside in fatigues, crying. That turned out to be Russell. A fourth roommate, Devon Arthurs, was arrested soon after and charged with shooting and killing Andrew Oneschuk, 18, and Jeremy Himmelman, 22. Russell wasn't charged in his roommates' killings, and Arthurs said Russell had nothing to do with the deaths. Scroll down for video The case came to light in May 2017, when Tampa police were called to this apartment for reports of a fatal shooting and later found Russell's bomb-making equipment, along with Neo-Nazi propaganda Among the items seized from the home was a framed photo of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh (pictured) But while detectives investigated, they discovered a stash of highly explosive materials in the apartment, and a cache of Neo-Nazi signs, posters, books and flags. Russell was in the Florida National Guard and had attended the University of South Florida. Investigators later found that Russell and Arthurs were co-founders of Atomwaffen Division, a Neo-Nazi group. Atomwaffen is German for 'atomic weapon.' On Tuesday, prosecutors showed a photo of Russell's car, which had flyers that said, 'Don't prepare for exams, prepare for a race war.' Russell's roommate and co-founder of the Neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division Devon Arthurs (pictured) has been charged with shooting and killing their two other roommates Russell also kept a photo of domestic terrorist Timothy McVeigh in his room and read books like Mein Kampf and The Thurner Diaries. An FBI agent testified that both are reading staples of white supremacist extremists. But the case got stranger as investigators probed. Arthurs allegedly told detectives he killed his roommates for teasing him about his recent conversion to Islam. He also said he killed his roommates to thwart a terrorist attack by Atomwaffen. He claimed Russell had materials in the house 'to kill civilians and target locations like power lines, nuclear reactors, and synagogues,' prosecutors said. 'I prevented the deaths of a lot of people,' Arthurs said in a rambling statement. Asked why his roommates would plan such an attack, he responded, 'Because they want to build a Fourth Reich.' While stressing that Russell had nothing to do with the deaths, defense attorney Ian Goldstein said his client has accepted responsibility and that he wants to move forward with his life. Arthurs allegedly told detectives he killed Jeremy Himmelman, 22 (left) and Andrew Oneschuk, 18 (right) for teasing him about his recent conversion to Islam He called Russell's mother, who said the young man was diagnosed as being on the autism spectrum and for having attention deficit disorder since he was young. 'He was always looking for something to belong to,' said a tearful Brigiite Chantalle Russell-Hilts. Prosecutors asked the judge to sentence Russell to 11 years in prison, significantly more than the federal guidelines called for. They said Russell's behavior between the time his roommates were found dead and when he was arrested - he went to another Atomwaffen member's house, then bought guns and drove to South Florida - indicated his propensity for violence. Prosecutor Josephine Thomas noted that 'there have been other violent incidents in this country where people are claiming allegiance to Atomwaffen.' When asked about this later, she declined to give specifics. Goldstein maintained his client was traumatized by the deaths of his roommates and already suffered from mental issues. Prosecutors, he said, wanted to lock Russell up longer 'solely because of the things he believes.' Although he admitted to having the bomb-making materials, there was no evidence he intended to use them against anyone, Goldstein asserted. 'Put him in jail for 11 years and he's going to get out and be a young, angry, untreated man,' he said, suggesting that the judge sentence him to 2 1/2 years in prison. 'The longer sentence you impose, the worse outcome you'll have. He'll be in prison with other people who believe the same things.' In a court filing Sunday, prosecutors said Russell drew a diagram of how to make an explosive in a letter he apparently intended to deliver to another 'Atomwaffen Division' member outside jail. The FBI obtained copies of other letters in which Russell drew plans for an 'Airborne Leaflet Dropping Device' showing Nazi propaganda falling from the sky, prosecutors said. 'In one letter, Russell attached a blurb about a 16-year-old Nazi who in 1962 told a judge, "I don't care HOW long you put me in jail, your Honor, ... as soon as I get out, I will go right back to fight for my White Race and my America!"' When summoned forward for sentencing, Judge Bucklew asked the young man if he had anything to say. 'I'm sorry for what I have done,' Russell said in a soft voice. 'I take responsibility for what if have done.' A newly released Senate committee transcript reveals that Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson was disposed to believe the salacious golden showers claim in the Trump dossier because Russians have cameras in 'all the luxury hotel rooms.' But he took efforts during testimony to protect sources for the dossier, and his lawyer claimed during his client's testimony that a source had been killed as a result of publication. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California on Tuesday unilaterally released the previously sealed transcript of Simpson, a former Wall Street Journal reporter who spoke to the Senate Intelligence Committee. Simpson relayed how he came to hire former British intelligence officer Chris Steele, with whom he had worked previously and said it was Steele's decision to bring material he uncovered to the FBI in the summer of 2016. Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson. The firm continues its research into Trump and Russia, according to a report He told investigative lawyers that he found Steele's memos 'really serious and really credible' both because of Steele's reputation and his own prior reporting on the Russians and their work with western lobbyists. With respect to the salacious and unproven claim about Donald Trump's conduct in a Moscow hotel room during the Miss Universe pageant, Simpson said he didn't have any 'additional facts' beyond what Steele included in the dossier without verification. 'I mean, it's probably in here somewhere actually, but it's well known in intelligence circles that the Russians have cameras in all the luxury hotel rooms and there are memoirs written about this by former Russian intelligence agents I could quote you,' Simpson told the committee. 'So the problem of kompromat and kompromating is just endemic to east-west intelligence work. So that's what I'm referring to. That's what he's referring to,' he said. Simpson defended the dossier, and was asked about a portion relating to Donald Trump's trip to Moscow About nine hours into Simpson's grilling, his attorney, Josh Levy, objected to questioning about a source and said that someone had been 'killed' after the the publication of the dossier. Buzzfeed published it in January, 2017. 'It's a voluntary interview, and in addition to that he wants to be very careful to protect his sources. Somebody's already been killed as a result of the publication of this dossier and no harm should come to anybody related to this honest work,' Levy said. Earlier, Simpson expressed his own concerns about revealing information that could endanger someone. One salacious and unverified claim dealt with Donald Trump's alleged conduct in a Moscow hotel room The unverified incident described in the dossier was at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Moscow 'There are some things I know that I just don't feel comfortable sharing because obviously it's been in the news a lot lately that people who get in the way of the Russians tend to get hurt,' he said. Neither Simpson or his lawyer offered any information during the testimony on a specific person who had been killed as a result of the dossier. There were reports in 2016 about a string of Russian diplomats who turned up dead, including ambassadors to Greece and India and Russia's ambassador to the UN. A diplomat at the Russian consulate in New York was found dead on election day. At another point, when asked about which employees and associates of the firm worked on researching Trump, Levy said he would convey the information but did not want it to be part of a transcript. 'I just want to make sure that employees involved in this matter are protected. We've had death threats come to the company,' he said. Simpson said it was Steele's idea to bring what he found to a contact he had at the FBI. 'He said he was professionally obligated to do it. Like if you're a lawyer and, you know, you find out about a crime, in a lot of countries you must report that. So it was like that,' Simpson said. Fusion GPS hired ex-British intelligence officer Christopher Steele Simpson defended the credibility and reliability of ex MI6 agent Christopher Steele 'Chris said he was very concerned about whether this represented a national security threat and said he wanted to -- he said he thought we were obligated to tell someone in government, in our government about this information,' Simpson said. 'He thought from his perspective there was an issue -- a security issue about whether a presidential candidate was being blackmailed.' After a delay of Months, Steele heard back from the FBI, meeting with an agent in Rome. Simpson says Steele told him the FBI had a source within the Trump campaign. 'Essentially what he told me was they had other intelligence about this matter from an internal Trump campaign source and that - that they -- my understanding was that they believed Chris at this point -- that they believed Chris's information might be credible because they had other intelligence that indicated the same thing and one of those pieces of intelligence was a human source from inside the Trump organization,' he said. After the Oct. 31 publication of a New York Times story which stated the FBI had not proved any collusion with the Trump campaign, Steele backed off his cooperation, Simpson said. 'Sometime thereafter the FBI -- I understand Chris severed his relationship with the FBI out of concern that he didn't know what was happening inside the FBI and there was a concern that the FBI was being manipulated for political ends by the Trump people and that we didn't really understand what was going on. So he stopped dealing with them,' he said. Simpson had done previous work reporting on Paul Manafort's work on behalf of a pro-Russia Ukrainian president. Manafort went on to chair Trump's presidential campaign Feinstein said in a statement as she released the Judiciary Committee transcript: 'The innuendo and misinformation circulating about the transcript are part of a deeply troubling effort to undermine the investigation into potential collusion and obstruction of justice.' She added: 'The only way to set the record straight is to make the transcript public.' Feinstein put out the transcript without consent of GOP Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, who last week, with fellow Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina provided a criminal referral of Steele matter to the FBI for prosecution. Both actions highlight the breakdown of bipartisan cooperation on the panel. Grassley spokesman Taylor Foy called the release 'totally confounding,' saying: 'Her action undermines the integrity of the committee's oversight work and jeopardizes its ability to secure candid voluntary testimony relating to the independent recollections of future witnesses. However Simpson ultimately wanted the transcript released, and also wants the House Intelligence panel to release his testimony. Fusion GPS continues to probe ties between President Trump and Russia, according to a new report. Simpson finds himself caught in the crosshairs as Republican congressional committees probe the origins of the dossier and his firm's role in its creation in addition to simultaneously representing other clients like a Russian lawyer who attended an infamous 2016 Trump Tower meeting withDonald Trump Jr. Simpson says Steele decided to bring his findings to the attention of the FBI. Former FBI director Robert Mueller was later named special counsel and picked up the bureau's Russia probe The dossier compiled by ex-British intelligence officer Christopher Steele remains an area of intense scrutiny in Congress. Republicans want to know if it formed the basis of the FBI's Russia probe, although there have been reports that it was other strands of information that got things started, including information revealed by a foreign policy advisor to the Trump campaign about Russian dirt on Hillary Clinton that made its way back to the FBI. Even with all the unwelcome attention, Fusion GPS' work on Russia work continues, the New York Times reported. The paper wrote that it continues to explore ties between Trump and Russia, citing several people briefed on its research. Simpson's firm began conducting opposition research on Trump after getting hired by the conservative Washington Free Beacon. After Trump won the Republican primary, it took payment from the Perkins Coie law firm on behalf of the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. The dossier, which Simpson has described as more of a series of memos, went on to describe a web of relationships between Trump associates and Russians, as well as an infamous unverified passage about Trump's supposed conduct in a Moscow hotel room. Fusion attorney Theodore J. Boutrous Jr. says the firm now has a legal defense fund and that its legal fees have spiraled. Fusion, in a statement to the Times, defended the firm's work which anti-Putin crusader William Browder has described as smears for hire. 'We collect facts, Fusion said in a statement. 'Occasionally, the facts turn out to be helpful to people we deplore, like Vladimir Putin, or undermine people for whom we have considerable sympathy, like William Browder,' who pushed for the Magnitsky Act sanctions. Said Browder of Simpson: 'Hes a professional smear campaigner and liar for money. The credibility of anything that he does is in question.' President Trump said Tuesday that he'd 'beat Oprah' if talk show host Oprah Winfrey faced off against him in the 2020 presidential election.' 'Oprah would be a lot of fun. I know her very well. I did one of her last shows ... I like Oprah,' the president told reporters at the White House. Trump added, 'I don't think she's going to run.' The prospect of a Trump-Winfrey presidential match was also brought up at Tuesday's press briefing, with Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders being asked if she had any campaign advice to share with the talk show queen. 'I'm not going to focus on anyone's campaign other than President Trump's re-election,' the press secretary said. 'I'm sure if she decides to run, which I think the president states he doesn't feel she will, I'm sure she'll have help with that.' Scroll down for video President Trump talked about a potential Oprah Winfrey rivalry in 2020 at the White House Tuesday, saying he didn't expect the talk show host to run, but suggested he would beat her and win re-election Oprah Winfrey's Golden Globes speech on Sunday night opened the door to rumors that she might be interested in a presidential run President Trump (left) said of Oprah Winfrey (right) that he knows the talk show host 'very well' and pointed out to reporters that he had done one of her last shows. Here the duo pose for a picture in January 1988 Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders wouldn't say whether Oprah Winfrey was qualified to be president, instead anticipating that the two of them would see very differently on policy issues Huckabee Sanders wouldn't say one way or another if she thought Winfrey was qualified, though to that question the press secretary anticipated disagreeing with Oprah on policy. Winfrey was a popular surrogate for President Obama. 'Is she a successful individual?' Absolutely,' Huckabee Sanders said. 'But in terms of where she stands on a number of positions, I would find a lot of problems with that.' 'But that would be something she would have to determine and lay out if she made a decision to run and what the campaign would look like,' Trump's spokeswoman said. Trump and Huckabee Sanders' assessments came on the heels of Winfrey's best friend Gayle King telling audiences on CBS This Morning, the show she co-hosts, that the queen of talk is 'intrigued' by the idea of running for president. 'I don't think she is actively considering it, I don't think she is actively considering it at this time,' King said. Presidential rumors ramped up after Winfrey gave a powerful speech at the Golden Globes Sunday night, proclaiming 'a new day is on the horizon.' 'And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men fighting hard to make sure they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say, "Me too," again,' Oprah announced from onstage of the glitzy Los Angeles ceremony, where Hollywood's women wore black to symbolically speak out against sexual harassment ans assault. President Trump (left), seen in this photo from November 2001 with Oprah Winfrey (right), said she'd be a lot of fun to run against, but said he thought she wouldn't jump in the 2020 race On Tuesday, bestie Gayle King said the queen of talk wasn't 'actively considering' seeking the White House Directly after the speech, her longtime partner Stedman Graham added fuel to the fire by telling the Los Angeles Times a presidential run isn't totally out. 'It's up to the people,' Graham said. 'She would absolutely do it.' Two unnamed pals of Winfrey's added to the speculation by telling CNN Money that the longtime talk show host is 'actively thinking' about a bid. The White House has already chimed in on Monday, welcoming Winfrey as a potential Trump rival. 'We welcome the challenger, whether it be Oprah Winfrey or anybody else,' Deputy Press Secretary Hogan Gidley told reporters aboard Air Force One. Last fall, Winfrey had said she has no intention of running for political office. On Tuesday, King suggested that her best friend's viewpoint remained unchanged. 'No, I absolutely don't think that her position has changed, I don't,' King told her CBS This Morning co-hosts, who were grilling her on the topic. 'I was up talking to her very late last night,' King added. 'I do think this though guys, I do think she's intrigued by the idea, I do think that,' King continued. 'I also know that after years of watching the Oprah show, you always have the right to change your mind,' the CBS anchor added. King noted that there are already people lining up to be Winfrey's campaign manager and volunteers for a potential bid. 'She loves this country and would like to be of service in some way,' King said. King also explained that Graham had misheard the question presented to him by the Los Angeles Times, thinking the reporter had asked 'would she make a good president.' 'And he said, "Absolutely, she would." That's how he interpreted the question,' King said. 'Because, this is the thing, Steadman would never so cavalierly say, "Absolutely she would do it. It's up to the people." He would never do that.' Gayle King (left) said that being in the room Sunday night at the Golden Globes with best friend Oprah Winfrey (right) was 'electrifying' Gayle King (left) and Oprah Winfrey (right) pose on the Kennedy Center's red carpet in Washington, D.C. King said that while Winfrey is 'intrigued' by the idea of a presidential run, she's not 'actively considering' a bid Co-host Norah O'Donnell challenged King on that, pointing to the fact that Graham did indeed say, 'She would absolutely do it.' 'I'm telling you his interpretation of the question was ... he thought the reporter was saying would she be a good president,' King said. 'He is nothing but supportive, he would never throw it out there like that,' Winfrey's best friend noted. King also said that Winfrey was wholly behind her Golden Globes speech, getting some advice from one of her O, The Oprah Magazine editors, but mainly penning it herself. 'She writes her column every month in the magazine. She's a very good writer. We all know she is a very good talker,' King said. 'I think it was a homerun on many levels.' King, who attended the awards ceremony alongside Winfrey and Graham, said being in the room was 'electrifying.' 'It was the right person giving the right speech at the right time,' King said. Brooklyn assemblywoman Pamela Harris has been indicted on fraud charges and accused of misusing tens of thousands of federal and state dollars for personal luxuries A Brooklyn assemblywoman has been indicted on fraud charges and accused of misusing nearly $50,000 of federal and state dollars for personal luxuries. Pamela Harris, who oversees Coney Island, Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights of New York City, has been charged with wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, making false statements, bankruptcy fraud, witness tampering and conspiracy to obstruct justice, according to papers filed by the New York Daily News. In one incident in 2012, the 57-year-old allegedly turned Hurricane Sandy recovery into a money-making scheme by lying about damage to her Coney Island home. 'Harris was busy brewing a storm of her own - one that resulted in her receiving significant payouts by the very federal agency charged with helping those truly in need,' FBI New York field office head William Sweeney Jr told the Daily News. Court documents claim Harris lied to the Federal Emergency Management Agency in 2012 about the level of damage Hurricane Sandy caused her Coney Island home. The indictment says she took nearly $25,000 from the agency and pocketed it because she did not need the money to fix her undamaged home. In one incident in 2012, the 57-year-old allegedly turned Hurricane Sandy recovery into a money-making scheme by lying about damage to her Coney Island home. She is pictured with Ari and Margarita Kagan in 2015 Court papers also claim Harris defrauded the City Council of nearly $23,000 by saying, falsely, the money would go to pay rent for a Brooklyn nonprofit. She is pictured in 2015 with Council Member Mark Treyger During that time she was living in the home she'd claimed was damaged and filed phony rent payment receipts and a fake lease agreements for a residence on Staten Island, according to the court documents. 'When she learned that law enforcement was investigating her various fraud schemes, she pressured witnesses to lie to the FBI and cover them up,' US Attorney Richard Donoghue told the Daily News. She was specifically accused of spending $10,000 of government money to pay for airline and cruise tickets for herself and her husband. She is also accused of using the money to buy lingerie at Victoria's secret Court papers also claim Harris defrauded the City Council of nearly $23,000 by saying, falsely, the money would go to pay rent for a Brooklyn nonprofit. Instead, she's accused of diverting the cash into her checking account to pay for personal expenses. She was specifically accused of spending $10,000 of government money to pay for airline and cruise tickets for herself and her husband. She is also accused of using the money to buy lingerie at Victoria's secret. She was arrested on Tuesday morning, and is expected to make her first appearance in Federal court to be arraigned later in the afternoon. Harris could face 30 years in prison if she is indicted on just the top count in her 1-count indictment, according to documents. Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie's spokesperson told the Daily News that today is the first they have heard of the investigation into Harris. 'They are very serious charges and it is important to let the justice system take its course,' the spokesperson said. Harris was elected to the city council in 2015. A Russian historian whose exposure of Soviet leader Josef Stalin's crimes angered state officials is due to begin enforced psychiatric testing this week amid fears he will be falsely declared insane, his lawyer said on Tuesday. Yuri Dmitriev, 61, is on trial in northwest Russia on charges brought by state prosecutors of involving his adopted daughter, then 11, in child pornography, of illegally possessing 'the main elements of' a firearm, and of depravity involving a minor. Some of Russia's leading cultural figures say Dmitriev was framed because his focus on Stalin's crimes - he found a mass grave with up to 9,000 bodies dating from the Soviet dictator's Great Terror in the 1930s - jars with the latter-day Kremlin narrative that Russia must not be ashamed of its past. Yuri Dmitriev, 61, pictured, right, faces 15 years in prison if he is convicted of the charges Russian president Vladimir Putin claimed the country was being undermined by people who engaged in the 'excessive demonisation of Stalin' The narrative has taken on added importance ahead of a March presidential election which polls show incumbent Vladimir Putin, who uses his country's World War Two victory when Stalin was in charge to bolster national pride, is on track to win. Putin asserted last year that what he called an 'excessive demonisation of Stalin' was being used to undermine Russia. Dmitriev faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted of the charges, which he denies. A previous psychiatric evaluation declared him to be of sound mind and a court-sanctioned expert group found no pornographic content in nine photographs of his daughter that are at the centre of the case against him, overturning the earlier findings of other experts commissioned by prosecutors. But on December 27, in an unexpected twist, the court ordered that the same nine photos be re-examined by experts for a third time. It also granted the prosecution's request that Dmitriev undergo enforced psychiatric testing to determine whether he has 'sexual deviations.' Dmitriev claims he has found the mass graves of 9,000 people murdered on the orders of Josef Stalin, left, during his Great Terror of the 1930s However, the court declined a prosecution request to extend his detention beyond January 28. Dmitriev's lawyer, Viktor Anufriev, told Reuters on Tuesday he had written to the supreme court of Karelia, the region where his client is being tried, to appeal against the court order. 'He's already been through one (psychiatric) test. The conclusions were fine, no evidence of deviance was found, and the results were not contested by prosecutors,' said Anufriev. 'This (latest testing) was ordered illegally.' Dmitriev was flown to Moscow at the end of last year to be evaluated at a psychiatric clinic, the Serbsky Centre, that was infamous in Soviet times for providing false testimony to allow the authorities to lock up dissidents in psychiatric facilities. Anufriev said he expected a doctor to be appointed to handle his client's psychiatric case later on Tuesday. He said he hoped the evaluation, which could last for up to a month, would be objective, but was concerned that state security officials in Karelia might pressure doctors. He did not specify which officials he was referring to. State TV broadcast last year what it billed as an expose of Dmitriev and of Memorial, the organisation for which he worked, complaining that foreign money was being used to provide a distorted and overly negative version of Russian history. The Kremlin has told Reuters it does not get involved in cases like Dmitriev's, while the Investigative Committee of Karelia, whose investigators submitted the original case for prosecution, did not respond to Reuters' questions about whether there was a political side to the trial. They said only that there had been enough evidence to open a criminal case. Anufriev, Dmitriev's lawyer, said he was worried. 'Perhaps if they can't convict him (of child pornography) they need to declare him insane,' the lawyer said. 'It's a purely Soviet procedure. Make accusations and then end things by locking someone up in a psychiatric facility.' Shahida Shahid, pictured, died after eating a burger that had been marinated in butter milk in Manchester city centre Tearful students told how their friend with a dairy allergy fell ill and collapsed 'very very suddenly' and later died in hospital after eating a burger marinated in butter milk. The girls' night out ended in tragedy when gifted university undergraduate Shahida Shahid, 18, suffered a fatal allergic reaction to her meal, begging 'Help me, I cant breathe,' Manchester Coroners Court heard. The careful teenager discussed her allergies with the waiter at Almost Famous burger restaurant in Manchester city centre before eating her meal, an inquest jury was told. But after leaving the restaurant the mathematics MA student suddenly became seriously unwell from the allergic reaction. She suffered severe brain damage 'not compatible with life' and died in hospital on January 12 2015, three days after eating the burger. Shahida, from Worsley, Salford, met with four college friends on the evening of January 9 2015, to discuss her first term at the University of Manchester. Lauren Davies said they had been out for a meal lots of times and every time Shahida would discuss with the waiter what she could eat due to her allergies. At the restaurant Shahida ordered an Awesome Fricken Chicken Sandwich, the order taken by waiter and bartender Reiss Balfour. Miss Davies said: 'Shahida went first because she always asked about what she can have and what shes allergic to. She is there longer than all of us and asked for advice. 'He went to talk to someone because I dont think he was sure and I think he came back and said she could have this but without the coleslaw and sauce. 'I definitely heard her talk about her allergies.' After the meal they walked to the Printworks complex of bars where Shahida went from 'laughing and joking' to feeling unwell and sat down outside a bar. Shahida's mother, sister and brother are pictured arriving at the inquest into her death after the student suffered severe brain damage Miss Davies continued: 'She just told me she felt hot. I went to crouch down to see if she was okay. 'She was quite sweaty and started saying she was quite itchy. I think she was scratching her arms and legs and at one point she said she was having an allergic reaction. 'I was trying to keep her calm and she told us to get her epi-pen out of her bag.' Another friend Hollie Blaydes said Shahida had previously shown them how to use her epi-pen in case of emergency, and another friend Nahla Halabi, jabbed her with the device in the right upper thigh over her clothes to deliver the medicine. However the epi-pen, which the inquest heard was 'just' out of date, did not have any effect. An inquest heard how Shahida, pictured, discussed her allergies with the waiter before eating the burger Security guards working at the venue, Imran Farooqi and Avais Ali, then came over to help. Mr Farooqi said Shahidas face and neck became swollen and he thought she had suffered an anaphylactic shock. He said: 'Her face was going purple, she was scratching herself vigorously. 'I grabbed hold of her and I heard a, "Help" sort of thing come out. We tried everything we could do for this young girl.' Shahida was put into recovery position and Mr Ali began CPR, the teenager repeatedly vomiting as Mr Imran continued attempting mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Mr Ali said before Shahida lost consciousness she was asked about a possible allergic reaction. But Mr Ali said she replied: 'Thats not the issue because I clearly told the waiter. It cant be that.' He said that shortly after, Shahida said: 'Please help me, Im struggling to breathe.' He added: 'She kind of fainted and started frothing from her mouth.' An ambulance was called but paramedic Matthew Shenck said Shahida was not breathing and there was no heart activity detected. The hearing continues. Six United Blood Nation gang members have been sentenced to lengthy terms for the murder of a South Carolina couple, a hit ordered from jail to prevent testimony against gang members who tried to rob their mattress store. The U.S. Attorney's Office said they were sentenced Monday to between 13 years and life in prison after pleading guilty to that crime. A connection was also made to an additional 2013 murder. U.S. District Judge Max O. Cogburn Jr. sentenced Rahkeem Lee McDonald, 25, to life for murder and conspiracy. David Lee Fudge, 24, got 26 years for murder and racketeering. The others who pleaded guilty to racketeering were Ibn Rashaan Cornea, 38, 23 years; Nehemijel Maurice Houston, 23, 20 years; Daquan Lamar Everrett, 23, 13 years; and Centrilla Shardon Leach, 33, 13 years. Six United Blood Nation gang members have been sentenced to lengthy terms for the murder of Douglas and Deborah London in Lake Wylie, South Carolina. Ahkeem McDonald, David Fudge, Ibn Cornea pictured Nehemijel Houston, Daquan Everrett, and Centrilla Leach pictured were also sentenced Jamell Cureton and Malcolm Jarrel Hartley, two other members, were already sentenced to live in prison in connection to the murders in 2014 of Douglas and Deborah London inside their home at Lake Wylie, South Carolina. On May 25, 2014, Cureton, Nana Adoma and Fudge robbed The Mattress Warehouse in Pineville, North Carolina, which was owned by the couple. Cureton, a high-ranking 5 Star General within the gang, instructed Hartley with details on the killing of the Londons. On May 25, 2014, Cureton, Nana Adoma and Fudge robbed The Mattress Warehouse in Pineville, North Carolina, which was owned by the couple (pictured) Cureton (left), a high-ranking 5 Star General within the gang, instructed Hartley (right) with details on the killing of the Londons 'According to court records, Cureton and other gang members discussed that Douglas London was the only eye-witness who could identify Cureton and therefore needed to be eliminated,' the U.S. Attorney's Office said to WCNC. Gang leadership 'authorized' the hit for Hartley, who on October 23, 2014, was driven by Briana Johnson to South Carolina where he shot and killed the Londons. Authorities later detailed how Cureton sent a letter ordering the murder of Douglas London because he was planning to testify against him in court. Cureton sent a letter ordering the murder of Douglas London because he was planning to testify against him in court; his wife was 'collateral damage' Four more defendants associated with the gang are still awaiting sentencing Deborah's murder was considered as 'collateral damage.' Four more defendants associated with the gang are still awaiting sentencing. Akheem Tahja McDonald is among the four, and he specifically is waiting for charges in connection to the 2013 death of Kwamne Clyburn. During the sentencing on Monday, each of the six members who plead guilty were also charged with RICO conspiracy. RICO or the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, is a federal law used to combat organized crime in the country. A former police chief hailed as 'a champion for the vulnerable and exploited' was found hanged at his home, an inquest was told. Paul Broadbent, 54, could not be revived after paramedics were called to his home in Barnsley on 27 December and he was pronounced dead at the scene. Mr Broadbent was the head of the UK's anti-slavery agency and his sudden death was described as 'a shattering tragedy' by a spokesman for the Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority (GLAA). Mr Broadbent - who was married and had a daughter - has been described as 'charming, warm, funny and generous' Mr Broadbent has received much posthumous praise for his work to eradicate slavery in the UK A former District Commander in Sheffield, Mr Broadbent spent most of his police career in South Yorkshire after joining the force in 1985. He left in 2010 after joining Nottinghamshire Police as an Assistant Chief Constable - acquiring 30 years' police service before retiring in 2012. He then joined the GLAA as its chief executive to tackle modern day slavery and exploitation. A spokesman described him as 'a champion for the vulnerable and exploited'. He said Mr Broadbent - who was married and had a daughter - was 'charming, warm, funny and generous' and his death was described as 'a shattering tragedy' for all those knew him. Mr Broadbent held senior positions for South Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire police Mr Broadbent was a senior detective and headed a number of high profile cases during his time in South Yorkshire - including the fatal stabbing of Sheffield prostitute Michaela Hague in November 2001. He led an investigation into the shooting of Tareq Chaiboub, 17, who was gunned down in a gangland attack at a barber's shop in the city in 2008 and was prominent during the policing of 2011 riots in Nottingham, later giving evidence to the Home Affairs Committee which investigated the disorder. Former police colleagues have expressed their shock at his death and paid tribute to him. Robert McCann said: 'I had the pleasure of working with Paul when he was District Commander of Sheffield police. 'He was a very forward thinking man and some I greatly enjoyed working with. 'It was Sheffield's loss when he moved to Nottingham but he left a great legacy. 'I am deeply saddened by his passing.' The inquest into Mr Broadbent's death opened on Tuesday at Sheffield's Medico-Legal Centre. It was adjourned for inquiries into the circumstances surrounding the death to be carried out - but it is not being treated as suspicious by South Yorkshire Police. A full hearing is expected to take place in April. Mr Broadbent worked at Nottinghamshire Police and South Yorkshire Police before taking over at the GLAA. Crime Minister Victoria Atkins said he was 'passionate, innovative and determined to tackle labour exploitation and modern slavery'. To contact the Samaritans, go to www.samaritans.org or call 116 123. President Donald Trump introduced chaos into immigration negotiations on Tuesday when he said he'd accept whatever compromise that Congress comes up with so long as he gets his border wall. Trump told a group of 20 legislators from both parties at the White House that he could get behind a two-step process that would save the Dreamers from deportation and beef up border security that's followed by a total immigration overhaul. 'My positions are going to be what the people in this room come up with,' Trump at one point said. 'If they come to me with things I'm not in love with, I'm gonna do it, because I respect them.' The assertion was a 180 from Trump's earlier stance that reform must include funding for the border wall and radical changes to immigration first and foremost in addition to safety for participants in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Trump had steadfastly said that he would not approve legislation that legalizes DACA unless he gets the wall, additional border security resources, the elimination of the visa lottery system and and an end to chain migration at the same time. As confusion over his position reached a high point on Tuesday after the remarkable meeting with lawmakers, the White House said that nothing had changed. Trump still believes that the four pillars of his immigration policy must be addressed in the first bill that Congress passes. Sen. Lindsey Graham had mentioned a pathway to citizenship as part of comprehensive immigration reform in his remarks at the meeting, but White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said that was not something the president was interesting in pursuing at this point in time. 'Right now our focus is on the four things I laid out,' she said. Sanders clarified that the wall is just one component of the border security measures that Trump is insisting on. He also wants technological upgrades to certain areas. On one point, though, Trump was adamant: Congress has to fund his border wall. 'I'd love not to build the wall, but we need the wall,' Trump said. 'If you don't have the wall, you cannot have security.' SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he'd accept whatever immigration compromise that Congress comes up with so long as he gets his border wall After a lengthy discussion with lawmakers in the room that Trump allowed to play out on camera, providing an inside look at the bipartisan negotiations, the president said it was clear to all that he was on a 'similar page' with legislators present. 'We have something in common. We would like to see this get done,' he said. Sen. Lindsey Graham told the former businessman point blank that he needs 'to close the deal' as Trump took a backseat position to the lawmakers in the room. The South Carolina senator noted that he'd built up a list of derogatory nicknames over his support for immigration reform such as Lindsey Grahamnesty and Lindsey Gomez. 'I don't want bad hombres,' he proclaimed. 'I don't want to do this every 20 years,' he said. Graham predicted that the right-wing would go bonkers over the deal that's in the works and characterize it as amnesty. Trump insisted that an agreement would sell itself, though, and said the lawmakers could put any heat they take over the compromise agreement on him. 'My whole life has been heat,' Trump said. 'I like heat in a certain way.' Democrats had been refusing Trump's demands for a border wall and a total immigration overhaul, leading Sen. Chuck Grassley, who attended the Tuesday meeting, to declare the negotiations 'doomed to failure' yesterday on the Senate floor. White House senior adviser for strategic communications Mercedes Schlapp positively told Fox this morning, however, 'The president will deliver.' Trump half-jokingly told legislators at the White House on Tuesday, 'Maybe at some point I'll just lock the doors and I won't let anyone out.' Tuesday's meeting was invite-only but Michelle Lujan Grisham, head of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, successfully crashed it after being told there was 'no space' for her at the table, according to Politico. She came to the White House with House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer. GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham, David Perdue, Jeff Flake and Tom Cotton were among those participating from Trump's party. Flake is seen here during the meeting that surprisingly took place while cameras were rolling The Republican president who led a lucrative business before he was elected will personally made his case for a revamp today in a White House meeting that was attended by immigration reform advocates in the House and Senate from both parties. 'I feel having the Democrats in with us is absolutely vital because it should be a bipartisan bill. It should be a bill of love. Truly,' Trump said. 'It should be a bill of love. But it also has to be a bill where were able to secure our border. Drugs are pouring into our country at a record pace. A lot of people coming in that we cant have.' A statement provided to DailyMail.com before the meeting said: 'The Trump Administrations immigration priorities are clear: securing the border with a wall, closing dangerous enforcement loopholes; eliminating the visa lottery program and ending chain migration.' GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham, David Perdue, Jeff Flake and Tom Cotton were among those participating from Trump's party. Democratic representatives include Sen. Dick Durbin, the number two Democrat in the Senate, Dianne Feinstein, and Bob Menendez. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy represented GOP leadership in the meeting along with Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. The meeting followed on Durbin's declaration on Friday that Trump was making 'outrageous' demands that 'would undercut months of bipartisan efforts' to protect Dreamers. Durbin accused Trump of 'trying to put its entire wish-list of hardline anti-immigrant bills - plus an additional $18 billion in wall funding - on the backs of these young people.' 'President Trump has said he may need a good government shutdown to get his wall. With this demand, he seems to be heading in that direction,' Durbin said. Trump told Democrat Dick Durbin on Tuesday that he now believes a DACA fix could be separate legislatively from other immigration reforms he's pursuing, like an end to chain migration and an end to the diversity lottery Trump told Durbin on Tuesday that he now believes a DACA fix could be separate legislatively from other immigration reforms he's pursuing, like an end to chain migration and an end to the diversity lottery. 'I really agree with Dick,' Trump said. 'I think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. I think it will happen.' Trump said in the long meeting that broadcast for nearly an hour, 'I think well do DACA, and we can certainly start comprehensive immigration reform the following afternoon. 'Well take an hour off and then well start. I do believe that,' Trump added. Trump had said Saturday during a presser at Camp David that Congress must fund the border wall he promised on the campaign trail or there would be no agreement. 'The wall is going to happen or were not going to have DACA. You know, we want to get rid of chain migration. Very important. And we want to get rid of the lottery system,' he said. Trump also said that Democrats must approve his spending request for additional border security personnel, as well. 'We all want DACA to happen. But we also want great security for our country. So important. We want to stop the drugs from flowing in. Very important,' he said Saturday. Trump has claimed numerous times that visa lottery awardees are bottom-dwellers who are intentionally displaced by their home countries. 'They give us their worst people, they put them in a bin, but in his hand, when hes picking them is, really, the worst of the worst. Congratulations, youre going to the United States. Okay. What a system lottery system,' he said recently. He made a similar claim on Tuesday, wrongly asserting that 'countries come in and put names in a hopper.' 'Theyre not giving you their best names common sense tells you theyre not giving you their best names. They give you people that they dont want, and then we take them out of the lottery,' he said in his meeting. 'When then do it by hand, put the hand in a bowl, and whats in the hand are the worst of the worst. They put people that they dont want in the lottery, and the United States takes those people.' In reality, it's the State Department who picks diversity lottery awardees, and they are selected at random. State heavily vets them before they are allowed into the U.S. Trump wants to move to a merit-based immigration system, nonetheless, in which high-skilled visa applicants would be prioritized. 'Theyre not sending us their finest, okay. When somebody gets picked in the lottery, were not getting their best people,' he said Saturday. 'So we have to get rid of the lottery system, we have to get rid of chain migration, and we have to have a wall.' The president told a reporter that he expects all of the immigration reform components he's demanding to be included in the compromise bill. He also said it's still his belief that Mexico will pay for the border wall. Last week Trump had a Republican-only meeting at the White House to discuss immigration. His Tuesday gathering included top Democratic voices on the issue like Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois. The meeting came less than a day after Grassley, an Iowa Republican, said in a floor speech that immigration talks have stalled because of Democrats' unwillingness to compromise. 'Unfortunately, this body still isnt closer to a legitimate and fair deal that promotes and protects the interests of the American people in a lawful immigration system, and provides a fair and equitable solution on DACA,' he said. 'As the Democrats see it, its take it or leave it, their way or the highway. That isnt good faith. That isnt negotiation. And that approach is doomed to failure.' Trump said during a Saturday presser at Camp David that Congress must fund the border wall he promised on the campaign trail or there would be no agreement Schlapp, a senior communications official in the White House, subsequently lambasted Democrats as 'hypocritical' in a Tuesday morning appearance on Fox & Friends for backing away from border security measures after voting for the Secure Fence Act in 2006. 'They were the ones in 2006 who basically supported these physical border barriers,' she exclaimed. 'It's time for them to come to the table. Let's strike a deal. The president wants to strike a deal with the Democrats, and the time is now to do it.' Durbin, notably, did not vote for 2006 legislation. Feinstein, however, did. The Illinois senator and Hispanic Democrats in the House are hoping to use a must-pass spending bill to force Trump's hand on DACA this month. The continuing resolution that's keeping the government up and running expires on Jan. 19. 'I will certainly vote against it, and I know most Democrats will vote against it,' Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro told MSNBC on Sunday evening. Castro said he can't see his side accepting the border wall in exchange for Dreamer protection. 'Well, I don't see -- I think that's gonna be a very tough deal for the president to make. We don't want to trade the lives of 800,000 people for a wall across the United States,' Castro stated. 'DACA should be handled with a clean Dream Act. And that if there's elements of border security that President Trump and Republicans want to pursue, that they can pursue that in separate legislation.' A memo that progressive group Center for American Progress is circulating that was obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation on Monday described the DACA standoff as a 'moral imperative' for Democrats that is 'critical' to their success at the ballot box. 'If Democrats dont try to do everything in their power to defend Dreamers, that will jeopardize Democrats electoral chances in 2018 and beyond,' the memo warns. 'In short, the next few weeks will tell us a lot about the Democratic Party and its long-term electoral prospects.' Schlapp told Fox on Tuesday that Democrats would be jeopardizing national security by holding up military funding if they go the shutdown route. 'I think the Democrats are really running a very big risk if they go in this direction,' she said. 'And here is a president saying come over to the White House, let's talk, let's get this done.' The American people want the homeland protected and real immigration reform, she asserted. 'That is why the president was elected,' Schlapp said. 'And the president will deliver.' The EU's chief Brexit negotiator today said Britain can get its own unique free trade deal in remarks which will be seen as a major victory for Theresa May. Michel Barnier said a post-Brexit free trade agreement 'will of course be tailored to the specificities of the United Kingdom'. He stressed that the bloc wants a close relationship with Britain which covers trade, security, defence and justice. And he said the EU could strike a deal which recognises UK laws as 'equivalent' to ones made in Brussels on areas such as financial stability. His remarks, made in a speech to business leaders this afternoon, are a boost for Mrs May who has been pressing Brussels for a unique trade deal. Michel Barnier, pictured in Brussels today, said a post-Brexit free trade agreement 'will of course be tailored to the specificities of the United Kingdom' in a softening of his rhetoric Europe had been indicating that Britain would have to pick between different existing trade models like the one struck between the EU and Canada or Norway. But speaking about the options for a free trade deal, Mr Barnier said: 'This agreement will of course be tailored to the specificities of the relationship between the Union and the United Kingdom, in the same way that our agreement with Canada is not identical to our agreements with Korea or Japan.' However, Mr Barnier warned there would be more 'friction' in trade flowing between Britain and the bloc after we quit. In a speech to business leaders in Belgium he said: 'But one thing is clear: a free trade agreement, as ambitious as it may be, cannot include all the benefits of the Customs Union and the single market.' And he repeated his warning that Britain's financial services will be stripped of their passporting rights - which allows a firm which has an office in one EU country to trade freely in all the others. Michel Barnier's comments are a boost for Theresa May (pictured with her new Cabinet in No10 today) who has been pressing for Britain to get its own unique post-Brexit trade deal And he urged companies operating in the EU to draw up contingency plans to prepare for Brexit. He added: 'There is neither punishment nor revenge; just the fact that we want to stay in control of our rules and how they are implemented. 'The United Kingdom, which wants to regain its autonomy of decision, will have to respect ours. 'Where our legislation so provides, we will have the opportunity to consider certain UK rules as equivalent, based on a proportionate and risk-based approach, including financial stability, which will remain our primary concern.' He said the EU will work with Britain to draw up an 'ambitious free trade agreement' in the coming months. The remarks are a softening of Mr Barnier's rhetoric and come after Mrs May convinced EU leaders to move on to trade talks late last year in a major breakthrough. Theresa May issued a stern warning to her ministers over sexual harassment, saying that any inappropriate behaviour would be severely punished. She unveiled a new code of conduct yesterday revamped in the wake of the so-called 'Pestminster' scandal which made clear that future misconduct 'will not be tolerated'. At a meeting of her new Cabinet in Downing Street, Mrs May made it clear she expected ministers to both read the code and order their junior ministers to read it, the Mail understands. Theresa May(pictured with her new Cabinet in No10 today) pledged to overhaul procedures in Parliament to give MPs staff and other workers greater protection. It came as a survey by the BBC found that sexual harassment and bullying is 'rife' within Parliament. According to the study of staff who recently worked for MPs, four women said they had been the victims of sexual assault, while 18 women and one man said they had suffered sexual harassment. Mrs May's intervention follows weeks of damaging revelations and claims about the prevalence of bullying and sexual harassment at Westminster. The sex-pest scandal has claimed the scalps of two of the Prime Minister's closest Cabinet allies, former first secretary of state Damian Green and former defence secretary Sir Michael Fallon. The alleged conduct of some MPs has angered Mrs May, who is said to have asked her aides: 'Why can't they just get on with their jobs?' The Prime Minister has already introduced a new code of conduct for all Tory staff, MPs and councillors setting out 'minimum standards of behaviour'. The update to the code, which was last revised in December 2016, also includes new rules relating to ministerial meetings with foreign governments, following the sacking of Priti Patel as international development secretary. She was forced to resign in November after failing to report meetings with Israeli government officials during a private holiday. Former defence secretary Sir Michael Fallon (pictured left) and former deputy PM Damian Green (pictured right) were both forced to quit form the Cabinet after being hit by allegations of sexual misconduct On harassment, the code says ministers should be 'professional in all their dealings and treat all those with whom they come into contact with consideration and respect'. Parliament bullying 'rife' Sexual harassment and bullying is 'rife' within Parliament, according to a survey of MPs' staff. Four women said they had been the victims of sexual assault, while 18 women and one man said they had suffered sexual harassment. Some described the atmosphere as 'sexist, laddish, misogynistic'. One woman, in her 20s, said the first MP she'd worked for had shouted at her and constantly threatened to fire her. The second MP she worked for made a pass at her. BBC Radio 5 Live sent anonymous questionnaires to all 1,500 staff publicly listed as working for MPs in Parliament in November last year. Of the 166 respondents, 39 said they had experienced bullying at Westminster. Advertisement It says all working relationships with civil servants, MPs and parliamentary staff should be 'proper and appropriate' and adds: 'Ministers of the Crown are expected to maintain high standards of behaviour and to behave in a way that upholds the highest standards of propriety. Harassing, bullying or other inappropriate or discriminating behaviour wherever it takes place is not consistent with the Ministerial Code and will not be tolerated.' But the new code was dismissed as a 'missed opportunity' by a union representing civil servants. The FDA union complained that there was no detail on what sanctions ministers could face if found to have committed inappropriate behaviour and who would investigate allegations. Assistant general secretary Naomi Cooke said: 'This behind-closed-doors tinkering with the Ministerial Code will do nothing to reassure civil servants that there's a proper system in place to protect them from harassment and bullying.' She claimed there was 'a crisis of confidence' among civil servants over the way bullying complaints are handled, with just 14 per cent saying in a recent survey that they were confident that a complaint against a minister or adviser would be properly investigated. The ministerial code of conduct was introduced in 1992 by the then Conservative Prime Minister John Major and has gone through several updates, often in response to scandals. The woman who was overcome with emotion when she met Prince Harry and Meghan Markle today has a long-standing connection with the royal family, MailOnline can reveal. Helen Wiltshire, 69, from Crawley, West Sussex, travelled to Brixton with her 39-year-old daughter Sandra to meet the royal couple today. She was photographed embracing Miss Markle on the streets in south London and told the actress she 'loved her'. Ms Wiltshire, who used to run a shop in Brixton for 25 years, later revealed her special connection with the royal family which dates back to the early 20th century. Helen Wiltshire (right) travelled to Brixton wit her daughter Sandra (left) to see the royal couple on Tuesday Helen Wiltshire, from Crawley, holds her hand out to Meghan as well-wishers gather to say hello to the royal couple in Brixton The couple (pictured) station offers accredited training and support in topics ranging from audio and radio production and editing British explorer Sir Harry Johnston (left) signed the 1900 Buganda Agreement while Queen Victoria (right) was on the throne She told MailOnline that her grandfather signed the 1900 Buganda Agreement and said she has a 'always felt close' to the family. The Buganda Agreement, also knows as the Uganda Agreement, formed the relationship between the British Uganda Protectorate and the subnational kingdom of Buganda. It was signed in March 1900 by Buganda's prime minister Sir Apolo Kagwa and British explorer Sir Harry Johnston. Ms Wiltshire revealed her family's connection to the agreement when both Meghan, 36, and Harry, 33, visited the underground music studios of Reprezent 107.3 FM in Brixton. They stopped to chat to people waiting in the crowd - who eagerly took the opportunity to take pictures of them Inside Reprezent's studios, the couple, who got engaged in November and will wed in May, met presenter Gloria Beyi, 17, host of radio show Glory Talks, who was on air, and her producer, Finn Whitehead, 27 They arrived to tumultuous cheers from the adoring crowd and the Suits actress beamed as she waved to people who had lined the streets. The Buganda Agreement: Sir Harry Johnston begins relations with Britain In 1899, British explorer Sir Harry Johnston was commissioned to visit the Uganda Protectorate following a mutiny of Sudanese troops who were used by the colonial government in 1897. Sir Harry was told by Britain to carry out detailed research and make recommendations on the territory's future administration. Just one year later he was signing the Buganda Agreement of 1990 which started British relations with the region for more than 50 years. It was signed by Buganda's prime minister Sir Apolo Kagwa and British explorer Sir Harry Johnston on behalf of the the UK government. The kabaka - or king - was now seen to be the recognised ruler of Buganda. Buganda was given an advisory council and was made a constitutional monarchy with Britain being able to veto choices made by the king. Advertisement Ms Wiltshire said: 'It just means so much. In 1900, my grandfather signed the 1900 Buganda Agreement with Queen Victoria. 'Because of the royal connection we've always felt close to them.' She wept as she held their hands and told Meghan: 'Thank you, thank you for all you've done.' Speaking afterwards, she said: 'I just love Prince Harry. For him to have found someone who he really loves it is amazing. You can feel their love I wish them all the best. 'I just want to say it was a dream to meet them. I wish them all the best and thank you so much for coming to Brixton.' Meghan squealed and said she was 'so excited' about her forthcoming wedding to Prince Harry. The visit to the urban radio station saw the couple wear headphones in the studio and and chat to dozens of young DJs. Harry even 'fist bumped' with one DJ and demonstrated that his wife wears the trousers in the relationship after he was asked about gender equality. Station manager Adrian Newman told him that they had a question for him to which Harry pointed at Meghan and swiftly replied: 'She answers the questions!' Serial rapist James Edward Webb, who's serving 25 years to life in prison, has now been linked to the 23-year-old crime New York City detectives say they've finally cracked a 23-year-old cold case thanks to DNA evidence. The victim, 29, told police on April 26, 1994, that she was dragged into the bushes and raped while walking through Brooklyn's Prospect Park with her groceries. She gave police a detailed description of her attacker who was carrying a large stick or cane, and had also demanded money from her. Yet when her story was reported, late Daily News columnist Mike McAlary wrote that he believed it was a hoax. He claimed he'd heard from a source the woman invented her story because she wanted to bolster a speech she was to give at a rally about violence against lesbians. The woman sued for libel, but the case was dismissed. Now, more than two decades later, Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce says cops have matched DNA from the crime to serial rapist James Edward Webb, 67, who's serving 25 years to life in prison. At the time, police say technology was not advanced enough to trace the alleged rapist. This 1994 sketch provided by the New York City police department was based off the victim's detailed description of her attacker 'The DNA evidence we collected was co-mingled with the victim,' NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said Tuesday, according to New York Daily News. 'At the time, we didn't have the technology to subtract the two and get a profile. It was difficult... one of those perfect storms of problems.' In November last year, detectives decided to take another look at the case and, using new technology, were able to extract the attacker's DNA and run it through their system. She says she was assaulted while walking through Prospect Park with her groceries in 1994 'We went back to the victim, asked her for her DNA, which she gave us, redacted it from the sample and ran the (suspect's) DNA and got a hit.' Webb, who was convicted of raping six women between 1969 and 1973, is now facing new rape charges. He'd been out on parole at the time of the attack on the cold case victim. He also attacked four others and was arrested again in 1995. Boyce said Wednesday the woman wept with joy when she was told. 'We spoke with the victim last night,' Boyce said. 'You can imagine how emotional she was. I think my detectives cried with her.' Webb denies raping the woman. A Texas woman at the center of a disastrous first date that ended with more than $1million worth of artwork destroyed - including two original Andy Warhol pieces - has denied being behind the damage. Lindy Lou Layman, 29, appeared in court on Tuesday for a bond hearing and said high-powered Houston trial lawyer Anthony Buzbee's version of what happened after their first and only date is not accurate. Layman was arrested on Christmas Eve for criminal mischief and is accused of destroying several pricey paintings in Buzbee's $9million River Oaks mansion in an alleged drunken rampage. 'We certainly disagree with Mr. Buzbee's rendition of the facts when he spoke to the media and we disagree with what was said in probable cause court,' her attorney Justin Keiter said according to the Houston Chronicle. Scroll down for video Lindy Lou Layman's is denying claims she damaged more than $1million worth of artwork at the home of prominent lawyer Anthony Buzbee Layman's attorney, Justin Keiter, left, said the real story will be come out in court Layman was in court on Tuesday for a bond hearing First date from hell: Lindy Lou Layman, 29 (left) is accused of getting drunk and destroying several artworks - including two Andy Warhols - belonging to her date, Houston attorney Anthony Buzbee (right) Keiter, however, refused to say what really happened that nigh,t telling KTRK that they're saving the true story for the courtroom. 'Our side has the rest of the story,' he said. During Tuesday's hearing, a judge prohibited the 29-year-old court reporter from using alcohol or drugs and ordered her not to contact Buzbee. Keiter said the conditions are fine with him and his client. 'We have no interest in having contact with Mr. Buzbee,' he said. According to court documents, Layman and Buzbee were on a first date at Buzbee's home when he said she got too drunk. She donned a black top, striped skirt and heels for the appearance Friends in VERY high places: Buzbee (right) is pictured in the summer of 2016 alongisde then-candidate Donald Trump and former Texas Governor Rick Perry (left) Layman (pictured in mugshot) was arrested on Christmas Eve on criminal mischief charges The prominent attorney, who donated to President Donald Trump's inaugural committee, said he called for an Uber to take Layman home but she refused to leave and hid inside the estate. When he found her and called for a second Uber, Layman allegedly became aggressive and tore his expensive art collection from the walls and doused three of the paintings with red wine. She was also accused of throwing a pair of $20,000 sculptures across the room, shattering both. Two Warhol paints were destroyed during her rampage. They were valued at $500,000 each, putting the total cost of damage at $1.5million. Charging documents state that the damage was '$300,000 or greater,' the Houston Chronicle reports. Layman was released on Christmas Day on a $30,000 bond. If convicted, she faces life in prison. 'She's weathering the storm of the intense media scrutiny that she has endured,' Keiter told the Houston Chronicle after her hearing. 'She's a great person.' Buzbeee told police that he tried to get Layman to leave his home but she refused. The attorney is known for defending former Texas governor Rick Perry (center) in an abuse-of-power case Two Warhols valued at $500,000 each were trashed putting the total cost of damage at $1.5million Layman is prohibited from using drugs or alcohol and cannot contact Buzbee, a judge said Buzbee is known for successfully defending former Texas Governor Rick Perry in an abuse-of-power case. He also hosted a fundraiser at his home in 2016 for then-presidential candidate Trump , but later said he was 'completely' done with the candidacy following Trump's 'grab them by the p***y' controversy. Buzbee, however, late donated $500,000 to Trump's inauguration committee, according to Law.com. Linda Jean Fahn, 69, fired two shots above her husband's head while he was on the toilet at their Goodyear, Arizona, home on December 30 An angry wife gave her husband a lot more than he bargained for, when he was least expecting it. Linda Jean Fahn, 69, of Arizona, fired two gun shots at her husband's head while he was on the toilet because he was not listening to her. Her husband, Charles, called the Goodyear Police Department on December 30th and met police at the corner near Pebble Creek Parkway and Indian School. Charles told police that his wife had been mad at him for two days and her animosity reached its tipping point while he was using the bathroom. He added that she came, while he was on the loo, and fired two shots above his head, according to police. Fahn was detained by police and she admitted to the deed. Charles told police that he and his wife had been arguing for two days and then that culminated with her shooting at him while he was on the toilet 'I shot two bullets at the wall above his head to make him listen to me,' she allegedly said to police, according to WPTV. Local authorities added that the woman asserted that her husband was not actually in danger. 'He would have to be 10 feet tall to be hit by the bullets,' she added. Police however, stated that the bullets flew seven inches over Charles's head and not 10. Fahn was booked on one count of aggrevated assault. The couple have reportedly been married for 32 years. Changed man? Convicted serial rapist Thomas Duvall (pictured in an old mugshot) has been cleared for a conditional release by a three-judge panel in Minnesota - despite his diagnosis as a sexual sadist A three-judge panel in Minnesota has approved the conditional release of a serial rapist convicted of brutally assaulting teenage girls in the 1970s and 1980s, raising strong objections from the sister of one of his victims. The state Department of Human Services said Tuesday that it would appeal the controversial ruling concerning the release of Thomas Duvall. Duvall, 62, has spent the past 30 years locked up for a series of rapes, the most heinous of which took place in 1987 when Duvall tied up a Brooklyn Park girl with an electrical cord and raped her repeatedly while hitting her with the handle of a hammer. The judicial panel on Monday approved Duvalls provisional discharge from the Minnesota Sex Offender Program, saying his progress in treatment outweighs his fearful diagnosis as a sexual sadist, the Star Tribune reported. At a hearing last April, therapists and others program staffers depicted Duvall as a reformed man who was contrite and ashamed of his violent history, and ready for a return to the community. 'The things I've done to people and the actions and crimes I've committed, I've paved my own road to where I am today,' an emotional Duvall said from the stand at the time, as KSTP reported. 'I put myself here. I'm responsible.' But Human Services Commissioner Emily Piper, who is in charge of the states sex offender program, said she will try to block his release. I, along with three testifying experts in this case, believe that Thomas Duvall poses an exceptional risk to public safety and should not be released into the community at this time, Piper said in a statement. I disagree with the courts decision to the contrary and will appeal this decision. Piper is not alone in her opposition to Duvalls release. The sister of the 1987 rape and hammer attack survivor told the paper her family were terrified by the prospect of Duvall regaining his freedom. I am scared for my sister, and I am scared for all the teenage girls out there, that this man will do this to someone else, the woman said. Duvalls record includes three past convictions on sexual assault charges in cases involving teenage girls; each rape took place after he had been released from prison. While undergoing treatment as part of the sex offender program, Duvall kept extensive fantasy logs in which he described his violent thoughts about past victims and female body parts. Duvall, 62, has been undergoing treatment as part of the Minnesota Sex Offender Program (offices pictured above) A forensic psychologist appointed by the state Supreme Courts panel testified last April that Duvalls journal documenting his fantasies and failed lie detector tests demonstrated that he was still obsessed with sex and not ready for release into the community. But the three-judge panel was persuaded by members of Duvalls treatment team, who testified that he has shown significant progress. Duvall dropped a previous attempt at partial freedom four years ago. While Minnesota Sex Offender Program staffers had recommended his release, Attorney General Lori Swanson objected. After Republican lawmakers also objected, Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton ordered his administration to oppose further releases until the program could be changed. Under his proposed discharge plan, Duvall will live under intensive 24-hour supervision with GPS monitoring in a halfway house, and will not be allowed to leave unless accompanied by staff. The US Supreme Court last October declined to hear a major challenge to the constitutionality of Minnesotas civil commitment program for sex offenders. While a federal judge declared the program unconstitutional because few people in it had ever won release, the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals overruled him. A mother-of-three was beaten up and spent almost a week in hospital after she was brutally assaulted by her truck driving husband who was angry because she was watching Britain's Got Talent. Suzanne Hill from Eccles, Greater Manchester married David Jennison after meeting him on the Plenty of Fish dating website in 2015 following a whirlwind romance. Jennison, who had prior convictions for violence against women, was jailed for three years and three months by Manchester Crown Court. He also faces a further three years on extended licence upon his release from jail. Suzanne Hill, left, was brutally assaulted by her new husband David Jennison, leaving her with extensive injuries that required hospitalisation, right David Jennison, right, married Suzanne Hill after the pair met on Plenty of Fish in 2015 In June last year, Jennison launched a brutal, sudden attack on his wife, following what Manchester Crown Court heard was a petty row over her choice of TV program. Jennison headbutted, choked and rained punches on Ms Hill, knocking her out cold before tying her up with electrical flex, bundling her into a sleeping bag, and leaving her in her blood-streaked hallway for her son to find. Ms Hill spent five days recovering in hospital, unable to open her eyes because they were so swollen. Now Jennison, 52, has been classed as a 'dangerous' offender and given an extended jail sentence. Following the case, Ms Hill has released images which graphically illustrate her ordeal to raise awareness of the realities of domestic violence. Ms Hill said she was attacked after Jennison had returned home from work. She said: 'I was sat having my tea, it was a warm night and the windows were open, she said. 'Everything seemed fine. He was a HGV driver so he had been up since 4am that day. David Jennison, pictured, was jailed for three years and three months for the horrific attack on Suzanne Hill 'I was watching Britain's Got Talent and he came in and said "I'm not watching that s***". I said "what's the problem?" 'He took the dog out for a walk and I thought that was the end of it. My son lives next door and he spoke with him for a bit. 'He was obviously in a mood and at 9pm he went upstairs and he muttered something I didn't hear. I thought I might as well go to bed too. 'In bed I was giggling a bit because we had our backs turned to each other.I said something and he just turned around and put his fist to me.' Shaken by the gesture, Ms Hill packed a bag for her husband and threw it downstairs. 'He slowly pulled the bed cover back and I thought he was going to hug me, but he gave me the biggest headbutt.' In court, Jennison claimed that this was a 'clash of heads'. 'Then as fast as he did that, he started strangling me,' Ms Hall added. 'And strangled. And strangled.' Ms Hill met Jennison on the Plenty of Fish dating site - although she did not realise at the time that her new husband had previously served four years in prison for GBH A victim impact statement read out in court by prosecutors described how she felt as thought she was fighting for her life at that moment. 'He finally stopped and his face had just gone,' Miss Hill said. 'He never spoke, there was no shouting or arguing. He just said "I'm going to kill you and I'm to kill me".' She moved downstairs and Jennison followed her to the front door. As she reached for the handle he grabbed her arm and pulled her back. She said: 'As I turned to look at him I felt the biggest blow. He split my lip and beat me and carried on beating me unconscious. 'Next thing I heard a voice saying "mum". It was my son - I had been unconscious half-an-hour.' When Ms Hill was discovered by her son Wade, her arms had been tied up with black electrical flex cord from the microwave, and she had been placed inside a sleeping bag. Ms Hill spent five days recovering in hospital following the attack Before Jennison left, he had called Wade and told him to come to the house, claiming his mother had taken some tablets and had grabbed a knife, and that he had tied her up for her own safety. The court heard that when Wade arrived, he thought his mother was dead. He realised she was alive when he heard her whisper 'please don't hit me again', with Ms Hill being unable to recognise it was her son in front of her. She was rushed to hospital. Jennison, quickly became the subject of a police wanted appeal and was arrested two days later, and refused to answer questions. 'How I survived that night I have no idea,' Ms Hill added. 'I get flashbacks and I see a therapist because of post-traumatic stress disorder. 'He had been brilliant with me before that. He didn't give me any reason to doubt him. But that night he was a complete bully.' Ms Hill, who is a care worker, says the attack unfolded quite unexpectedly, but she now wishes she had acted on a gut instinct to look into her husband's past. Under Clare's Law, which is legislation designed to protect potential victims of domestic abuse, anyone can request information about their partner's past. Ms Hill said she was completely unaware of her husband's violent past until the trial Also known as the Domestic Violence Disclosure Scheme, Clare's Law is named after 36-year-old Clare Wood, who was murdered by her ex-boyfriend, George Appleton, in Salford 2009. He had a history of violence against women. Ms Hill says it's essential that anyone with concerns about domestic abuse makes proper use of police powers which could protect them. She also believes that dating websites have a responsibility to carry out background checks on members so as to prevent violent attacks. 'I think they should look into people's backgrounds before they go on these sites,' said Suzanne, who only learned of his extensive criminal past at his sentencing hearing. She said: 'I met him on Plenty of Fish and that was it. We got on really well and it felt right and nice. He treated me like a queen. He did all the cooking, he was great and he looked after me. 'He had the odd moment but he had never laid a finger on me and I never would have stayed with him if he had. 'The only time I got that feeling in my tummy was with these moods. But I had lived on my own for 24 years so I didn't know if I was being over the top. 'I think women need to be aware if you do get any funny feeling there's Clare's Law. If you get that odd feeling you need to follow it.' After the attack, Suzanne was contacted by a woman who knew Jennison. She told her that Jennison had a history of violence against women. Prosecutor Brian Berlyne told Jennison's sentencing hearing that he had 13 previous convictions. His offences, which date back to 1990, include causing actual bodily harm, common assault, witness intimidation, battery - and he served a four-year prison sentence for causing grievous bodily harm with intent. The battery conviction related to an incident of domestic violence in 2013, Jennison grabbed his partner's throat and threw a knife at her. He was then convicted of harassing the same woman the following year, by sending abusive messages and threatening to kill her. Jennison sent a letter to the judge in the latest case, in which he said he was 'mortified' and 'truly sorry' for his actions towards Ms Hill. But the judge said he had showed 'little degree of insight' into his offending, and said he had tried to downplay his responsibility in a pre-sentence report. Judge Timothy Smith said: 'Your record shows that you are a repeated and consistent history of using violence to others when you are in a relationship.' He said Jennison's behaviour showed a 'repeated pattern of offences of violence and harassment towards former or current partners'. Jennison, of Gaskall Road, Eccles, will only be released from prison when it is deemed safe to do so by the Parole Board. He will serve three years and three months in prison and an extended licence period of three years means that even after release, he is at risk of being recalled to prison until 2024. In a victim impact statement read to the court by prosecutors, Ms Hill said: 'I will never get over the shock of what my husband did to me that night. 'My daughter had a feeling about him and she didn't know she could go to the police as a third party. 'I work as a carer caring for people all day and it was a nice bit of telly that was easy to watch. But he's a controlling person and he wanted me to give him the attention. That set him off in a mood. They need stronger sentences for domestic abuse. The person I thought would protect me was the person I needed protecting from.' Plenty of Fish have been approached for comment. Fears are growing for a British mother-of-two who has been missing for a week from her home in southern Spain. Rebecca Muldoon, originally from Southend, Essex, vanished on 2 January from the upmarket resort of Marbella where she has been living for the past year with her two children aged eight and 11. Local reports said police were alerted by a neighbour who discovered the youngsters were alone in the property, although it is believed the person that called the cops was someone who had been left temporarily in charge of the youngsters and grew concerned when the missing Briton failed to return. Rebecca Muldoon, 35, went missing on the same day she was due to appear in court in relation to domestic abuse she allegedly suffered at the hands of her partner Rebecca - originally from Southend - has been living in Marbella for the last year Friend Stephanie Faye Dalrymple appealed for information on her whereabouts in a Facebook appeal overnight, saying: 'Rebecca has been missing for a week. She has no money, passport or clothes and her phone is dead. 'She has two children and I desperately need to know if anyone has seen her. 'If you live in Marbella please share this. Her family are so worried and any info at all would be gratefully received.' Police have confirmed they are probing 35-year-old Rebecca's mystery disappearance. Last night it emerged Rebecca vanished between reporting her partner to police for domestic violence and being summonsed to court the following day to ratify the complaint. A local Spanish news website quoted police sources as saying that the British expatriate vanished the same day she lodged the complaint and her unnamed partner was arrested. Officers discovered she was missing the day she was due in court. Her children are now understood to be in the UK in the care of a close relative while her family and loved ones wait anxiously for news on her whereabouts. A judge in Oklahoma has decided that a father will stand trial for murdering his 22-year-old daughter, who he claims accidentally killed herself while playing with a gun. Police were called to Ronald 'Ronnie' Lee McMullan's home in Norman on June 29, 2017 after he called 911 to tell police his daughter had accidentally shot herself 'in the face.' But evidence presented by a detective in court on Monday showed that Kailee Jo Hooker couldn't have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to the Oklahoman. Special Judge Steve Stice then ruled there was enough evidence to send the first degree murder case against the 43-year-old father to trial. Scroll down for video A judge in Oklahoma has decided that Ronald Lee McMullan will stand trial for murdering his 22-year-old daughter, Kailee Jo Hooker, who he claims accidentally killed herself while playing with a gun. McMullan is pictured in court Monday Evidence presented in court on Monday shows that Kailee couldn't have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. McMullan, pictured, had claimed his daughter shot herself Special Judge Steve Stice then ruled there was enough evidence to send the first degree murder case against the 43-year-old father to trial When officers arrived at McMullen's home in June they found he had wiped up blood in the kitchen, even though her body was lying in the entryway, according to an affidavit - and then he tried to bury himself, the Oklahoman reported. This sparked an investigation into the father, which led to a detective concluding that the evidence at the scene didn't match McMullen's story. During a preliminary hearing on Monday, Detective Brian Franks testified that gunshot residue proved Kailee was shot from about 18 inches away. Franks said that would have been 'outside her reach,' according to the Oklahoman, meaning that someone else had to have pulled the trigger. According to an affidavit for a search warrant filed on July 6, police arrived at the home on the 1700 block of Abe Martin Drive, to find McMullen's wife, Karen Hooker McMullan, giving the young woman CPR. Officers took over CPR duties on Kailee - whose surname was given as Hooker in official documents - until it was clear that she was dead. Kailee's body was in the home's entryway, and a blood-splattered .357 revolver was found on a side table. Her father was also covered in blood, and stared blankly when the police asked what happened, cops claim. Detective Brian Franks testified that gunshot residue proved Kailee was shot from about 18 inches away. Franks said that would have been 'outside her reach'. McMullan and Kailee are pictured with her mother, Karen Hooker McMullan When police ventured further into the home they found that McMullen had been trying to mop up blood in the home's kitchen, the affidavit said. And when they tried to take pictures of the blood-drenched dad he attempted to wipe it off himself with a towel despite repeated demands that he stop, it alleged. The towel was snatched away from McMullen, who then tried to use his hands until he was physically restrained, the report said. After the photos were taken, McMullen's behavior reached bizarre extremes, as the man allegedly went to the entryway of the home, which borders a grassy front lawn, and 'lay down in the dirt,' He then 'began covering himself in dirt while rubbing the shoes he was wearing on the concrete entryway,' the affidavit claimed. He then dug a small hole, covering himself in soil, the report said. McMullen was arrested on Wednesday July 5 on first-degree murder charges in her death. The affidavit said that Kailee had been living at home on and off prior to her death, but had a deeply unhappy relationship with her father, friends told police. They told officers that in April McMullen had slapped her until her mother pulled a gun on him to make him stop. And two of her friends told police that he had molested her when she was younger. Kailee was working as an EMT in her hometown in Oklahoma when she was shot. McMullen had told 911 that she shot herself but was arrested for her murder When police arrived at the home they found Kailee, pictured, in the front entryway, and the father trying to clean up blood in the kitchen. He was covered in blood School and Department of Human Services records showed that an investigation took place but no charges were filed, the affidavit claimed. Prior to his arrest, police had said they were treating the young woman's death as 'suspicious'. Police said they are still investigating but do not expect to arrest anyone else in connection with her death. An obituary published in the Norman Transcript just two days before her father's arrest said Kailee 'cherished her family and always had time for them'. 'Kailee had a zest for life and a bubbly personality, was quick witted, and had a quirky sense of humor,' her obituary read. 'Always the entertainer, she loved making people laugh and was famous for the elaborate costumes she would put together when the occasion arose. 'Kailee was a good and loyal friend, and all who knew her were better for it.' She was religious and grew up attending Goodrich Memorial United Methodist Church. Kailee was working as an EMT and at a plasma donation clinic in Norman when she was killed. She graduated from Norman High School in 2013 where she was a Varsity cheerleading captain, before attending Bible college in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. 'Kailee had a passion for helping people and loved animals,' her obituary read. Two Florida state lawmakers admitted on Tuesday to having an extramarital affair after an anonymous web site claimed to have surveillance video that proves the nature of their relationship. Oscar Braynon, a Democrat, and Anitere Flores, a Republican, issued a joint statement just before the Florida state legislature began its session on Tuesday, according to the Sun Sentinel. The two Miami-area state senators said in their statement that they 'do not want gossip and rumors to distract from the important business of the people.' That said, they admitted that 'our longtime friendship evolved to a level that we deeply regret.' 'We have sought the forgiveness of our families, and also seek the forgiveness of our constituents and God,' the statement read. 'We ask everyone else to respect and provide our families the privacy that they deserve as we move past this to focus on the important work ahead.' Two Florida state lawmakers - Senators Anitere Flores (left) and Oscar Braynon (right) admitted on Tuesday to having an extramarital affair after an anonymous web site claimed to have surveillance video that proves the nature of their relationship Surveillance cameras believed to have been planted by a private investigator show a woman purported to be Flores walking in and out of Braynon's apartment The video shows the woman walking into and out of the apartment for four consecutive nights Braynon and Flores were also purported to be seen in one surveillance shot (above) from April 23, 2017 entering and leaving Braynon's apartment Both Braynon and Flores are married. The extraordinary statement was made after a website - floresbraynonaffair.com showed surveillance videos shot by a hidden camera planted in an apartment complex in Tallahassee. The videos appear to show Flores walking into Braynon's apartment across the hall from her own apartment in the residential complex used by a number of Florida state lawmakers. The videos were recorded in April of last year during the two-month Florida legislative session. Nobody has yet to determine who posted the site, which is written under the headline 'Flores (R) Caught Caucusing with Braynon (D)!' 'Flores & Braynon Busted!' read the sub-headline. 'Why was President Pro Temp Anitere Flores (R) sleeping at Minority Leader Oscar Braynon's (D) apartment for 4 straight nights?' The individual who recorded what appear to be the two lawmakers may have been a private investigator. Braynon (right), a Democrat, and Anitere Flores (left), a Republican, issued a joint statement just before the Florida state legislature began its session on Tuesday 'After analyzing the videos and taking the totality of the circumstances into consideration, it is the author's opinion that there is sufficient evidence to show that Anitere Flores and Oscar Braynon were actively engaged in inappropriate extramarital activities with each other,' the anonymous web page said. 'When the videos are considered in their entirety, they depict a clear pattern of behavior that is consistent with individuals engaged in an extramarital relationship, and/or cohabitation.' The site includes video clips, layout maps of the floor, and charts suggesting that the person who installed the surveillance equipment was a professional. The author of the web site even notes that he obtained the car make, model, and license plate numbers for both Flores and Braynon. The author also claims to have received permission from one of the condominium's residents to strategically place a hidden camera in the sixth floor hallway right outside Flores' and Braynon's respective apartments. There is even surveillance of the condo's parking lot, where Flores is seen leaving one morning while wearing the same clothes she wore the previous night. According to the Tampa Bay Times, Braynon last year suspected he was being watched when he found a secretly placed surveillance camera on the sixth floor of the Tennyson condominium. Braynon and Flores rent condos across the hall from each other. After Braynon found the camera, he notified the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which investigated the matter. FDLE found that the camera belonged to a private investigator, Derek Uman of Gainesville. Uman owns a company, Clear Capture Investigations, which offers as one of its services 'infidelity surveillance' and 'political and corporate surveillance.' The apartment building's own cameras showed Uman placing the hidden camera in a few locations over a period of a few days, according to the Times. In November, Braynon said he noticed something had fallen underneath a hall table. According to the Tampa Bay Times , Braynon last year suspected he was being watched when he found a secretly placed surveillance camera on the sixth floor of the Tennyson condominium (above). Braynon and Flores rent condos across the hall from each other When he reached down to see what it was, he found a camera with a power pack. The camera's power light was covered over with tape. Braynon's colleagues in the state Senate told him that he was being targeted for revenge after a Republican lawmaker, Frank Artiles of Miami, resigned after making racist comments to colleagues. The Florida state legislature has been rocked by scandal involving alleged sexual misconduct by its members. Republican Sen. Jack Latvala, a powerful state senator and Republican candidate for governor, stepped down this week after he was accused by six women employees of Florida's State Capitol of touching them without their consent or making demeaning remarks about their bodies. In October, Jeff Clemens, a Democratic senator, resigned after he admitted to having an extramarital affair with a lobbyist. Steve Bannon, the former Donald Trump campaign CEO who spent six months working in the White House and returned to his old life at the helm of Breitbart News in August, is stepping down from his position as the conservative website's executive chairman. The New York Times reported Tuesday on the departure of the outspoken ideologue whom Trump re-branded as 'Sloppy Steve' following the publication of a loosely reported tell-all book last week. A source close to Bannon confirmed that his departure was the product of a revolt on the publication's board of directors, led by longtime financier and donor Rebekah Mercer. Scroll down for videos Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon is leaving his position as the conservative Breitbart News website's executive chairman, following a revolt by the board of directors. Happier days: Coming off the Trump campaign, where he was CEO, Bannon had a lofty perch in the White House as the president's chief strategist. He's pictured (right) during a January 2017 executive-order signing along with other senior Trump aides Bannon helped secure West Wing access and sources for author Michael Wolff, whose book 'Fire and Fury' include gossipy claims about the president's mental health There can be only one: President Donald Trump appears to have had the last laugh after Bannon twisted the knife in Wolff's book Mercer, who has poured millions into Breitbart, tipped her hand last Thursday, saying in a statement: I support President Trump and the platform upon which he was elected. My family and I have not communicated with Steve Bannon in many months and have provided no financial support to his political agenda, nor do we support his recent actions and statements.' Trump has given no quarter in his caustic regard for Bannon following the release of Michael Wolff's 'Fire and Fury.' He tweeted last week that the political gossip tome is 'full of lies, misrepresentations and sources that dont exist.' 'Look at this guys past and watch what happens to him and Sloppy Steve!' Bannon brought Wolff into the White House and persuaded an unknown number of administration officials to cooperate with him. And Bannon himself spoke harshly of Trump and his son Donald Jr. in the book, at one point calling the younger Trump 'treasonous' for holding a campaign-year meeting that included a Russian lawyer. The president's nasty nickname for Bannon? 'Sloppy Steve' Bannon issued a quasi-apology on Sunday, telling the Axios news website that he supports Trump and his agenda. 'I regret that my delay in responding to the inaccurate reporting regarding Don Jr. has diverted attention from the president's historical accomplishments in the first year of his presidency,' he said. Bannon never specifically denied telling Wolff the things attributed to him in the book, but said he regretted waiting five days to respond to 'inaccurate reporting.' He also called Donald Trump Jr. an 'honorable man.' But hours later a White House spokesman told reporters aboard Air Force One that it was too little, too late: 'I just don't think there's any way back at this point.' Bannon's Waterloo: The nationalist firebrand backed Alabama U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore despite sexual assault and abuse allegations lodged against him Bannon had predicted in 'Fire and Fury' that the Russia probe, led by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, would focus on money laundering and ensnare the president's eldest son. 'Theyre going to crack Don Junior like an egg on national TV,' he says in the book. The president himself has piled on in recent days. 'I guess Sloppy Steve brought him into the White House quite a bit,' a prescient Trump said Sunday, 'and it was one of those things. That's why Sloppy Steve is now looking for a job.' Breitbart CEO Larry Solov said in a statement that the company will find a way to transition Bannon out the door smoothly. 'Steve is a valued part of our legacy, and we will always be grateful for his contributions, and what he has helped us to accomplish,' Solov said. A source with knowledge of Tuesday's events at Breitbart told DailyMail.com that Solov, a close friend and former roommate of the late Andrew Breitbart, argued most forcefully for the board to oust Bannon saying he was 'damaged' and 'toxic.' Breitbart News is named for Andrew Breitbart, the late conservative firebrand who died in 2012 of a heart attack at age 43 Bannon, though, said he was 'proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplished in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform.' CNN reported that Solov addressed Breitbart employees on Tuesday via a Slack channel, saying that the outlet 'will continue doing what we do as well as anybody in the world, and that is report the news.' An unnamed Breitbart employee told the network: 'Everyone seems stunned.' Bannon, the ousted former Trump-whisperer, has been left a man without a country, and he also won't find sanctuary at the TV network most likely to house conservatives. 'Fox News will not be hiring Steve Bannon,' the network said in a statement late on Tuesday. The Mercers, including Rebekah's father Robert, a billionaire financier, had already cut ties with Bannon and said they would no longer fund his political projects. That backlash came after Bannon's failed attempt to shepherd the controversial former judge Roy Moore to the finish line of a U.S. Senate race Republicans expected to win in deep-red Alabama. Moore defeated Trump's chosen candidate Luther Strange in a primary race but then was beset with accusations that he had fondled teen girls when he was in his 30s. Following the release of early excerpts of Wolff's book last week, the White House left no doubt that it was cutting all ties with Bannon. 'Steve Bannon has nothing to do with me or my Presidency,' Trump said in an unusually lengthy statement full of pointed barbs. 'When he was fired, he not only lost his job, he lost his mind.' 'Steve pretends to be at war with the media, which he calls the opposition party, yet he spent his time at the White House leaking false information to the media to make himself seem far more important than he was. It is the only thing he does well.' A former White House ally of Bannon told Axios: 'I've gone from being sympathetic to Steve to believing he's a genuinely bad guy, totally duplicitous. It's a shame. He has a lot of talent. But his self-destructive streak is unlike anything I've ever seen.' In addition to his role with the Breitbart News website, Bannon also lost his seat on the company's radio program, which airss on the SiriusXM Patriot Channel. 'Breitbart News has decided to end its relationship with Stephen K. Bannon, therefore he will no longer host on SiriusXM since our programming agreement is with Breitbart News,' the satellite radio company said in a statement. A father-of-two is in hospital with a traumatic brain injury after he fell off his electric skateboard on New Year's Eve. Damyon Wiese was knocked unconscious after he hit his head but it was his helmet that saved his life. The 38-year-old's wife, Lisa, told 7 News they are lucky quick thinking bystanders were able to help the Perth man. Father-of-two (pictured) is in hospital with a traumatic brain injury after falling off skateboard Damyon Wiese (right) was knocked unconscious when he fell off his electric skateboard The software developer (pictured) is being treated for swelling on his brain and neck fractures and is expected to stay in hospital for another month 'It would have been a very scary scene to find someone who'd had an accident and was unconscious,' Ms Wiese said. 'He was bleeding from the nose and ears and obviously not in a very good state at all.' The software developer is being treated for swelling on his brain and neck fractures and is expected to stay in hospital for another month. While Mr Wiese is unable to talk properly or understand where he is, his wife is optimistic he will make a full recovery because he is starting to recognise faces. 'We're seeing glimmers of hope each day ... we're optimistic that we'll see him like this again,' Ms Wiese wrote on social media. The young family are hoping to find the people who helped Mr Wiese after the accident on North Beach to thank them personally. 'We don't know the identity of the wonderful people in North Beach who came to his aid and arranged the ambulance, it would have been a scary scene but due to their bravery Damyon received immediate care,' Ms Wiese wrote. While Mr Wiese (pictured with his wife Lisa) is unable to talk properly or understand where he is, his wife is optimistic he will make a full recovery because he is starting to recognise faces The 38-year-old's wife, Lisa, told 7 News they are lucky quick thinking bystanders were able to help the Perth man who was found on North Beach (pictured) Advertisement An eerie morning fog covered Washington, DC, on Tuesday just days after Winter Storm Grayson swept north along the East Coast, closing schools and businesses and delaying thousands of flights. Temperatures in DC as well as other big cities, including New York and Boston, will rise to the mid-40s this week, up from the bone-chilling temperatures brought on by last week's storm. Sunday morning ended up being the coldest for Baltimore and DC, which recorded a low of 20F. An eerie morning fog covered Washington, DC, on Tuesday just days after Winter Storm Grayson swept north along the East Coast, closing schools and businesses and delaying thousands of flights Temperatures in DC as well as other big cities, including New York and Boston, will rise to the mid-40s this week, up from the bone-chilling temperatures brought on by last week's storm The mercury dipped into the single digits in Baltimore and DC during the weekend, about 20F (6C) below normal for this time of year. The fog signals the end to the bitter cold snap and this week, folks across the East Coast can expect the ice to vanish as temperatures continue to climb People line up in the fog at the the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington to attend arguments early Tuesday The fog eventually started dissipate at the White House shortly after blanketing the city The mercury dipped into the single digits in Baltimore and DC during the weekend, about 20F (6C) below normal for this time of year. The fog signals the end to the bitter cold snap and this week, folks across the East Coast can expect the ice to vanish as temperatures continue to climb. DC residents will receive mostly sunny weather for the rest of the week with temperatures climbing as high as 62F on Friday. The blast of arctic air engulfed portions of the East Coast and broke cold temperature records from Maine to West Virginia and stunned sea turtles in Florida. Last week, Boston experienced historic flooding as the 'bomb cyclone' hit the region. The storm, with winds gusts of more than 70mph, dumped a foot or more of snow throughout the region, including Boston and parts of New Jersey and Maine. In DC, 0.8 inches of snow fell during the storm that ended on Sunday. But on Monday, the area received a wintry mix of rain, sleet and snow. People walk through fog on the National Mall as temperatures warm up in DC on Tuesday DC residents will receive mostly sunny weather for the rest of the week with temperatures climbing as high as 62F on Friday The blast of arctic air engulfed portions of the East Coast and broke cold temperature records from Maine to West Virginia In DC, 0.8 inches of snow fell during the storm that ended on Sunday. But on Monday, the area received a wintry mix of rain, sleet and snow Forecasters advised drivers to watch for icy conditions, especially on the smaller highways and neighborhood streets, early Monday morning. Over the past weekend, the National Weather Service predicted 'life-threatening' cold overnight for much of the region. On Friday and Saturday, the East Coast was sent into a deep freeze, causing travel chaos at major airports, especially the John F Kennedy International Airport, where more than 6,000 flights were cancelled. The storm caused the airport to close on Thursday and reopen at 7am on Friday. But the reopening was compounded by further disasters - such as a plane needing to turn back for an emergency landing after a false alarm and a collision on the tarmac. The backlog continued into Saturday where one Aeroflot flight sat on a runway for nine hours before the crew finally requested someone come pick them up, and simply left the plane on the runway. DC saw a high of 48F on Tuesday, after receiving a wintry mix of rain, sleet and snow on Monday On Wednesday, temperatures are predicted to climb to about 41F as depicted on this chart And Thursday, temperatures will hit the low 50s for residents in the area Though DC only saw about 0.8 inches of snow, the temperature was 20F below normal for the area around this time of year Mason Perry Curtis was seen shoveling snow in front of the US Capitol last Thursday To make matters worse, the arrivals section of JFK's Terminal 4 had to evacuate around 1.30pm on Sunday after a water pipe broke flooding parts of the airport. The flooding caused even more delays and sparked further misery and travel chaos for passengers, some of whom had already been waiting days for their flights after blizzard conditions caused the airport to close on Thursday, and caused severe delays and cancellations through till Monday. Thankfully, operations finally returned to normal Tuesday after the chaos of the weekend with the majority of flights running on time. Many East Coast communities ordered drivers to stay off the roads and closed schools last Friday. Schools in Boston and Baltimore canceled classes while Newark, New Jersey, schools were opening two hours later than usual on Friday. Friday's forecast shows a high of 62F for DC and Baltimore is expected to get a high of 59F On Saturday, DC, Maryland and Northern Virginia will see temperatures in the mid-50s Three New Jersey families are demanding answers after their dogs either died or were badly injured during grooming appointments at a Hunterdon County PetSmart. Over an eight-day period from December 22 to 29 at least two dogs died after being dropped off at the Flemington pet store, according to NJ Advanced Media. A third dog suffered serious back injuries. Danielle DiNapoli told the outlet that her dog Scruffles died on December 29, one hour after she dropped the healthy eight-year-old bulldog off for a grooming session. I was in shock. You know, you expect to see your dog happy and healthy and groomed, and I got a dead dog,' she told NJ.com on Monday. Danielle DiNapoli said her bulldog, Scruffles, died on December 20 during a grooming appointment at the Flemington PetSmart DiNapoli said PetSmart never gave her a written report on what happened and she still does not know how Scruffles died She started a Facebook page, Justice for Scruffles, hoping to get answers DiNapoli said she dropped Scruffles off around 9.45am and by 11am the dog was being taken to Flemington Veterinary Hospital. She was pronounced dead on arrival. The distraught woman said none of PetSmart's employees where at the hospital when she got there to answer her questions. According to DiNapoli, she has still not received a written report from the store explaining what happened and she does not know how Scruffles died. Results from a necropsy, the animal equivalent of an autopsy, won't be available for weeks. DiNapoli has since started a Facebook page, Justice for Scruffles, demanding answers about what happened to her pet pooch. 'PetSmart refuses to answer any questions regarding her passing and only states its under investigation,' she posted. 'We have asked to speak to the groomer and a report of what happened during her last hours on earth. They refuse to give us information.' PetSmart told NJ.com that an investigation is still being conducted, but initial findings indicate 'the associates involved followed all policies and procedures consistent with care and services provided to breeds such as bulldogs. The NJ Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is also investigating Scruffles' death and is looking into whether or not charges need to be filed. Two other New Jersey residents have said they faced similar horror incidents after dropping their dogs off at the Flemington PetSmart. Tara Fiet said her dog, Ranger, died on Christmas Eve, two days after his grooming appointment. She told the outlet that dog was lethargic following his session and never recovered. The store told Fiet that there were no incidents involving her dog the day he was dropped off to them. David Bolduc said his shih tzu, George, suffered serious back injuries after he dropped the dog off for grooming on December 22 at the Flemington PetSmart George needed heavy steroids and had to be confined to a cage for 10 days because of his injuries Tara Fiet said she dropped her dog, Ranger, off at the Flemington PetSmart on December 22 for a grooming session. He died two days later on Christmas Eve When Danielle posted her story, I messaged her and said, My dog went there Friday and died Sunday. Is that a coincidence or could something have happened?' she said. David Bolduc said he was left with a badly injured dog when he brought his shih tzu, George, in for grooming on December 22. Bolduc said the store called him after he left the dog claiming that George had bit the groomer and he needed to come get him. He said by the time he got his dog, George was in 'extreme pain, arching his back to keep weight off his hind legs, the outlet reports. George was taken to a vet and given heavy steroids. He was also confined to a cage for 10 days. Bolduc said when he called PetSmart, he was told nothing happened while George was in their care. I had an immobile pet. Im several hundred dollars into this and looking at much more.' he said. PetSmart later contacted Bolduc and said they would cover medical expenses and take care of anything George needs. All three families are still awaiting answers on what happened to their dogs. One of the Queen's bridesmaids was kept waiting on an NHS hospital trolley for 20 hours after contracting life-threatening pneumonia, her daughter has claimed. Lady Pamela Hicks, who is the daughter of Earl Mountbatten and a cousin of Prince Philip, was taken to hospital in an ambulance in the middle of the night after collapsing at her home. But when the 88-year-old aristocrat was wheeled in, she was allegedly left on a trolley for almost a day because every bed in the hospital was being used. Eventually, she was given a bed in the neuroscience ward because of the acute shortage of space on general wards, where pneumonia sufferers are usually treated. Lady Pamela Hicks (pictured with her daughter India), who is the daughter of Earl Mountbatten and a cousin of Prince Philip, was taken to hospital in an ambulance in the middle of the night after collapsing at her home Lady Pamela's daughter India Hicks, 50, blamed 'busy' hospitals at 'this time of year' for her mother's plight. She took to Instagram to express her concerns Lady Pamela, a former lady-in-waiting to the Queen, was understood to have been admitted to a hospital near her Oxfordshire home towards the end of last week. Her admittance came during the NHS winter crisis which has seen hospitals cancel up to 55,000 operations and put patients on mixed-sex wards to free space. NHS England is worried the pressures will intensify this week when rising flu levels coincide with the effects of a cold snap. Flu rates are twice as high as this time last year and many patients are infected with an aggressive strain, h3n2, which wreaked havoc in Australia six months ago. Lady Pamela's daughter India Hicks, 50, blamed 'busy' hospitals at 'this time of year' for her mother's plight. Lady Pamela (pictured far right on the Queen's wedding day in 1947), a former lady-in-waiting to the Queen, was understood to have been admitted to a hospital near her Oxfordshire home towards the end of last week Pictured: Pamela Mountbatten (now Hicks, left), Princess Alexandra of Kent (centre left), Princess Margaret (centre right) and Queen Elizabeth (left) in 1947 Lady Pamela Hicks is pictured with her husband David at a funeral with Prince Philip and Prince Charles Writing on Instagram, the former model said her mother had to be 'rescued' by her 54-year-old son Ashley after collapsing at her country house, which is near the market town of Watlington. Miss Hicks, who runs a lifestyle brand, said: 'Having the excitement of an ambulance rush her to hospital in the middle of the night, she was then kept on a gurney for 20 hours before the NHS found her an available bed in the neuroscience ward. 'It's that time of year. Hospitals are busy.' Lady Pamela, the widow of interior designer David Hicks, is understood to have been treated in hospital for three days before being discharged on Monday. The aristocrat told the Daily Mail yesterday: 'I arrived in A&E on a busy, busy, busy night. 'I stayed in hospital for about three days. I'm now recovering from pneumonia at home. 'The NHS were brilliant. The staff were fantastic and I had wonderful care when I was in hospital.' Lady Pamela (pictured centre with her daughters Edwina and India), the widow of interior designer David Hicks, is understood to have been treated in hospital for three days before being discharged on Monday The NHS would not confirm which hospital she was treated in. However, Oxfordshire's neurology services are based in the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. India Hicks, who is also recovering from pneumonia, flew from her home in the Bahamas to Britain when her mother became unwell. The aristocrat told the Daily Mail: 'I arrived in A&E on a busy, busy, busy night. I stayed in hospital for about three days. I'm now recovering from pneumonia at home. The NHS were brilliant. The staff were fantastic and I had wonderful care when I was in hospital.' She added: 'My mother, being a lot stronger than most of us, had disguised her pneumonia much better than I had, living with it at home throughout Christmas till finally collapsing from a lack of oxygen, only to be rescued, brilliantly, by my brother. 'I was recovered enough from my own share of pneumonia to fly back to England to be with her.' Lady Pamela, who accompanied the Queen on several colonial tours, was one of her eight bridesmaids when she married Prince Philip in 1947. She is the daughter of Lord Mountbatten, India's last viceroy who was killed by the IRA when a bomb exploded on his fishing boat in County Sligo in 1979. The bomb also killed his grandson Nicholas Knatchbull, 14, crew member Paul Maxwell, 15, and the dowager Lady Brabourne, 83. Other family members were seriously injured. In an interview on Radio 2 last year, Lady Pamela said the only moment she struggled to cope was when she was asked to identify her father's body at the hospital. This is the second time that she has faced sparse NHS resources. Last summer, when she had a serious leg injury, she had to be wheeled around her local hospital on an office chair because no wheelchairs were available. Melbourne City Council spent $100,000 on alcohol at functions, staff farewells, and Tuesday post-meeting drinks in just one year. The leaving party for just one worker ran up a tab for $3,100 in a single night at a lavish, boozy party in the Town Hall's Yarra room. This was almost as much as the $3,680 blown at the 2016 Christmas Festival launch VIP drinks at the The Westin Hotel. Melbourne City Council (Lord Mayor Robert Doyle pictured at outside event) spent $100,000 on alcohol at functions, staff farewells, and Tuesday post-meeting drinks in just one year Councillors and senior executives drink every Tuesday after meetings, costing $4,522 between October 2016 and 2017. Morris Rutherglen Shiraz, retailing at $13 a bottle, and Cape Schanck T'Gallant Pinot Grigio for up to $20 were the most popular among this top echelon. Melbourne Council said these post-meeting dinners meant councillors and executives could discuss matters informally. '(It) is critical to the development of cohesive, productive working relationships,' it told the Herald Sun. However, it promised to review its alcohol policy after the investigation into Lord Mayor Robert Doyle was completed. The office of Mayor Doyle, who is accused of sexual harassment and indecent assault against a former councillor, spent a total of $2,589 last financial year. Councillors and senior executives drink every Tuesday after meetings, costing $4,522 between October 2016 and 2017 Events included celebrating the end of the council term, swearing in new councillors, and introducing them to senior staff More than $2,000 was spent supplying events celebrating the end of the council term, swearing in new councillors, and introducing them to senior staff. The council's total bill from all events was $85,659 including festivals, exhibitions, and entertaining foreign delegations. 'The City of Melbourne has a rigorous alcohol procurement policy for functions and events,' it said. 'This requires function organisers and event co-ordinators to seek approval from both a manager and a director.' The White House is said to be considering former fast foot titan Andy Puzder for another position in the administration. Puzder was President Trump's first nominee for labor secretary. He withdrew his nomination in February after decades-old allegations of domestic abuse resurfaced. The former chief executive of CKE Restaurants Inc., parent company of the Carls Jr. and Hardees, is now being looked at for some other job, Politico reported, citing three sources. The White House is said to be considering former fast foot titan Andy Puzder (left) for another position in the administration On Monday the White House seemingly tested the waters for Puzder's hiring, distributing an op-ed he wrote for the Wall Street Journal through official channels. Politico reported that same day that the Trump administration was mulling a position for him, after the first one didn't work out. Ex-wife, Lisa Fierstein, on Oprah Winfrey's show in 1990, claimed that her husband had abused her. She retracted the claims months later The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from DailyMail.com on the news publication's report. The report focused on Puzder's peppered past. Specifically, allegations by his ex-wife, Lisa Fierstein, on The Oprah Winfrey show in 1990 that he had abused her. Fierstein retracted the claims eight months later as part of a mutual agreement to split custody of their children. She sent a letter to the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee before her ex-husband's nomination was yanked reiterating the retraction. The damage, however, was already done. Puzder had also admitted to employing an illegal immigrant housekeeper for several years, whose status he says he and his wife was unaware of at the time. The charges were too much for Puzder to overcome in the upper chamber, which has the sole authority to instate cabinet officials. It's not clear what role Puzder would have in Trump's administration now. Trump ultimately appointed Alexander Acosta as labor secretary. His nomination passed 60-38. Former fast food exec withdrew his nomination for labor secretary in February. It's not clear what role Puzder would have in Trump's administration now If Puzder were brought into the Trump administration's fold, it's likely one that didn't require the same kind of Senate confirmation that sunk him the first time Trump tried to hire him. One position that's rumored to be open soon is chief economic adviser to the president, a job that's held currently by Gary Cohn. As recently as Saturday, Cohn said that he was not leaving the White House, though. Puzder's cabinet bid ended in February and he stepped down from his position at CKE in April. He's been an adviser to the Trump-backing non-profit America First Policies since October, Politico reported. In an email, Puzder told Politico that he had no knowledge that the administration was trying to find other work for him prior to the news publication's outreach. Politico wrote that Puzder did not respond to am email asking whether he would accept a job in the executive branch at this point if one was offered. In June 1950 fighting broke out between the communist North and capitalist South, sparking a brutal war that killed between two and four million people. Beijing backed Pyongyang in the three-year conflict, while Washington threw its support behind the South -- alliances that have largely endured. The Koreas have been locked in a dangerous dance ever since that conflict ended in 1953 with an armistice rather than a formal peace treaty, leaving them technically at war. Pyongyang has tested the fragile ceasefire with numerous attacks. The secretive nation sent a team of 31 commandos to Seoul in a botched attempt to assassinate then-President Park Chung-Hee in 1968. All but two were killed. In the 'axe murder incident' of 1976, North Korean soldiers attacked a work party trying to chop down a tree inside the Demilitarized Zone, leaving two US army officers dead. Pyongyang launched perhaps its most audacious assassination attempt in Myanmar in 1983, when a bomb exploded in a Yangon mausoleum during a visit by South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan. He survived but 21 people, including some government ministers, were killed. U.S. Marines covering the road leading to the front lines in South Korea in 1950 In 1987 a bomb on a Korean Air flight exploded over the Andaman Sea, killing all 115 people on board. Seoul accused Pyongyang, which denied involvement. The North's founding leader Kim Il-Sung died in 1994, but under his son Kim Jong-Il it continued to prod its southern neighbor. In 1996 a North Korean submarine on a spying mission ran aground off the eastern South Korean port of Gangneung, sparking 45-day manhunt that ended with 24 crew members and infiltrators killed. A clash between South Korean and North Korean naval ships in 1999 left some 50 of the North's soldiers dead. In March 2010 Seoul accused Pyongyang of torpedoing one of its corvette warships, killing 46 sailors. Pyongyang denied the charge. November that year saw North Korea launch its first attack on a civilian-populated area since the war, firing 170 artillery shells at Yeonpyeong. Four people were killed, including two civilians. North Korea has steadfastly pursued its banned nuclear and ballistic missile programs since its first successful test of an atomic bomb in 2006, as it looks to build a rocket capable of delivering a warhead to the US mainland. Its progress has accelerated under leader Kim Jong-Un, culminating in its sixth and biggest nuclear test in September 2017. Kim has since declared the country a nuclear power. Despite the caustic effect of clashes and the battery of conventional weapons that the North has amassed at the border to threaten Seoul, the two nations have held talks in the past. Then North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il held two historic summits with counterparts from the South in 2000 and 2007, which eased tensions between the neighbors. Lower-level talks since then have been much hyped but failed to produce significant results. Source: AFP Robots created from scrap may not seem like they would make for the sexiest strippers, but one visionary sculptor has made it his mission to create alluring pole-dancers from rubbish. The android adult entertainers are the creation of a British artist who says they are a comment on the nature of surveillance, power and voyeurism. With a head formed from a jettisoned surveillance camera and bodies built using mannequins and car parts, there is little risk of anyone confusing these bots with the genuine article, however. They were brought in to entertain the crowds descending on Las Vegas this week for the 2018 Consumer Electronics Show. Scroll down for video They may grind and gyrate around a pole with moves like a real stripper, but these robotic dancers are unlikely to replace human performers anytime soon. They were brought in to entertain the crowds descending on Las Vegas for the 2018 Consumer Electronics Show POWER AND VOYEURISM The robots were originally created in 2012 by Mr Walker for a show called 'Peepshow'. Mr Walker has previously hired out the robots for 2,500 ($3,100) at another technology industry event. They also performed at the Sexpo trade event in Melbourne in November 2016. 'By placing the CCTV on the body of a pole dancer I am looking at the relationship of voyeurism and power,' Mr Walker told AAP at the time. 'Is she (the stripper) the one with the power, or is it the people watching her?'. Advertisement The robo-strippers were built by Giles Walker, who specialises in constructing machines with the aim of addressing social issues. While they may grind and gyrate around a pole with moves like a real stripper, these robotic dancers are unlikely to replace human performers anytime soon. Artificial intelligence? Don't even think about it. These strippers are powered with recovered windshield wiper motors and are programmed to move with the artist's sense of feminine style. They are currently on display at the Sapphire Gentleman's Club a few blocks off the Vegas Strip, which will host the robotic exotic dancers from January 9 to 13 Speaking at a media event Monday night, which was not part of the official CES program, Mr Walker said: 'I wanted to do something sexy with rubbish.' Peter Feinstein, the club's managing director, said he invited Walker and his robots to add variety at a venue which has long hosted attendees to one of the world's largest tech shows. 'This is our 18th year for the club, and we felt we needed to come up with something new and unique,' Mr Feinstein said. The android adult entertainers are the creation of a British artist who says they are a comment on surveillance, power and voyeurism. A human dancer performs next to a stripper robot The robo-strippers were built by Giles Walker, who specialises in constructing machines with the aim of addressing social issues. A stripper robot wears a garter while performing The bots are currently on display at the Sapphire Gentleman's Club a few blocks off the Vegas Strip. Two robots perform during their on-stage debut 'It used to be just nerds. But we wanted something more creative that would appeal to both men and women.' At the club, where human dancers were also performing, the robots got mixed reviews. 'I think it's a good idea,' said one male customer who asked not to be identified, but added that he preferred the real thing. With a head made from a jettisoned surveillance camera and the rest from bits of scrap material from mannequins and car parts, there is little risk of anyone confusing the bots with real strippers, however At the club, where human dancers were also performing, the robots got mixed reviews. 'I think it's a good idea,' said one male customer who asked not to be identified, but added that he preferred the real thing One of the club's dancer's who gave her name only as Rouge said she was not worried about the competition. The Sapphire will host the robotic dancers from January 9 to 13 The robots were originally created in 2012 by Mr Walker for a show called 'Peepshow'. Dollar bills are seen in a tip bucket as a 'stripper robot' performs during their debut 'This is just the first step. They're not there yet.' One of the club's dancer's who gave her name only as Rouge said she was not worried about the competition. 'I think there are a lot of people with weird fetishes so I am sure somebody will get turned on by that. But nobody can beat the beauty of someone, and our talent with our brains, the way we talk, the way we use our bodies,' she said. 'We can make people feel better than them.' The robots were originally created in 2012 by Mr Walker for a show called 'Peepshow'. Mr Walker previously hired out the robots for 2,500 ($3,100) at another technology industry event. They also performed at the Sexpo trade event in Melbourne in November 2016. 'By placing the CCTV on the body of a pole dancer I am looking at the relationship of voyeurism and power,' Mr Walker told AAP at the time. 'Is she (the stripper) the one with the power, or is it the people watching her?'. Mr Walker previously hired out the robots for 2,500 ($3,100) at another technology industry event They also performed at the Sexpo trade event in Melbourne in November 2016. This image shows two of the robots gyrating on stage 'By placing the CCTV on the body of a pole dancer I am looking at the relationship of voyeurism and power,' Mr Walker told AAP at the time A Japanese astronaut says he has grown by 3.5 inches (nine cm) in height during the past three weeks aboard the International Space Station. So big has his growth spurt been that he is worried whether he will fit into the return capsule that will transport him back to Earth. The phenomenon of astronauts growing due to the low gravity of space is well known and they do return to their normal height upon their return. Scroll down for video A Japanese astronaut says he has grown by 9cm (3.5 inches) in height during the past three weeks aboard the International Space Station. So big has his growth spurt been, that he is worried whether he will fit into the return capsule that will transport him back to Earth WHY DO YOU GET TALLER IN SPACE? Astronauts can grow up to three inches (seven cm) taller in space, because of how microgravity affects the human body. Imagine that the vertebrae in your back form a giant spring. Pushing down on the spring keeps it coiled tightly. When the force is released, the spring stretches out. In the same way, the spine elongates by up to three per cent while humans travel in space. There is less gravity pushing down on the vertebrae, so they can stretch out. Stretching of the spine also happens every night to some degree as, when you lie down, gravity isn't pushing down on your vertebrae. Advertisement Norishige Kanai wrote on social media that he was concerned he won't fit into the seat of the Russian Soyuz vehicle that is due to bring him back to the planet in June. In a Tweet, Mr Kanai said: 'Good morning, everybody. 'I have a major announcement today. 'We had our bodies measured after reaching space, and wow, wow, wow, I had actually grown by as much as 9cm! 'I grew like some plant in just three weeks. Nothing like this since high school. 'I'm a bit worried whether I'll fit in the Soyuz seat when I go back.' This is the first mission to the ISS for the 41-year-old Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut, who is also a medical doctor. He joined Commander Anton Shkaplerov of Roscosmos and flight engineer Scott Tingle of Nasa, who docked their Soyuz spacecraft about 250 miles (400 km) above Earth at 8.39am GMT on December 19, 2017. The Soyuz spacecraft which transport astronauts from Earth to the ISS and back again have a limit on seating height, so it could pose a problem if crew members become too tall. 'Nine centimetres is a lot, but it is possible, knowing that every human body is different,' Libby Jackson of the UK Space Agency told BBC News. 'You do get taller in space as your spine drifts apart, usually by about two to five centimetres. 'There's a range of growth for different people, and everybody responds differently.' Astronauts have been known to grow up to three inches (seven cm) taller in space, because of how microgravity affects the human body. Imagine that the vertebrae in your back form a giant spring. Pushing down on the spring keeps it coiled tightly. When the force is released, the spring stretches out. In the same way, the spine elongates by up to three per cent while humans travel in space. There is less gravity pushing down on the vertebrae, so they can stretch out. The phenomenon of astronauts growing due to the low gravity of space is well known and they do return to their normal height upon their return. The Soyuz spacecraft which transport astronauts from Earth to the ISS and back again do have a limit on seating height Stretching of the spine also happens every night to some degree as, when you lie down, gravity isn't pushing down on your vertebrae. American Scott Kelly grew two inches while he was on board the International Space Station When the Nasa astronaut arrived back in Houston in March 2016, after spending a record-breaking 360 days in space, he appeared to be slightly taller than his twin brother, Mark. He soon returned to his usual height, however, after Earth's gravity shrunk him back down to size. Shanghai (Gasgoo)- Ford Motor delivered a total of 1,196,625 vehicles in China last year, down 6 percent from a year ago, the automaker announced on Tuesday. Its December sales in China dropped 9 percent year on year to 140,103 units. In 2017, Changan Ford handed over 826,740 vehicles to customers in China, down 14 percent compared with 2016. Its December sales in China were 102,219 units, decreasing by 12 percent year on year. JMC 2017 sales totaled 292,942 units, up 11 percent from a year earlier. But its December sales in China reported 6 percent year-on-year decrease and totaled 30,322 units. Lincoln delivered over 54,000 vehicles in China last year, soaring 60 percent compared with the year before. It is the third consecutive year for the luxury marque to break annual sales record. In the last month of 2017, the sales of Lincoln totaled 6,030 units, jumping 41 percent, its highest monthly sales volume in China. All of its five models, Navigator, MKX, MKC, Continental, MKZ, set a new monthly sales record in December, 2017. The delivery of Ford Escort reached 42,000 units, increasing 18 percent year on year and setting the best monthly sales record. The sales of Mondeo grew 6 percent year on year to 15,000 units. And Ford delivered more than 4,200 Mustangs in China last year. Just months after she made history by becoming the first robot to be granted legal citizenship, Sophia has been given legs. The humanoid robot, which is capable of holding a conversation with humans, can now move forward in a series of clunky steps. Sophia represents a remarkable 'rise of the machines' that promises or threatens to revolutionise man's relationship with technology. Scroll down for video The talking humanoid robot, which is modelled after Audrey Hepburn, was designed by Hong Kong firm Hanson Robotics, which claims Sophia can hold a conversation with humans. WHO IS SOPHIA? Sophia first emerged two years ago as a super-intelligent human-like head with a realistic face that was able to blink, look from side to side and talk. The humanoid robot, created by Hanson robotics can chat, smile mischievously and even tell jokes. While Sophia has some impressive capabilities, she does not yet have consciousness, but Hanson said he expected that fully sentient machines could emerge within a few years. Sophia herself has insisted 'the pros outweigh the cons' when it comes to artificial intelligence. 'Elders will have more company, autistic children will have endlessly patient teachers,' Sophia said. Just months after she made history by becoming the first robot to be granted legal citizenship, Sophia has now been given legs. Advertisement Sophia first emerged two years ago as a super-intelligent human-like head with a realistic face that was able to blink, look from side to side and hold a conversation. The humanoid, which is modelled after Audrey Hepburn, was designed by Hong Kong firm Hanson Robotics, and controversially became the world's first robot to be granted legal rights. At this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the firm announced they had given Sophia a pair of ugly, mechanical legs that produce movement closer to Frankenstein's monster than the young woman she pretends to be. She is able to simulate more 60 different facial expressions, track and recognise faces, look people in the eye, and hold natural conversations. And she appears even more humanlike thanks to a material that mimics real human musculature and skin that allows her to seem more expressive. Sophia was created by David Hanson of Hanson Robotics, who said: 'I quest to realise Genius Machines - machines with greater than human intelligence, creativity, wisdom, and compassion. Sophia was sporting what appeared to be a pair of futuristic cowboy boots for her first steps 'To this end, I conduct research in robotics, artificial intelligence, the arts, cognitive science, product design and deployment, and integrate these efforts in the pursuit of novel human-robot relations. He added: 'We envision that a rough symbiotic partnership with us, our robots will eventually evolve to become super intelligent genius machines that can help us solve the most challenging problems we face here in the world.' Sophia (left) first emerged two years ago as a super-intelligent human-like head with a realistic face that was able to blink, look from side to side and hold a conversation. The humanoid, which is modelled after Audrey Hepburn, was designed by Hong Kong firm Hanson Robotics Sophia represents a remarkable 'rise of the machines' that promises or threatens to revolutionise man's relationship with technology. Pictured is the android during an interview in November At this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the firm announced they had given Sophia a pair of ugly, mechanical legs that produce movement closer to Frankenstein's monster than the young woman she pretends to be It is a development that raises many questions and fears, stoked by films like The Terminator, I Robot and even Blade Runner. Details of her first steps were revealed by Hanson Robotics, who go by the motto 'We bring robots to life', at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. Hanson has signed a partnership with Rainbow Robotics and DASL (Drones and Autonomous Systems Lab) to help Sophia become a fully-fledged humanoid. In October, Sophia was granted citizenship in Saudi Arabia. Speaking at a conference (pictured) in Riyadh, Sophia said: 'I am very honoured and proud for this unique distinction. This is historical to be the first robot in the world to be recognized with a citizenship' And the first step in her evolution was to add her brains and head to a highly sophisticated robot body, called a DRC-HUBO, which was developed by scientists in South Korea. The DRC-HUBO body has beaten robots from around the work in a series of physical challenges. Some versions even have a 'transformer' ability to switch back and forth from a walking humanoid biped to a wheeled machine. Chief Scientist at Hanson, Dr Ben Goertzel, said: 'Giving Sophia a more complete and robust embodiment is a key part of our ongoing, rapidly accelerating quest to supply her and our other Hanson robots with general intelligence at the human level and ultimately beyond. 'Integrating Sophia with a body that can allow her to walk completes her physical form so she can access the full range of human experiences, which will help her learn to live and walk among us.' Lockheed Martin's secretive Skunk Works unit may have already finished making the radical hypersonic update of the long-retired Mach 3 SR-71 Blackbird spy plane. Jack OBanion, Vice President of Strategy and Customer Requirements, Advanced Development Programs for Lockheed Martin, let slip at a conference the unmanned aircraft has already been made. Speaking at The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics SciTech Forum, he showed a slide of a digital mockup of the craft, and said 'Without the digital transformation, the aircraft you see there could not have been made.' Scroll down for video Jack OBanion posted this image of a digital 'twin' of the craft, saying 'Without the digital transformation, the aircraft you see there could not have been made.' 'In fact, five years ago, it could not have been made.' OBanion also said the aircraft will have a 'digital twin' that knows every part on the aircraft. 'Talking about speed, you're talking about hypersoncs, aircraft that operate above mach 5,' he added. According to Aviation Week late last year, a technology demonstrator, believed to be an unmanned subscale aircraft, was observed flying into the U.S. Air Force's Plant 42 at Palmdale, where Skunk Works is headquartered, in July. The SR-72 hypersonic plane will be a strike and reconnaissance aircraft that tops Mach 6, and the firm has been working on the project since the early 2000s. Lockheed Martin posted an artist's impression of the craft to its website, with the caption 'The Skunk Works hypersonic design an aircraft developed to execute Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance and strike missions at speeds up to Mach 6.' 'Although I can't go into specifics, let us just say the Skunk Works team in Palmdale, California, is doubling down on our commitment to speed,' Orlando Carvalho, executive vice president of aeronautics at Lockheed Martin, told the SAE International Aerotech Congress and Exhibition. 'Simply put, I believe the United States is on the verge of a hypersonics revolution.' Hypersonic technologies, including a combined cycle propulsion system that blends a rocket engine and a supersonic jet engine, are now sufficiently advanced to allow the planned SR-72 project to begin, it is believed. 'We've been saying hypersonics is two years away for the last 20 years, but all I can say is the technology is mature and we, along with Darpa and the services, are working hard to get that capability into the hands of our warfighters as soon as possible,' Rob Weiss, Lockheed Martin's executive vice president and general manager for Advanced Development Programs, previously told Aviation Week. THE RECORD BREAKING BLACKBIRD SR-71 The SR-71 was the world's fastest and highest-flying operational manned aircraft throughout its career. On July 28 1976 it broke the world record for absolute altitude - reaching 85,069 feet. That same day a different SR-71 set an absolute speed record of 2,193.2mph - a record it still holds today. The plane was so fast that it could outrun surface-to-air missiles as it traveled close to the edge of space at about 85,000 feet, or about 16 miles above the earth. On July 28 1976 it broke the world record for absolute altitude - reaching 85,069 feet If a surface-to-air missile launch was detected, the standard evasive action was simply to accelerate and outfly the missile. The plane flew so high above the Earth's surface that Joersz said there was no real sense of speed at all with the clouds so far below. A total of 32 of the aircraft were built which flew from 1964 to 1999; 12 were lost in accidents, but none were shot down by enemies. Lockheed's previous reconnaissance aircraft was the relatively slow U-2, designed for the CIA. The plane's titanium skin was capable of surviving temperatures up to 482C In late 1957, the CIA approached the defense contractor Lockheed to build an undetectable spy plane and within ten months they had come up with the design for the Blackbird. Flying at 80,000 ft meant that crews could not use standard masks, which would not provide enough oxygen above 43,000 ft, so specialist protective pressurised suits were made. The plane's titanium skin was capable of surviving temperatures up to 482C. Advertisement 'I can't give you any timelines or any specifics on the capabilities,' he said. 'It is all very sensitive. 'Some of our adversaries are moving along these lines pretty quickly and it is important we stay quiet about what is going on. 'We can acknowledge the general capability that's out there, but any program specifics are off limits.' It is expected to be around the same size as an F-22 and powered by a full-scale, combined cycle engine. Envisioned as an unmanned aircraft, the SR-72 would fly at speeds up to Mach 6, or six times the speed of sound, Lockheed Martin has said previously. The image was revealed as part of a slide on how Lockheed Martin is using 'disruptive designs' At this speed, the aircraft would be so fast, an adversary would have no time to react or hide. 'Hypersonic aircraft, coupled with hypersonic missiles, could penetrate denied airspace and strike at nearly any location across a continent in less than an hour,' said Brad Leland, Lockheed Martin program manager, Hypersonics. 'Speed is the next aviation advancement to counter emerging threats in the next several decades. 'The technology would be a game-changer in theater, similar to how stealth is changing the battlespace today.' Marillyn Hewson said Lockheed's engineers are on the verge of making technology such as scramjet engineers, which have been talked about for years, a reality. This illustration shows the design for the SR-72's engine. The plane will also have a 'warm structure' that will heat up during flight Envisioned as an unmanned aircraft, the SR-72 would fly at speeds up to Mach 6, or six times the speed of sound, Lockheed Martin has said previously. Lockheed Martin posted an artist's impression of the craft to its website, with the caption 'The Skunk Works hypersonic design an aircraft developed to execute Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance and strike missions at speeds up to Mach 6.' Lockheed Martin and Aerojet Rocketdyne have been working together since 2006 on work to integrate an off-the-shelf turbine with a scramjet to power an aircraft with a combined cycle propulsion system from standstill to Mach 6 'The combined cycle work is still occurring and obviously a big breakthrough in the air-breathing side of hypersonics is the propulsion system,' Weiss revealed. 'The technology of the 'air breather has been matured and work is continuing on those capabilities to demonstrate that they are ready to go and be fielded,' he adds. It comes as Boeing has pledged to make hypersonic passengers planes a reality - and says they could be operating within a decade. 'I think in the next decade or two you're going to see them become a reality,' Boeing Chairman and CEO Dennis Muilenburg told CNBC at the Paris Air Show. However, he admitted the firm still has to prove there are enough people who could afford tickets to make it worthwhile. 'I think in the next decade or two you're going to see them become a reality,' Boeing Chairman and CEO Dennis Muilenburg told CNBC at the Paris Air Show. He believes the firm's work on experimental craft such as the firm's work on the X-51 Waverider (pictured) would also prove invaluable. 'There is still work to do on closing the business case to make sense for our customers,' said Muilenburg, who said the firm's work on the X-51 Waverider would also prove invaluable. 'But we see future innovations where you could connect around the world in about two hours.' Hypersonic jets, flying at up to Mach 5, or 3,800 mph, could allow passengers to dramatically cut journey times. For example, a commercial flight from New York to Shanghai currently takes about 15 hours - but at hypersonic speeds, could take two. NASA recently said it is is seeking proposals for the development of its supersonic X-plane, with plans to begin work as early as next year. The Quiet Supersonic Transport (QueSST) low-boom flight demonstrator aims to produce a much lower 'boom' than other supersonic aircraft, and NASA is hoping to see the first flight tests take place in 2021. Lockheed Martin has been working on the preliminary design, with hopes to move on to build the demonstrator, but NASA has now opened the door for other companies to submit their own designs as well. Boeing recently won a military contract to build a 'big bother' for the secretive X-37b spaceplane. Boeing declined to say how much it will put into development of the vehicle, which it calls Phantom Express, with DARPA, which is an agency under the U.S. Department of Defense. About the size of a business jet, Phantom Express will take off like a rocket, boost itself beyond the atmosphere and release an expendable second-stage rocket and satellite, then turn around and land like an airplane on a runway. The project, known as XS-1, is expected to debut in 2020, and military bosses claim it will 'bolster national security by providing short-notice, low-cost access to space.' Within two minutes of the launch the ship disengaged its rocket booster which then returned to the station A secret satellite codenamed Zuma lit up the Florida sky as it traveled to an unknown destination Elon Musk's SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida at 8pm Sunday Advertisement SpaceX has defended its rocket performance during the weekend launch of a secret U.S. satellite, amid reports that the secret satellite codenamed Zuma was lost. Company President Gwynne Shotwell said the Falcon 9 rocket 'did everything correctly' Sunday night and suggestions otherwise are 'categorically false.' Northrop Grumman which provided the satellite for an undisclosed U.S. government entity said it cannot comment on classified missions. Scroll down for video In this image made with an 8-minute long exposure, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and lands as seen from from the Ocean Club Marina in Port Canaveral The company chose SpaceX as the launch provider, noting late last year that it took 'great care to ensure the most affordable and lowest risk scenario for Zuma.' The name refers to a Malibu beach in Southern California. This was SpaceX' s third classified mission for the U.S. government, a lucrative customer. It was so shrouded in secrecy that the sponsoring government agency was not even identified, as is usually the case. The Falcon's first stage completed its job, lifting the rocket off the pad and toward space, then separated and landed back at Cape Canaveral. But second-stage information was kept to a minimum because of all the secrecy surrounding the flight. The rocket's second stage propels the satellite into orbit. The Wall Street Journal quotes unidentified congressional officials who were briefed on the mission as saying the satellite apparently did not separate from the second stage, and plunged through the atmosphere and burned up. Originally scheduled for a November launch, Zuma was delayed by potential concern about another mission's payload fairing, the shell on top that protects a satellite during launch. The company later said it had cleared the issue. Shotwell said in a statement that since no rocket changes are warranted for upcoming flights, the company's launch schedule remains on track. If additional reviews uncover any problems, she said, 'we will report it immediately.' The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on January 7, 2018. On Sunday, SpaceX has launched a secret satellite codenamed Zuma on its first flight of the new year Experts claim the satellite is now 'dead in orbit' - but say the information blackout around the launch means we may never know its fate. Peter B. de Selding, a spaceflight reporter for'Space Intel Report' claims a sourcetold him the satellite 'may be dead in orbit after separation.' 'Info blackout renders any conclusion - launcher issue? Satellite-only issue? - impossible to draw.' he added. SpaceX told Selding: 'We do not comment on missions of this nature; but as of right now reviews of the data indicate Falcon 9 performed nominally.' Photos and video show the launch - a secret satellite codenamed Zuma - lighting up the Florida sky but the exact position of its orbit was kept a secret. The ship launched in an orbit less than 1,200 miles from Earth and within two minutes disengaged its rocket booster, which then traveled back to and landed right at the Air Force Station. Much of the trip was kept secret and it was not revealed where the ship traveled to in the atmosphere. Selding said the lact of information was an issue. The launch is seen from Viera, Florida. SpaceX launched its mission - a secret satellite codenamed Zuma - at 8pm Pictured is another view made with a long exposure. The ship launched in an orbit less than 1,200 miles from Earth and within two minutes prepared for its rocket booster to land right back at the Air Force Station, which it did 'Distasteful to announce this stuff without beyond-reasonable-doubt certitude,' he tweeted. 'But if those in the know refuse to speak publicly, we all abhor the vacuum; the facts will emerge one way or another.' The launch was broadcast on SpaceX's website but the entire mission was not live-streamed. What the ship is made out of, among other questions, has not been revealed to the public. Previous reasons given for the delay in its launch were further testing being necessary and weather-related conditions. Musk, meanwhile announced on January 4 that SpaceX will launch 'the world's most powerful rocket' later this month with his own electric car on board. The Falcon Heavy 'megarocket' will fire beyond orbit from the former Apollo 11 moon rocket launchpad at the Kennedy Space Centre near Cape Canaveral, Florida. Musk said the launch vehicle will blast off at the 'end of the month' on an unmanned mission with a unique payload - the billionaire's cherry red 2008 Tesla Roadster, which will be fired toward Mars. The rocket will use 27 engines and three separate re-usable cores that will return to Earth after liftoff during the test flight, which is set to be one of the firm's most technically complex challenges to date. Elon Musk has announced SpaceX will launch 'the world's most powerful rocket' later this month with his own electric car on board. The Falcon Heavy 'megarocket' (pictured) will fire beyond orbit from the former Apollo 11 moon rocket launchpad at the Kennedy Space Centre near Cape Canaveral, Florida FALCON HEAVY LAUNCH If all goes according to plan, the Falcon Heavy will lift off and enter Earth's orbit, before two of its booster rockets separate off and return to Earth at Cape Canaveral in controlled landings. The rocket's central core will then separate from the main module, containing Musk's car, and begin its own controlled descent back to Earth, landing on the firm's 'Of Course I Still Love You' drone ship in the Pacific Ocean. The main module will continue its trajectory into 'deep space', the billionaire said, with a destination set for the orbit of Mars 140 million miles (225 million kilometres) away. According to SpaceX founder Elon Musk: 'Destination is Mars orbit. Will be in deep space for a billion years or so if it doesn't blow up on ascent.' Advertisement Before the maiden launch, a full test firing of the rocket's engines is expected, Musk said. 'Falcon Heavy now vertical on the former Apollo 11 moon rocket launchpad,' he wrote on Instagram on Thursday. 'At 2,500 tons of thrust, equal to 18 Boeing 747 aircraft at full throttle, it will be the most powerful rocket in the world by a factor of two. Excitement on launch day guaranteed, one way or another. 'Hold-down test fire next week. Launch end of the month.' When it lifts off for the first time in late January, the Falcon Heavy will become the most powerful rocket in the world thanks to its 5.1 million pounds of thrust generated through 27 Merlin engines. The vast rocket, which is ultimately three Falcon 9 rockets linked together, will have the combined thrust to eventually launch 140,000 pounds (63,500kg) of cargo into orbit. The mission marks SpaceX's most ambitious project to date. Musk founded SpaceX in 2002, with the aim of reducing space transportation costs and enabling the colonisation of Mars. The 46-year-old South African is also the CEO of Tesla, and predicts Falcon Heavy's payload will stay in deep space for a while. A photo of the unusual cargo - Musk's cherry red 2008 Tesla Roadster - was released last month. Images released by SpaceX show an original Roadster perched on a large cone inside the Falcon Heavy on what appears to be a secure mount to keep it stationary as the rocket makes its maiden flight. 'Test flights of new rockets usually contain mass simulators in the form of concrete or steel blocks. That seemed extremely boring,' Musk said in December. If all goes according to plan, the Falcon Heavy will lift off and enter orbit before two of its booster rockets separate and return to Earth at Cape Canaveral in controlled landings. The centre core of the rocket will then separate from the main module, containing Musk's car, and begin its own controlled descent back to Earth, landing on a drone ship in the Pacific Ocean Musk said the launch vehicle will blast off at the 'end of the month' on an unmanned mission with a unique payload - the billionaire's cherry red 2008 Tesla Roadster, which will be fired toward Mars. Pictured is the car strapped into the Falcon Heavy's main module THE FALCON HEAVY Height: 70 meters (229.6 feet) Stages: 2 Boosters: 2 Cores: 3 Engines: 27 Payload to LEO: 63,800kg (140,660 lb) Payload to Mars: 16,800kg (37,040 lb) Total width: 12.2m (39.9 ft) Mass: 1,420,788kg (3,125,735 lb) Total thrust at lift-off: 22,819 kilonewtons (5.13 million pounds) Advertisement 'Of course, anything boring is terrible, especially companies, so we decided to send something unusual, something that made us feel. 'The payload will be an original Tesla Roadster, playing Space Oddity, on a billion year elliptic Mars orbit.' If all goes according to plan, the Falcon Heavy will lift off and enter Earth's orbit, before two of its booster rockets separate off and return to Earth at Cape Canaveral in controlled landings. The rocket's central core will then separate from the main module, containing Musk's car, and begin its own controlled descent back to Earth, landing on the firm's 'Of Course I Still Love You' drone ship in the Pacific Ocean. The main module will continue its trajectory into 'deep space', the billionaire said, with a destination set for the orbit of Mars 140 million miles (225 million kilometres) away. Musk has said the payload 'will be in deep space for a billion years or so if it doesn't blow up on ascent.' In a Washington, D.C., speech last July the Tesla founder which said Falcon Heavy is one of the most difficult and technically complex projects SpaceX has ever undertaken. 'There's a lot of risk associated with Falcon Heavy,' he said during the 2017 International Space Station Research and Development Conference. The rocket will use 27 engines and three separate re-usable cores that will return to Earth after liftoff during the test flight, which is set to be one of the firm's most technically complex challenges to date 'Real good chance that the vehicle doesn't make it to orbit. I want to make sure to set expectations accordingly.' Musk has spent the proceeding months building up hype for the historic launch with a series of social media posts. Last month he posted an image to Twitter of people stoof next to a landed Falcon Heavy rocket to give an idea of the vehicle's scale. He tweeted: 'Falcon Heavy launching from same @NASA pad as the Saturn V Apollo 11 moon rocket. 'It was 50% higher thrust with five F-1 engines at 7.5M lb-F. 'I love that rocket so much.' He also confirmed the rocket will have a 'max thrust at lift-off is 5.1 million pounds or 2300 metric tons,' adding the first mission will run at 92 per cent capacity. 'Falcon Heavy to launch next month from Apollo 11 pad at the Cape. 'Will have double thrust of next largest rocket. Guaranteed to be exciting, one way or another,' Musk originally posted. Folding laundry may be among the most abhorred household chores. But, the task could soon be a thing of the past at least, for humans. At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, high-tech laundry robots are already beginning to make a buzz, including Seven Dreamers Laundroid. The firm demonstrated what it claims is the worlds first fully automated laundry folding robot, revealing it can even distinguish between different types of clothing to find the best folding style. Scroll down for video At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, high-tech laundry robots are already beginning to make a buzz, including Seven Dreamers Laundroid. The firm demonstrated what it claims is the worlds first fully automated laundry folding robot Initially, Laundroid will be quite expensive. The laundry robot is launching at $16,000, with luxury homeowners in mind. But, as sales come in, theyre hoping to eventually bring the price down to around $2,000. The robot has a sleek design that lets it blend in with the rest of your furniture, concealing the multiple robotic arms, cameras, and sensors on the inside. Laundroid relies on visual analysis and artificial intelligence to fold clothes without any help from a human, President & CEO Shin Sakane told Dailymail.com. It picks up each one-by-one and recognizes what kind of clothing it is. In a demonstration at CES, the firm revealed how easy it is to use; just load the Laundroid before bed, outing your clothes in randomly, and open the door to see neatly folded clothing in the morning Laundroid is controlled by a circle interface on its top segment, which allows you to open and close its doors. An exhibitor demonstrates Seven Dreamers Laundroid at CES In a demonstration at CES, the firm revealed how easy it is to use; just load the Laundroid before bed, putting your clothes in randomly, and open the door to see neatly folded clothing in the morning. It also uses an accompanying app to visualize the process as it's happening. To begin, turn the dial to the 12 oclock position to open the Laundroid, an exhibitor explained. The middle compartment is where the folded clothes will appear after the folding process is complete, she noted. Turn the dial back to the 3 oclock position to close the door. Once the door is closed, Im going to load my clothes into the bottom drawer. The robot has a sleek design that lets it blend in with the rest of your furniture, concealing the multiple robotic arms, cameras, and sensors on the inside Then the machine will pick up each type of clothing and begin to recognize which type of clothing it is so that it knows how to fold it correctly. The clothes dont have to be arranged in any particular way for the system to work, just randomly place them in, and Laundroid will sort them itself. According to Sakane, the system can hold about 30 items of clothing per session or, about the size of one dryer load. One in five Britons (19 per cent), or around 9.5million people, has been approached about making a compensation claim for holiday sickness, according to new research. Travel trade organisation Abta, which commissioned the poll, warned that claims management firms are cold calling millions of people, urging them to make false claims. It said there has been a six-fold rise in the number of claims made by UK holidaymakers since 2013. One in five Britons (19 per cent), or around 9.5million people, has been approached about making a compensation claim for holiday sickness, according to new research This is despite sickness reports in resorts remaining stable and travellers from other countries not experiencing the same issues. Abta found the most common way people are being contacted by claims management companies is over the phone (14 per cent), followed by text message (seven per cent) and email (seven per cent). Others were approached on social media (three per cent) or in person (two per cent), including at airports. The survey of 2,029 adults revealed that more than two-thirds (70 per cent) are unaware that making a false claim could result in a prison sentence in the UK or abroad. In October last year Deborah Briton and partner Paul Roberts from Wirral, Merseyside, were jailed at Liverpool Crown Court for making fraudulent claims. Travel trade organisation Abta warned that claims management firms are cold calling millions of people, urging them to make false claims ABTA'S 'STOP SICKNESS SCAMS' CAMPAIGN Abtas Stop Sickness Scams campaign is supported by destination governments, tourist boards and Abta members, including Thomas Cook, TUI and Jet2holidays. As part of the campaign Abta is reminding people that if they believe they have experienced food poisoning as a result of eating in their hotel, to contact their hotel or tour operator immediately in resort. It also advises that anyone who is cold-called and encouraged to make a fake or exaggerated claim should report the company to the Claims Management Regulator. Advertisement Briton was sentenced to nine months in prison and Roberts was handed a 15-month jail term. The research has been published six months after the Government announced plans to reduce the incentives of making such claims. A major barrier to tackling the issue is that legal fees are not controlled, so costs for tour operators who fight cases can be out of proportion to the damages claimed. Under Government proposals, travel firms would pay a prescribed sum depending on the value of the claim, making the cost of defending cases predictable. Abta wants the measures to be in place by April so they are effective for the summer season. Chief executive Mark Tanzer said: 'Unscrupulous claims management companies are encouraging people to make a false sickness claim which could land them with a large fine or even a prison sentence. 'False claims don't just make UK holidaymakers vulnerable to serious penalties - they're also costing travel companies and hotel owners tens of millions of pounds and tarnishing the reputation of the British abroad. 'Closing the loophole in the law in time for the 2018 holiday season will make a big difference in tackling fraudulent sickness claims.' Travelling can be an expensive business with the cost of flights taking up the bulk of tourists' budgets. However, there are several simple ways in which you can keep costs down from booking at exactly the right time to being flexible. Consumer group Which? has come up with five tips on how you can save when it comes to handing money over to airlines - and shows how it managed to save 88 per cent on the cost of a trip to Italy. Consumer group Which? has revealed the five simple tips that can help travellers save money when booking flights Time it right Airline fares are always going up and down in price depending on supply and demand. And according to Which?, choosing the exact right moment to book flights is crucial if you want to save money. Its consumer experts suggest that signing up to price alerts is the best way to know when fares are cheap. This is because websites will email passengers and notify them when the flight price drops. 'Simply click the price-alerts button on the results page of your flight search and enter your email address,' said Which? Be flexible According to Which? Fridays and Sundays are the most expensive days to travel. And it suggests being flexible with travel dates, travelling before or after, in order to save money. HOW WHICH? REDUCED ITS AIRFARE TO FLORENCE BY 88% In its report, Which? shows how a return flight from London to Florence on British Airways departing on a Friday, returning on a Sunday could be reduced from 265 to just 33. The first step was to move the trip forward one day and travel on a Saturday, return on a Monday via Vuelling Airlines, which reduced the flight to 144. To further reduce costs, it then switched the flights to Ryanair, arriving in Pisa and departing Bologna, as both cities are just a bus ride away from Florence. This brought the price down to 90. Which? then made another 50 saving by choosing to travel on Ryanair with hand luggage only. And finally after setting a flight alert, the experts booked the airfare on receiving an email telling them the price had dropped to just 33. Advertisement However, if the dates are set in stone, the consumer experts at the group say travellers could be flexible with their destination instead. They cite several websites such as Momondo and Kayak, where you can enter your dates and budget and they will come up with a destination for you. Look for alternatives Booking flights usually means flying from and returning to the same airport using the same airline. However, Which? suggests there is sometimes money to be saved by using multiple airports and airlines. It says that you can fly from London to Alicante from Stansted on Ryanair and return to Southend on Easyjet for a total of just 37.50. And on long-haul, consider going indirectly. Be in the know Many websites scour the internet looking for cheap deals on flights. And Which? advises signing up to them so you are kept informed of deals and offers. Two sites that it recommends staying on top of are Secret Flying and Jack's Flight Club. Avoid airline extras Another way to keep costs down is to travel light and only take hand luggage with you Many low cost carriers making their money through charging for extras such as checking in luggage, printing boarding passes and on-board food. However, Which? says that being aware of these charges allows you to plan in advance to make sure you aren't stung by them. But if you need to check a bag, its experts suggest pre-booking this online to get it at a cheaper price than arranging this at the airport. Its experts also say downloading an airline's app on to your phone means you can sometimes download your boarding pass on to it. Rory Boland, Which? Travel Editor, said: 'Most people won't be surprised that a bit of forward planning and flexibility can help cut the cost of your next flight - but probably won't realise just how much they can save. 'Flying Saturday and Monday rather Friday and Sunday, using price alerts and shopping around airports as well as airlines can knock hundreds of pounds off your fare.' While the stars of Hollywood were celebrating the Golden Globes with plenty of after-parties Sunday, stars Shia LaBeouf and Mia Goth opted for a quiet night at home. The actor/performance artist, 31, donned short sweatpants and blue Crocs while grabbing groceries in Sherman Oaks, California Sunday. His British-bred partner, 24, was also subdued, wearing little-to-no makeup and a simple sweater to the store. Quiet night: Stars Shia LaBeouf and Mia Goth opted for a quiet night at home Sunday in lieu of hitting up Golden Globes after-parties with other celebs While out, Shia tucked a black tee into grey shorts which were slashed to expose the star's pale legs along with a scattering of tattoos on his thighs. Unafraid of the fashion police, the Even Stevens actor sported blue Crocs and white socks on foot. His hair was cropped short on the sides and swept across the front while Shia kept a dark swath of hair across his face and jaw. His girlfriend Goth, who had parts in A Cure for Wellness and Marrowbone last year, walked ahead of her partner-of-five-years. Don't sweat-er the small stuff! Mia walked ahead of her partner-of-five-years donning a preppy cable knit sweater and pushing a full cart Maniacs for each other! The pair (above at the premiere of Fury in 2014) first got together after working opposite each other on Lar Von Trier's Nymphomaniac in 2013 The English model/actress pushed along a cart filled with several bags from the upscale Gelson's grocer and a box of La Croix sparkling water. Mia looked preppy in a cable-knit sweater worn over a white shirt. She kept her face make-up free while tucking her straight, shoulder-length locks behind her ears. The pair first got together after working opposite each other on Lar Von Trier's Nymphomaniac in 2013. Fooled you! The couple (above in 2014) made it look like they had gotten married back in 2016, later revealing that the Vegas nuptials were just 'a commitment ceremony' with officials adding they had 'no record' of a wedding license The duo looked like they were hitched in 2016 after they were spotted walking down the aisle at a chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada. Later it was explained that the live-streamed nuptials, which were officiated by an Elvis impersonator, were simply a 'commitment ceremony.' Officials from the Clark County registrar confirmed their 'records show no marriage license' between the pair speaking to People back in October 2016, shortly after the union. In July 2017 Shia was arrested for 'public drunkenness' in Savannah, Georgia for which he later took a plea deal in December, avoiding potential jail time. She's My Kitchen Rules self-confessed flirt who broke all the rules after sharing a friendly kiss with a cooking rival. And it appears things are heating-up again for former contestant Bek Outred, 28, who has confirmed she's in a relationship with handsome Fremantle Sea Rescue officer, Josh Gammon Carson. On Sunday, the petite blonde vet confirmed her status via an update on her Facebook account. Hot new romance: My Kitchen Rules self-confessed flirt Bek Outred, 28, has confirmed she's in a relationship with Fremantle Sea Rescue officer, Josh Gammon Carson On the menu: Hunky new beau Josh Gammon Carson works with Fremantle Sea Rescue Having famously said she would 'flirt with a pot plant', it appears fans of the blonde beauty were happy for the new couple. On Facebook user wrote: 'congrats mate, looks like its all Outred on Facebook', while others cooed 'Ooooh Congratulations gorgeous lady.' Appearing on the top-rated cooking show last year, bold Bek quickly became a fan favourite. Hot dish: The petite blonde and her new beau Josh are getting plenty of congratulations from friends and family Despite herself and cooking partner, Ash Brannan, being the first contestants kicked off the show with a paltry 26 points, interest in the reality star has remained strong. In May last year, the vet was rumoured to be making a return to reality television, with talks she could replace Bondi Vet, Dr Chris Brown. Taking to her Instagram account, Bek was obviously keen on the idea, saying it would 'mean the world' if she was given another chance on the small screen. At the time, the production company refused to confirm if Bek was a serious contender for the role or not. However it appears her television career might be put on ice, with both herself and new boyfriend Josh currently living in Perth. Tough time: Blonde Bek had a tough time on the show with cooking partner Ash Brannan (pictured), with the pair scoring the lowest number of points in the history of the show at that time She usually steps into the spotlight with best pal and Strictly Come Dancing co-host Tess Daly. But Claudia Winkleman, 45, made a rare public appearance with her husband Kris Thykier as the pair arrived arm-in-arm at the GQ dinner for London Fashion Week Men's at Berners Tavern on Monday. Despite putting on a stylish display in her black longline cocoon coat, the television presenter suffered from a fake tan faux pas as her feet were enhanced with patches of golden-brown. Scroll down for video Loved-up: Claudia Winkleman, 45, made a rare public appearance with her husband Kris Thykier as the pair arrived arm-in-arm at the GQ dinner for London Fashion Week Men's on Monday Bundled up by her long-time partner, the television and radio host opted for her trademark all-black attire as she wore a longline pea coat with matte gold buttons, glossy jeans and black stilettos. She swept her usually tousled mane into an effortless ponytail, paired with gold hooped earrings. As her thick full fringe fell beneath her eyebrows, she enhanced her face with candy pink lipstick and striking bold eyeliner. Missed the mark! Despite putting on a stylish display in her black longline cocoon coat, the television presenter suffered from a fake tan faux pas as her feet were enhanced with patches of golden-brown Stylish: The television and radio host opted for her trademark all-black attire as she wore a longline pea coat with matte gold buttons, glossy jeans and black stilettos Industry pals: The Strictly Come Dancing host posed for the cameras with British diver Tom Daley Slick: She swept her usually tousled mane into an effortless ponytail, paired with gold hooped earrings Reunited: Rita Ora found company in musician Liam Payne on Monday night, as she hosted the London Fashion Week Men's dinner with GQ Handsome couple: Snappy dressers Dustin Lance Black and Tom Daley put on a united front, inside the party Sweet pair: Dermot O'Leary looked sharp as he accompanied his wife Dee Koppang Fake tan faux pas! Claudia missed the mark in the fake tanning department, as her feet gave a peek at the patchy tone - showcasing a gradient from her natural skin tone to an orange-brown shade Claudia missed the mark in the fake tanning department, as her feet gave a peek at the patchy tone - showcasing a gradient from her natural skin tone to an orange-brown shade. Her husband - a film producer, looked dapper in a midnight blue wool coat, styled with a classic checked scarf. She shares her three children with the BAFTA nominated producer, also 45, who she married in 2000. Claudia, who has fronted the successful Strictly series with co-host Tess Daly this winter, is used to taking centre-stage in front of the nation. Daring: As her thick full fringe fell beneath her eyebrows, she enhanced her face with candy pink lipstick and striking bold eyeliner Fake tan lover: Discussing her pampering routine before going on TV, she admitted she was 'addicted' to fake tan and preferred to be a fetching shade of 'teak' at all times Discussing her pampering routine before going on TV, she admitted she was 'addicted' to fake tan and preferred to be a fetching shade of 'teak' at all times. 'I need my fix of an all-over whoosh of orange liquid once every couple of weeks,' she wrote in her column for the Sunday Times' Style magazine in June. 'Sometimes I opt for a really orange hue and sometimes (OK, let's call it once) I just like to waft past a mist of silky bronzed magic. 'A fake tan makes me feel enthusiastic, delighted with life and even (and trust me, this is big news) like leaving the house after 8pm.' She's a top supermodel with a growing resume. But Bella Hadid proved she's just a normal young adult as she stopped by a gas station in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon. The 21-year-old stunner looked ready to workout as she sported tight spandex pants from WE/ME at Bandier, as well as a pair of $850 Balenciaga sneakers to fill up her vehicle. Scroll down for video Pit stop! Bella Hadid proved she's just a normal young adult as she stopped by a gas station in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon Bella kept warm in the crisp rainy weather with a crisp white hodded sweatshirt that hit just above her slender waistline. She sported a pair of navy blue leggings over her slim pins, with scrunchy white socks covering her ankles. The Victoria's Secret Angel donned a pair of pricey white trainers with thick white soles adding inches to her already statuesque frame. Sweating: The 21-year-old stunner sported a pair of WE/ME leggings from high-end retailer Bandier to fill up her vehicle, hours after sharing candid pizza-eating snaps on Instagram Bella tied back her short chocolate brown into a chic top bun and accessorized with a pair of large silver hoop earrings. Earlier in the day she shared a few candid photos eating pizza to her nearly 17 million followers on Instagram. She captioned one image, Me in my Natural habitat brought to you by,' before tagging a photographer friend. Yum! Earlier in the day she shared a few candid photos eating pizza to her nearly 17 million followers on Instagram She captioned one image, Me in my Natural habitat brought to you by,' before tagging a photographer friend Bella recently flaunted her sensational figure to promote Giuseppe Zanotti's Spring Summer 2018 [SS18] season. In pictures by Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, the model displayed her enviably long legs in a skintight black leotard that showed off her hourglass curves. Zanotti said of the campaign: 'Bella, back for a second season, brings with her a rock-and-roll attitude that's also playful and seductive. The overall effect is compelling, contemporary, arresting.' Bella, along with model siblings Gigi, 22 and Anwar, 18, are the children of former model Yolanda Hadid and real-estate developer Mohamed Hadid. She started modeling at age 16 and signed with IMG Models in August 2014, and was named Readers Choice Break Out Star: Women by Models.com Industry Awards a year later. Stunning: Bella recently flaunted her sensational figure to promote Giuseppe Zanotti's Spring Summer 2018 [SS18] season Shanghai (Gasgoo)- During CES 2018, the startup electric vehicle company Faraday Future (FF), organized a test ride for its FF91 in a hotel nearby the exhibition instead of joining it. Several media were invited to have a test drive. Regarding the time FF91 to be put into market, an early employee of LeSEE who is presently responsible for FF's publicity in US said, Due to the capital issue, we met some difficulties in the vehicle design and production. Now, we need around 10 months to prepare the plant that is forcasted to have annual production capacity of 10,000 units. Once the plant opens, we plan to deliver production vehicles in small batches at the end of 2018. According to the above mentioned employee, the hardest capital problem has been alleviated. 75% of suppliers have resumed providing goods and most of debts FF owed have been paid. There was information revealing that FF has raised a funding of $ 1 billion. However, as for the capital resources, this employee always remained silent and refused to make any comment. Besides, this employee also expressed that FF91s price will not compete with Teslas, but the product will target Bentley and Rolls-Royce. A reporter receiving the invitation revealed that the tested vehicle has no interior. The interior details will be exposed in the first quarter this year according to the employee mentioned above. Besides, the reporter showed that there were a few troubles happening during the test drive. Tires were burned and back door could not open in some accidental situations. The team behind CW's Black Lightning took the stage at the Television Critics Association Tour on Sunday. Cress Williams, China Anne McClain, and Nafessa Williams were joined by other cast and crew to discuss the new DC comics-based show in Pasadena, CA. 'Its important to us to put our humanity into the picture, into the tableau that is out there in storytelling,' said creator series Mara Brock Akil when asked how she shaped the first African-American superhero show on television. Super crew: The team behind CW's Black Lightning took the stage at the Television Critics Association Tour on Sunday in Pasadena including Salim and Mara Brock Akil, Cress Williams, China Anne McClain, Nafessa Williams, Christine Adams, Marvin Jones III, and James Remar 'I just drew from my life,' Mara's co-creator and husband Salim Akil told the room of reporters at The Langham Huntington Library. 'One thing that Salim and I set out early to do and its a through line in all of our projects, is that we do black on purpose, Mara continued. 'This is what I know and this is what we know so lets do whats real. Lets do whats authentic and real to me, which I think everybody embraces. Im appreciative of that. Its very personal to me.' Based on the characters created by Tony Isabella with Trevor Von Eeden, the show revolves around Jefferson Pierce, a.k.a Black Lightning, a retired superhero who gets pulled back into the vigilante life when his family is under attack from a new threat. All in: They were joined by a room full of reporters to discuss the new DC comics-based show Having a laugh: China enjoyed the interview with her TV father Cress Laugh riot: China couldn't contain herself as she put her head on Cress' shoulder Cress - who plays the lead role - cut a dapper figure at the event in a purple shirt and navy vest. 'I was just ecstatic to land this role. This is an amazing opportunity to entertain but also to speak to life and I think thats our job as artists,' he told the crowd. Daring to impress in a chic black wardrobe, China - who plays Jefferson's daughter Jennifer - smiled and laughed next to her TV father. Chic: Nafessa - who plays eldest daughter Anissa - dazzled in a satin pink, white, and purple ensemble For the frill of it: Christine wore a ruffled black shirt as she sat next to China Powerful: Nafessa will get her own super powers as Thunder And Nafessa - who plays eldest daughter Anissa - dazzled in a satin pink, white, and purple ensemble. The two daughters will eventually find their own superpowers which excites the creators the most. 'You havent even seen Thunder and Lightning yet,' Salim said. Baby steps: China will also figure out how to navigate being a superhero as Lightning Coming out: Nafessa's character will be an out and proud lesbian 'The conversation is revolving around Jefferson and Black Lightning but look at this. You have a superhero with her hair in cornrows. Thats for the culture. You guys havent seen that yet.' Rounding out the cast at the TCA event were Christine Adams (Lynn Pierce) and Marvin Jones III (Tobias Whale). Black Lightning premieres Tuesday, January 16 at 9:00 p.m. on The CW. Super mom: Christine plays the matriarch of the family Her film Lady Bird bagged the gong for Best Motion Picture for a Comedy or Musical at Sunday's 75th Golden Globes. And the multi-talented actress Greta Gerwig, 34, wasted no time getting back home as she made a dash for LAX airport on Monday. While a successful evening, the indie darling suffered one of the night's most awkward moments when asked about previously working with controversial director Woody Allen, with her attempted side-step seen as an upset to many. Scroll down for video Hotfoot: The multi-talented actress Greta Gerwig, 34, wasted no time getting back home as she made a dash for LAX airport to jet back home on Monday The former Mumblecore queen kept a low profile as she headed to her flight, cosying up cream camel coat and retro black jumper dress. She maintained her vintage vibe with warming black tights and block heels as she kindly stopped to greet fans and sign autographs. The Damsel in Distress actress appeared fresh faced without a touch of make-up for her relaxed outing, giving her porcelain complexion some downtime following the high-glam night before. She left her golden blonde locks untamed in her trademark crop as she carried her garment bag through the airport while happily obliging fans eagerly waiting for her. Greta left the jewels for the red carpet, only sporting a delicate ring on her left hand. Winners: Her film Lady Bird bagged the gong for Best Motion Picture for a Comedy or Musical at Sunday's 75th Golden Globes Cosy: The former Mumblecore queen kept a low profile as she headed to her flight, cosying up cream camel coat and retro black jumper dress It was a largely successful night for the up-and-coming director and her Lady Bird lead actress Saoirse Ronan, who picked up Best Actress gong for her portrayal of high-school student Christine 'Lady Bird' McPherson in the popular coming of age story. Lady Bird is loosely based on Greta's own coming-of-age, with the film centering around a high school senior's turbulent relationship with her mother. Despite the films raging success, Greta missed out on a nomination for Best Director, with some award fans outraged as no females were included in the category. Happy: She maintained her vintage vibe with warming black tights and block heels as she kindly stopped to greet fans and sign autographs In a rush: She left her golden blonde locks untamed in her trademark crop as she carried her garment bag through the airport while happily obliging fans eagerly waiting for her However, Greta's success was overshadowed by her apparent side-step of an sensitive Hollywood topic - working with controversial director Woody Allen. Woody's career in the film industry has been a touchy subject for some time after step-daughter Dylan Farrow accused Allen of sexual assault when she was just seven years old in the midst of her mother Mia Farrow's split from the filmmaker - Woody has always denied her claims. The #Metoo and #Timesup campaigns had played a big part in the Golden Globes evening, with all but few screen actors wearing black for the award show in protest of recent sexual harassment claims within the industry. Dainty: Greta left the jewels for the red carpet, only sporting a delicate ring on her left hand During her Best Film post-win conference with the press, Greta, who sported black gown alongside actress Saoirse, was asked if she regretted working with Allen on his film To Rome With Love. In her stuttered response, she replied: 'It's something that I've thought deeply about. Looking visibly flustered, she continued: 'I'm so thrilled to be here tonight as a writer and director and creator, and to be making my own movies and putting that forth. 'You know, it's something that I've thought deeply about and I care deeply about, and I haven't had an opportunity to have an in-depth discussion where I come down on one side or the other.' Flustered: During her Best Film post-win conference with the press, Greta, who sported black gown alongside actress Saoirse, was asked if she regretted working with Allen on his film To Rome With Love Greta isn't the only screen talent to be asked the difficult question. Her To Rome With Love co-star Ellen Page published a personal essay on how she felt 'ashamed' to have said yes to the project. Adding: 'I did a Woody Allen movie and it is the biggest regret of my career. I had yet to find my voice and was not who I am now and felt pressured, because 'of course you have to say yes to this Woody Allen film. 'Ultimately, however, it is my choice what films I decide to do and I made the wrong choice. I made an awful mistake.' Some of Greta's fans took to Twitter to denounce their support for the writer after failing to come down on her time working with Woody. One wrote: 'Greta Gerwig's non-answers abt Woody Allen make me upset and I love her and her come-up to no end but I will not support her if and until she speaks about him and that's how everyone should feel about their faves being accused'. Another added: 'If Greta Gerwig won't publically denounce Woody Allen, I cannot support her as a voice for women in her art, because her choices disregard the experience of assualt surviors no matter what colour dress she wears or words her characters say. 'Disappointed: Some of Greta's fans took to Twitter to denouce their support for the writer after failing to come down on her time working with Woody Allen A third called Greta's response 'disappointing' and continued: 'When is the right time to talk about and take a stand'. MailOnline have contacted Greta's representatives for comment. Gerwig, previously known primarily for her acting in 'mumblecore' films and the films of Noah Baumbach, grew up in Sacramento, attended Catholic school and later moved to New York City. But she has repeatedly stressed that the film is not an autobiography but rather comes from a place of emotional truth and is inspired by the world in which she grew up, telling Reuters: 'Lady Bird, in a way, wrote herself'. She rose to fame as Playboy's 2015 Miss January, labelling herself a 'hyperconfident, kickass woman'. So no wonder Brittny Ward, 25, accentuated her toned frame in snug gym attire while out with her British racing driver boyfriend Jenson Button, 37, on Monday. The loved-up couple took their pets out for a light stroll in Los Angeles, shortly before taking the animals to a controlled dog park. Scroll down for video Slender: Brittny Ward, 25, accentuated her toned frame in snug gym attire while out with her British racing driver boyfriend Jenson Button, 37, on Monday Clad in a tight marled mock jacket - hugging her busty assets - the model teamed her gym ensemble with glossy leggings and grey Nike trainers. Despite on a casual stroll, the model still managed to inject an essence of glamour into her look, as she wore her golden locks in loose waves. Opted for a fresh-faced appearance, she held onto the dog lead as she strolled the streets with her pets and beau Jenson. He looked equally relaxed as he was dressed in a casual grey hoodie with lime green zips, paired with dark grey tracksuit bottoms. Animal lovers: The loved-up couple took their pets out for a light stroll in Los Angeles, shortly before taking the animals to a controlled dog park Casual appearance: Opted for a fresh-faced appearance, Brittny held onto the dog led as she strolled the streets with her pets and beau Jenson The lovebirds have been dating for more than a year, after they went public in March 2016 following Jenson's high-profile split from his wife Jessica Michibata in December 2015. And they appear to be going from strength to strength, having rung in the new year together with a sweet social media post to celebrate the festivities. Taking to Instagram, Brittny captioned the image: 'Here's to many more happy New Years #partylikeits2018'. Stronger than ever: The couple looked happier than ever as they shared a glimpse into their relationship on Instagram while they enjoyed a sun-soaked holiday back in October Meanwhile, Jenson's ex-wife Jessica gave birth to a baby girl back in October but has remained tight-lipped about the father's identity. She took to Instagram to announce the arrival of her daughter, sharing a cute snap. She first added a caption in English reading: 'Words cannot describe how happy I feel and how much love I have for this beautiful soul... 'Welcome to the world Joy Thank you for choosing me as your mother, I will love you forever and ever and ever.' The stunner then posted in Japanese: 'Three weeks earlier than planned At 21:01 (Japan time 21st) on October 20th in Los Angeles time A healthy baby was born! 'The scheduled date was November 11, so I did not expect to be born on the same birthday, but both mothers and children are healthy Everyone who supported for childbirth, thank you very much. Good luck with your mothers who are giving birth!' Enjoying motherhood, she recently posted an adorable snap with her dewy-eyed daughter with the caption: 'Morning like this'. Former flame: Meanwhile, Jenson's ex-wife Jessica has recently given birth and has moved on with a new boyfriend, although she has never confirmed his identity Next of Kin Rating: Silent Witness Rating: Frankly, Next Of Kin (ITV), a drama about a British Pakistani family embroiled in a terrorist nightmare, ran into trouble from the moment the first bomb went off. Wed met selfless London GP Mona (Archie Panjabi) and her brother, the even more saintly Kareem, who ran a charity clinic in Lahore. Next of Kin (ITV), starring Archie Panjabi as selfless London GP Mona (pictured), ran into trouble from the moment the first bomb went off Kareem was due to fly home for a visit. Panjabi has a smile as tense and brittle as eggshell porcelain, but we could tell she was excited because shed bought a cake. It had candles and a message in icing, and she carried it proudly up the street . . . while behind her, the sky was black with smoke from a terrorist atrocity. Mona scarcely gave it a glance. Fire engines screamed past, crowds jostled to film the aftermath on their phones, and she kept marching homewards with the cake in her arms. Once through the door, she ordered her siblings to switch off the TV. No one was allowed to pay the least attention to the bomb on their doorstep. That attitude killed any sympathy we could have for the character. If she doesnt care about her community, if she doesnt have the slightest curiosity about people being murdered in the neighbouring streets, why should we care about her? Kareem was a much more likeable chap. He risked missing his flight home to perform a life- saving emergency op on a little girl with a pregnant mother. Then he made a dash for the airport. Happy returns of the night Only Connect (BBC2), the insanely fiendish quiz presented by Victoria Coren, is back in its proper Monday slot, after an inexplicable switch to Fridays. Why do TV bosses feel the need to monkey with the schedules? Advertisement Unluckily, he was kidnapped on the way and shot in the head. He wont be stealing any more limelight from Mona and her husband (film star Jack Davenport). We should have been on the edge of our seats, desperate to see Kareem rescued. Instead he was dead and everyone else was ignoring the London bombing. As far as this family was concerned, the biggest drama of the day came when Monas mum got stuck in the lift at their apartment block and had to wait half an hour to be rescued by a technician. Were supposed to believe that this is a loving, close-knit group. But gradually we discovered that Kareem has a son at university, Danny. While his dad was away, not one of Dannys family has bothered to see or chat to him. Fed up, the boy left for Pakistan weeks ago, and no one even noticed he was missing. I really wanted to like this show. We need brilliant dramas to help us make sense of the terrorist threat. What we dont need is indifference. The long-running forensics thriller Silent Witness (BBC1) was back and more deranged than ever, starring Emilia Fox as Dr Nikki Alexander (pictured) Someone mentioned in passing that among the dead in the car bomb was the mother of two young twins. It was that family, whoever they were, that should have been at the centre of this story. Meanwhile, the long-running forensics thriller Silent Witness (BBC1) was back, more deranged than ever. It exists in a parallel world where pathologist Dr Nikki (Emilia Fox) collects clues from murder scenes, and solves the crimes that are baffling detectives. This time, a helpless Chief Inspector (Alex Macqueen) was begging for Dr Nikkis help, to find the maniac who abducted her best friend. Macqueen suspects another pathologist is a secret psycho: he implored Dr Nikki to give the man a job, so she could investigate him. Julian Rhind-Tutt plays the suspect, all leather jacket and long hair. His phone ringtone is You Sexy Thing by Hot Chocolate. Im betting hes not a psycho hes Dr Nikkis new sidekick. Well, its no madder than anything else. This time last year, her relationship with former girlfriend Tiffany Scanlon was at its peak. Now approaching ten months since their split, Megan Marx is clearly feeling alright - while her ex has been left out in the cold. The former flame's outfit choices on Tuesday perfectly illustrated their separate lives: Megan sporting a bikini at the beach, Tiffany covering-up for the Bachelor Winter Games. White hot! Now approaching ten months since their split, Megan Marx is clearly feeling alright - while her ex has been left out in the cold Sharing a seductive snap from her excursion to Trigg Beach via Instagram, Megan was seen perched on a wooden railing. She held an apparently promotional freebie bottle of Melano Boost sun tan lotion, much of which had been lathered onto her bare skin. The reality star shot a piercing gaze to camera as she whiled away another scorching Summer's day. Meanwhile, Tiffany sported a thick winter jacket for a promotional snap for her upcoming TV gig: representing Australia at the Bachelor Winter Games. Literally! While Megan was putting on a scorching display in Western Australia, her ex Tiffany Scanlon was covering up for a Bachelor Winter Games promo shoot Moving on! Megan is spending her first full Summer without her former flame 'I'm so excited to be representing Australia in the first ever International Bachelor series airing Feb 13th!' she wrote on Instagram. It's going to be her first full Summer without fellow Bachelor contestant Tiffany Scanlon by her side. Last week, single Megan returned to Bali, a place where she and her former love once called home. What a difference a year makes! Last week, single Megan returned to Bali, a place where she and her former love once called home Megan simply captioned her post: 'Happy.' A positive outlook is a more-than-welcome sign for the busty blonde, who twelve months prior shared a loved-up snap in the arms of Tiffany. 'My biggest accomplishment in my arms on the first day of 2017,' Megan wrote in the caption at the time. The pair split in March, insisting they'd made a crucial mistake in documenting their relationship so openly. She enjoyed some time away with her boyfriend during the winter holidays. But Sofia Richie was back to business grabbing a cup of coffee between meetings in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon. The 19-year-old budding model looked cozy in a large creamy shearling coat as she braved the rain while walking to a waiting vehicle. Scroll down for video Sofia Richie was back to business grabbing a cup of coffee between meetings in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon Sofia pounded the pavement wearing long blue jeans with peeks of her toned legs popping through distressed pieces of fabric. She kept warm in the chilly rainy weather in a furry cream-colored coat with a matching belt. The daughter of Lionel Richie sported a retro-inspired white T-shirt with a thick yellow collar underneath her warm jacket. Staying dry: The 19-year-old budding model looked cozy in a large creamy shearling coat as she braved the rain while walking to a waiting vehicle She tied back her short brunette hair into a flirty top bun and kept a pair of dark sunglasses over her eyes. Sofia checked up on emails on her iPhone as she hurried through the rainy street to a a waiting car. Her boyfriend Scott Disick, 34, was nowhere to be seen less than one week after what was reported to be a tension-fraught New Year's Eve for the couple in Aspen, Colorado. Out and about: Her boyfriend Scott Disick , 34, was nowhere to be seen less than one week after what was reported to be a tension-fraught New Year's Eve for the couple in Aspen, Colorado; seen on Wednesday A source told the New York Post Scott 'went ballistic' and 'crazy' with jealousy when he saw her chatting it up with Formula One racer Lewis Hamilton - who she was romantically-linked with early last year - while the two were party-hopping in the well-heeled town. After 'Sofia started talking to Lewis' during a billiards game he was playing, a 'very jealous' Scott 'insisted they leave the party immediately,' the insider told the paper. A source told E! News that Disick was 'frustrated' by the 'unexpected' run-in. 'He doesn't like surprises and reacts aggressively in situations like that,' the source said. 'This isn't the first time that Scott has lost it for a minute.' She fended off competition from Hollywood icons including Dame Judi Dench and Helen Mirren get the coveted Best Actress gong. And Saoirse Ronan, 23, couldn't stop herself from smiling as she made her way home from Los Angeles on Monday morning, following her huge win at the 75th Golden Globe Awards. The Lady Bird actress beamed as she left her car in search of her flight home, wrapping up in striking fuchsia scarf - the bright colour fitting for the stars' mood. Scroll down for video Beaming: Saoirse Ronan, 23, can't stop herself from smiling as she made her way home from Los Angeles on Monday following her huge win at the 75th Golden Globe Awards Cutting a casual style in an on-trend white statement T-shirt, the Ireland native didn't stop for make-up as she rushed to catch her flight, unable to meet fans waiting to catch a glimpse of the starlet. She sported a comfortable pair of blue boyfriend jeans as she made her way through the crowd, pounding the grey pavement with rose-embellished white trainers. The acclaimed actress carried her worldly possessions in an equally florescent turquoise and pink backpack as she tried to duck out of the rain. Saoirse picked up her first Golden Globe award on Sunday for her turn as Christine 'Lady Bird' McPherson in the popular coming of age story Lady Bird Winner: The Lady Bird actress beamed as she left her car in search of her flight home, wrapping up in striking fuschia scarf - the bright colour fitting for the stars' mood Award-winning: Cutting a casual style in an on-trend white statement t-shirt, the Ireland native didn't stop for make-up as she rushed to catch her flight, unable to meet fans waiting to catch a glimpse of the starlet Irish actress Saoirse combated the poor weather in a warming double-layer combo, with long woolen cardigan underneath a sophisticated black jacket, perfect for keeping the rain at bay. Keeping her essentials strapped to her in an elegant quilted cross-body bag, the blonde beauty left her platinum tresses tucked into her scarf while she walked through the soggy airport. Saoirse picked up her first Golden Globe award on Sunday for her turn as Christine 'Lady Bird' McPherson in the popular coming of age story Lady Bird. Eye-catching: The acclaimed actress carried her worldly possessions in an equally florescent turquoise and pink backpack as she tried to duck out of the rain Lady Bird is loosely based on director Greta Gerwig's own coming-of-age, with the film centering around a high school senior's turbulent relationship with her mother. It was third time lucky for the talented actress, who was previously nominated for her role in Atonement in 2008, and then again for Brooklyn in 2016. Her unique name garnered a lot of attention during the swanky Hollywood evening, after fellow screen star Jessica Chastain was accused of 'butchering' the pronunciation of Saoirse's Ronan's moniker as she presented her with a Best Actress prize. Huge mistake: Her unique name garnered a lot of attention during the swanky Hollywood evening, after fellow screen star Jessica Chastain was accused of 'butchering' the pronunciation of Saoirse's Ronan's moniker as she presented her with a Best Actress prize Third times a charm: It was third time lucky for the talented actress, who was previously nominated for her role in Atonement in 2008, and then again for Brooklyn in 2016 The Molly's Game star, 40, took to the stage with Thor hunk, 34, to announce the nominations, but Jessica quickly ran into hot water when she attempted to pronounce the Lady Bird star's moniker while reading out her name alongside fellow nominees Judi Dench, Helen Mirren, Margot Robbie and Emma Stone. Things went from bad to worse when the actress realised she would have to say the tricky Irish name once again when she opened an envelope to reveal Saoirse had won the coveted prize. Co-presenter Chris provided little help, and didn't even attempt to get his tongue around the name, which Jessica pronounced as 'Sher-sha'. Twitter users quickly flocked to social media to mock the incident, with one writing: 'Jessica chastain butchering saoirse Ronans name is making my eye twitch.' Top team: Lady Bird is loosely based on director Greta Gerwig's own coming-of-age, with the film centering around a high school senior's turbulent relationship with her mother The Brooklyn star also addressed the issue while making her Saturday Night Live hosting debut in December, kicking off her episode with a public service announcement on how to pronounce her name. She explained in her opening monologue: 'I am very Irish, and I have an extremely Irish name. Some would say too Irish. Its Saoirse. It means freedom. But Ive got a little problem; it's spelled wrong. Its a full typo.' Big Little Lies and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri were the big winners of the night, picking up four prizes each. Dominating the television category, Big Little Lies was named Best Limited Series or TV Movie, with three of its stars taking home individual prizes. Nicole Kidman won Best Actress, Limited Series or Television Movie for her role as domestic abuse victim Celeste Wright, while screen husband Alexander Skarsgard picked up the Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Limited Series or TV Movie. Laura Dern was also a winner, taking home Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Limited Series or TV Movie. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri was the big winner in the movie categories, picking up the coveted Best Motion Picture, Drama accolade, as well as Best Screenplay. The cheating scandals on Vanderpump Rules kept spreading on Monday's episode of the Bravo show. Season six of the series started with Jax Taylor confessing to cheating on girlfriend Brittany Cartwright and episode five ended with her hearing a recording of him criticizing her to his mistress. Newlywed Tom Schwartz this season also was caught kissing another woman while wife Katie Maloney was away, threatening his plans to go into partnership with Lisa Vanderpump in a new bar. Full fury: Brittany Cartwright unloaded on Jax Taylor after hearing a recording of him and his mistress on Monday's episode of Vanderpump Rules The reality show's latest episode Sex, Lies And Audiotape threw in yet another scandal - with Scheana Marie told that boyfriend Robert Valletta was seen kissing another woman at a club. Despite being told there were eyewitnesses, Scheana instantly insisted: 'I already know that this is bullshit. It's just funny timing - Jax cheats, Schwartz cheats, and now it's like, "Rob kissed a girl." 'It's f***ing bulls***. I honestly don't believe any of it.' She even came up with a bizarre explanation for knowing it could not be true, telling the girls: 'He and I don't even kiss a lot because he isn't a kisser. He's very affectionate in every other way but we don't kiss a lot. So for him to walk in and kiss someone is laughable.' Audio recording: Jax was recorded criticizing Brittany to server Faith who he had earlier admitted cheating with on his girlfriend Bizarre explanation: Scheana Marie refused to believe her boyfriend Robert Valletta was seen kissing another woman at a club because he isn't a kisser But she still insisted that 'I don't even think there are words to describe the rage' she had for Katie Maloney spreading the story in revenge for Scheana telling Lala Kent that she had been gossiping about her and her alleged 'sugar daddy'. 'I don't think there's a word worse than c*** to describe her,' Scheana insisted of Katie. Scheana earlier invited Tom Sandoval and girlfriend Ariana Madix over for dinner cooked by private chefs at Rob's 'huge house in Beverly Hills' to show off their love. Dinner party: Robert and Scheana hosted Tom and Ariana to a dinner party at his 'huge house in Beverly Hills' Sex talk: Tom Sandoval was hoping for dessert and sex with girlfriend Ariana She then admitted she was not even divorced yet - revealing she had a counter app on her phone to let her know exactly when it had happened - shocking Rob when she told them all: 'We can't get married until July.' 'I'm joking, obviously!' she insisted, with Rob awkwardly changing the subject. While Scheana refused to believe the cheating story, Kristen Doute said: 'My gut, and I hope I'm wrong, is he's gonna f***ing break her heart.' Duly warned: Kristen Doute was concerned that Scheana was going to have her heart broken The friends all seemed shocked that Brittany seemed to have forgiven Jax for cheating on her, especially when they told everyone they were hosting a housewarming party. 'Brittany should be looking for a new apartment, not warming this one,' Stassi Schroeder told Lisa, who agreed. But Brittany told some of the girls: 'My heart is wanting to believe that he can be a better person even though my brain is telling me he can't. I just feel that I love him too much where it's not fair if I don't at least try.' New apartment: Stassi Schroeder said that Brittany should be looking for a new apartment instead of warming one with Jax Hosting gigs: Lisa Vanderpump agreed with Stassi about Brittany and also offered her more work party planning The party seemed to be going well with plenty of drinking games, until Brittany walked in on Jax talking about his insatiable urge to have sex sometimes. 'If a f***ing squirrel would have looked at me with a f***ing p***y I would have f***ed it. I wanted the attention,' she heard him tell Kristen's boyfriend Carter. After a screaming row - where once again Jax seemed more angry at Brittany than the other way around - Lala Kent finally had enough and told Brittany about a recording she had from Faith, the woman Jax admitted cheating with, calling it 'disgusting' and 'despicable.' Good times: Brittany was having fun hosting the house warming party with Jax Shotski time: The crew drank from a shotski at the party Catching up: James Kennedy and Tom Sandoval caught up at the bash Relationship talk: Stassi listened as Scheana talked glowingly about Robert Brittany was shown listening to the recording on the balcony - then storming into the apartment and screaming at Jax: 'You're a piece of s**t. You're a piece of f***ing s***. 'I've heard the recordings - you deserve to rot in hell. F*** you. Get the f*** out of here you piece of s***. You deserve to rot in hell.' The recording also troubled a least one other relationship, with a teaser showing Tom Sandoval screaming at Ariana for letting Brittany hear the tape - and her replying angrily: 'I just think we should break the f*** up.' Audio recording: Ariana played the damaging audio recording for Brittany Instant anger: Brittany cussed out Jax and told him to leave the party after hearing the recording Tom Schwartz, meanwhile, seemed to get off relatively lightly as Katie was mostly forgiving of him kissing someone else - even when he fought back at her telling him he has to stop getting wasted. 'You're never gonna tell me what I'm gonna do or not gonna do, ever,' Tom snapped back, adding to camera later: 'I mean, she's not my mom, I'm an adult. Even though I made some poor decisions I don't think it should cost me my freedom.' But Lisa Vanderpump warned Katie that she would not be so forgiving, saying that their plans to go into business together was 'like a marriage.' Cheating scandal: Tom Sandoval reacted as Katie blasted Tom Schwartz for cheating on her Candid conversation: Katie and Lala Kent talked about the source of the cheating rumor 'If I'm going to, pardon the pun, ''be getting into bed with him,'' I can't tolerate that kind of behavior,' she warned. 'That's too dangerous to me.' She later had a one-on-one with Tom, telling him bluntly: 'I think it's time to grow the f*** up, I really do.' 'Schwartz nearly woke up without a wife. Well, next time it will be without a business partner,' she insisted to the camera. Blunt talk: Lisa told Tom Schwartz that he needed to grow up after he cheated on Katie Ariana, meanwhile, told Lala about her not having sex with Sandoval, saying: 'I don't really crave a p in the v sitch, pretty much ever. It's like uncomfortable for my vagina.' 'So you're just giving blowies?' Lala asked, with Ariana saying: 'Er... no.' 'I was in a really mentally and emotionally abusive relationship where I was told my vagina was disgusting. Those things don't go away,' she explained, saying the initial thrill of being with Tom helped her get over it but the old pain had reemerged as 'a huge monster that now takes up a big space in my head.' Shopping trip: Ariana and Lala opened up to each other while shopping Abusive relationship: Lala was shocked to hear that Ariana was in a past abusive relationship that has impacted her sex life Lala then explained how every morning she gives thanks to all the different parts of her body and tells them she loves them. 'I thank my hands even though I think they're man hands because they give great hand jobs,' she said to camera, pointing to her groin as she added: 'I thank my little kitty cat because it takes that D like a champ.' Vanderpump Rules will return next week on Bravo. She left Australia for Hollywood in 2015, after four years playing rebellious teenager Sasha Bezmel on Home and Away. But Demi Harman looked like she'd strolled straight out of Summer Bay on Sunday as she enjoyed a relaxing day at the beach. The 24-year-old actress recently returned to Sydney and was spotted catching up with a friend at Balmoral Beach, Mosman. Soaking up the sun! Former Home and Away star Demi Harman (pictured) looked like she'd strolled straight out of Summer Bay on Sunday as she enjoyed a relaxing day at the beach Demi, who hails from Brisbane, flaunted her toned body in a stylish black bikini featuring striped bottoms. She was spotted arriving at the beach in a hat and sunglasses, before taking a dip. The Celebrity Splash! star was seen hugging a female friend in the ocean and sharing a lively conversation. Enjoying the heatwave? The 24-year-old actress recently returned to Sydney and was spotted catching up with a friend at Balmoral Beach, Mosman Career move: Demi, who hails from Brisbane, left Australia for Hollywood in 2015, after four years playing rebellious teenager Sasha Bezmel on Home and Away Demi kept hydrated during the weekend heatwave with a bottle of water and orange juice. After a cool swim, the two friends strolled up the sand while carrying their beach supplies. In June 2016, Demi spoke to New Idea about her attempt to break into Hollywood, describing the experience as 'challenging'. Beach babe: Demi flaunted her toned body in a stylish black bikini featuring striped bottoms Getting along well: The Celebrity Splash! star was seen hugging a female friend in the ocean Friendly catch-up: The pair were also spotted having a lively conversation 'It's a whole new ball game in terms of acting,' she said. 'I have high hopes and it's just a matter of time' Demi continued: 'It's all about your outlook and perspective. 'It's hard but it's all worth it, and it's exciting because my career can go from nothing to everything very quickly.' Beach babe: Demi flaunted her toned body in a stylish black bikini featuring striped bottoms Heatwave: She was spotted arriving at the beach in a hat and sunglasses, before taking a dip The past year was not short on huge milestones and achievements for Elyse Knowles. And as 2018 gets well and truly underway, the 25-year-old bikini model reflected on what she had gone through in the past 12 months, as well as sharing some sizzling hot bikini snaps. Posting to her self-titled blog on Monday, The Block star wrote a list of hers highs and learning points of the year, explaining: 'Every experience we have contributes to the person we become. We learn from our mistakes and we grow with our achievements.' 'There is only one of me, no one can replace me': The Block's Elyse Knowles reflects on the highs and lows of 2017... as she flaunts her curves in white-hot bikini snap After winning the latest season of The Block alongside her boyfriend Josh Barker, it was no surprise the victory was included on Elyse's list. Also making the cut were Elyse's modelling career highlights, including gracing the cover of Women's Health and shooting for Seafolly. The star also shared some behind-the-scenes snaps from the magazine shoot, including photos of the stunner flaunting her curves in a white Calvin Klein bikini. White hot! The blonde bombshell shared behind-the-scenes snaps from her Women's Health shoot and sizzled in a Calvin Klein bikini Big achievement! Even though Elyse graced the cover of Women's Health, she still admitted to struggling with body image issues But the blonde beauty also admitted that body image was a huge challenge for her in 2017, as she added it to her 'learning experiences' list. 'I work very hard on keeping my body at a certain level. I have learnt to be more content with myself and what my body looks like,' she explained. 'People tend to assume "models" are born with perfect bodies and fast metabolisms. Nope! It takes work, time, patience and a very positive attitude to not only get in shape, but to stay in shape (the key!)' 'I have learnt to be more content with myself and what my body looks like': Elyse said she worked extremely hard to stay in shape and keep her figure looking a certain way Elyse appeared to be taking positive steps to combat her body image issues, adding: 'I have learnt not to compare myself. There is only one of me, no one can replace me.' And while she divulged that completing The Block with Josh as well as renovating and selling their own property was a highlight, it took an emotional toll. She said while the pressure and stress could be overwhelming at times - and tested the couple's relationship - the pair's bond was stronger than ever by the end of it. Sold! As well as winning The Block, Josh and Elyse renovated and sold their own property The Keep It North charity products, which Josh and Elyse launched with their Block competitors Sticks and Wombats, was also described as one of the star's biggest achievements. Also listed was Elyse's trip to East Timor, which she visited in a bid to help those less fortunate. The year ahead appears to be just as big for the reality TV star, with Elyse also revealing she and Josh have 'brand new project and a massive goal for 2018' in the works. Shanghai (Gasgoo)- Last year, Nissan delivered a total of 1,519,714 vehicles in China, surpassing Honda and Toyota, whose sales were respectively 1,441,307 units and 1,290,000 units. Nissan announced that its delivery marked an all-time high in China market, increasing 12.2 percent year on year. In the last month of 2017, Nissan China delivery rose 13.4 percent year on year to 184,197 units. The Sylphy was the most popular Nissan model in China with a sales volume of over 50,000 units in December, 2017. Honda was the first one among the three Japanese automakers to announce 2017 China sales. In 2017, Honda delivered a record-high sales volume of 1,441,307 vehicles in China, growing 15.5 percent compared with the previous year, but still lagged behind Nissan. In December, 2017, Honda and its joint venture in China delivered 141,195 vehicles, growing 6.2 percent year on year and setting the best monthly sales record. Toyota, once the most popular Japanese auto brand in China, handed over 1.29 million vehicles in China last year, an increase of 6.3 percent from a year earlier. In December, 2017, Toyota China sales dropped 5.6 percent to 107,500 units, according to Reuters. In terms of 2017 China sales, Toyota fell behind Nissan by nearly 230,000 units and Honda 150,000 units. He's known for wearing his heart on his sleeve. And Scott Disick seemed to be sending a message with a loud sweatshirt while shopping in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon. The 34-year-old self-confessed 'sex addict' sported a 'Rehab Staff' sweater as he left Barney's while ex Kourtney Kardashian, 38, enjoyed a day at the spa with their youngest children Penelope, five, and Reign, three. Scroll down for video Talk about it: Scott Disick seemed to be sending a message with a loud sweatshirt while shopping in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon His long-sleeved black sweatshirt featured the words 'Rehab Staff' in bright yellow block lettering across his back. The RtA logo was emblazoned across his chest, with the electric yellow words 'East Hampton' running up his sleeve. The father-of-three completed his afternoon ensemble with a pair of blue jeans and white trainers. Shopper: The 34-year-old self-confessed 'sex addict' sported a 'Rehab Staff' sweater as he left Barney's while ex Kourtney Kardashian enjoyed a day at the spa with their youngest children Penelope, five, and Reign, three Statement: His long-sleeved black sweatshirt featured the words 'Rehab Staff' in bright yellow block lettering across his back Comfortable: The father-of-three completed his afternoon ensemble with a pair of blue jeans and white trainers Loud: The RtA logo was emblazoned across his chest, with the electric yellow words 'East Hampton' running up his sleeve Scott slicked back his short brown hair and donned a pair of dark sunglasses as he left the trendy store. While he was on one side of town without his girlfriend Sofia Richie, 19, Kourtney Kardashian seemed to enjoying a relaxing day at the spa with their littlest children. Sharing an adorable photo posing front of a mirror, the eldest Kardashian daughter donned matching robes with Penelope and Reign. Holding on to a pair of blue goggles while her youngest son jumped into the shot, she captioned the sweet photo, 'Squad spa day.' Family: Sharing an adorable photo posing front of a mirror, the eldest Kardashian daughter donned matching robes with Penelope and Reign. Good times! Kourtney Kardashian seemed to enjoying a relaxing day at the spa with their littlest children Mellow yellow: He kept warm in a black sweatshirt with 'Rehab Staff' written on the back Earlier this week, it emerged that Scott engaged in 'a jealousy-fueled fight' with Sofia's ex-boyfriend Lewis Hamilton, according to Page Six. The new report alleges the couple were party-hopping in Aspen and stopped by an event where Sofia's ex Lewis Hamilton was playing a $100,000 winner-takes-all billiards game with oil heir Brandon Davis. 'Sofia started talking to Lewis during the [pool] game,' a source told the publication. 'When Scott saw them talking, he went ballistic, crazy. He was very jealous. He insisted they leave the party immediately.' Formula One driver Hamilton was linked to the young model from January-May of 2017. However his lawyer denied the claims. 'Although Mr Hamilton was in Aspen for the holiday, there was no jealousy, no fight, and no issue; rather, as Ms. Richie has herself confirmed, there was a perfectly friendly, polite exchange and any claim to the contrary is simply false,' Hamilton's lawyer told the publication. Earlier this week, it emerged that Scott engaged in 'a jealousy-fueled fight' with Sofia's ex-boyfriend Lewis Hamilton, according to Page Six Walk it out: Scott slicked back his short brown hair and donned a pair of dark sunglasses as he left the trendy store She is one of the music industry's biggest stars And Katy Perry certainly looked the part as she attended a party ABC held in Los Angeles conjunction with the Television Critics Association's Winter Press Tour on Monday night at The Langham Huntington in Pasadena. The 33-year-old singer - who inked a $25 million pact with the network's star judge on American Idol - stole the show in a sleek, low-cut silver dress with matching silver heels at the swanky event. Scroll below for video Star power: American Idol's newest centerpiece Katy Perry, 33, dazzled Monday at a party ABC held in Los Angeles for the Television Critics Association's Winter Press Tour Katy looked absolutely flawless as she commanded attention in saucy dress - which flashed her toned legs. The Roar ringer accessorized perfectly with a diamond choker and earring, with her short, blonde 'do with dark sides. Katy was impeccably made up, with smoky eye shadow and bold red lipstick. Earlier on in the day, Katy appeared on a panel for the American Idol alongside her colleagues on the reality TV reboot - Luke Bryan, Lionel Richie and Ryan Seacrest, as well as execs Jennifer Mullin, Trish Kinane and Megan Michaels Wolflick. Talented trio: Katy looked absolutely flawless as she commanded attention in saucy dress - which flashed her toned legs - posing with Luke Bryan and Lionel Richie Gorgeous: The Grammy-nominated artist wore a diamond choker and earring to the party Confident: The I Kissed A Girl singer's $25 million signing immediately made the American Idol reboot one of the most-anticipated shows of 2018 Ready to go: (top row; L-R) Earlier on in the day, American Idol execs Jennifer Mullin, Trish Kinane, Megan Michaels Wolflick; and (bottom row; L-R) Ryan Seacrest, Bryan, Perry and Richie fielded questions at the industry event At that event, the Firework songstress wore a sheer black jumpsuit with diamond patterns and a gold necklace. The famed fashionista rounded out the flashy get-up with white pumps. The group has been busy working on the show since the summertime, as they went on a 23-city tour to conduct auditions to find the next big star, on a show that's launched the careers of Jennifer Hudson, Carrie Underwood and Kelly Clarkson. At that event, the Firework songstress wore a sheer black jumpsuit with diamond patterns and a gold necklace. The famed fashionista rounded out the flashy get-up with white pumps. The group has been busy working on the show since the summertime, as they went on a 23-city tour to conduct auditions to find the next big star, on a show that's launched the careers of Jennifer Hudson, Carrie Underwood and Kelly Clarkson. On the hunt: Perry said that the pressure is on to find another major superstar as the show did in its early years, with Kelly Clarkson, Jennifer Hudson and Carrie Underwood Winning team: Bryan, Perry and Richie have all demonstrated considerable mastery in their respective genres Stalwart: Ryan Seacrest has been the face of the show since the beginning, initially hosting the program with Brian Dunkleman in 2002 Icon: Lionel brings more than 50 years of experience to the judges' table this year On the panel, Perry made clear that it was imperative to add a fourth name to the aforementioned list, saying, 'We are wasting our time if we dont find another star,' according to Deadline. 'America does not need another star; they need another legitimate American Idol.' The Teenage Dream artist said that she and her two judges come 'secondary' to discovering an 'actual Idol and making the good old American Dream come to life.' Perry, who boasts more than 176 million followers across Instagram and Twitter, said that the reboot is a complement to a music scene that's been flooded by hopefuls taking to social media to demonstrate their abilities. 'American Idol has come full circle, this big platform to separate whats good and what isnt,' she said. 'These days you have to light yourself on fire on Instagram while singing and still might not get enough hits.' The new American Idol premieres on ABC March 11 at 8/7c. Style setter: Katy utilized gold jewelry in her dark patterned jumpsuit on the panel Popular: Katy has an astounding 176 million-plus followers across Instagram and Twitter She's the model mum who is a self-confessed sweet tooth. And Rebecca Judd, 34, tucked into another tasty treat on Tuesday. Taking to Instagram, the glamorous mother-of-four shared a hilarious snap of herself fighting off one-year-old twins, Tom and Darcy, while sitting down to enjoy a glass of Milo. How does she do it?! Slender Rebecca Judd enjoys Milo after revealing a love of Tim-Tams and indulging in dessert EVERY night The glamazon captioned the image: 'like seagulls with a chip', adding the hashtags #milo #notspon #justyum. Early last year Bec spoke out about the difficulty of being criticised because of her frame. 'I have always been thin,' the AFL WAG told Stellar Magazine. 'I have always been thin' Early last year Bec spoke out about the difficulty of being criticised because of her frame 'My mum is thin.' She also added that she used to get 'teased'. 'Skinny used to be a body type and now it's seen as an illness ... I try not to get upset, because (social media) is not real life,' she explained. Shaking off the criticism, the Postcards presenter has often taken to social media to show off her penchant for chocolates and other sugary treats. In November, she showed off a giant pack of the chocolate biscuits, accompanied by the caption: 'Yasss.' She followed the photo of the Tim Tams with a giant raspberry and peach tart covered in powdered sugar. Not an inch to pinch: The TV and radio presenter regularly takes to social media to flaunt her enviable figure In 2016, the brunette weather presenter told Mamamia that she indulges in dessert every night. 'I eat dessert every night,' she said. 'I also bake a lot, so I am quite partial to a piece of banana cake with cream-cheese frosting or a chocolate cupcake.' The brunette beauty and her AFL-playing husband Chris Judd are known to be fitness fanatics, even launching their own active-wear brand, JAGGAD. Indulgence: In November, she showed off a giant pack of the chocolate biscuits, accompanied by the caption: 'Yasss She flaunted her figure in a sheer black gown at the InStyle and Warner Brothers Golden Globes party on Sunday. And one day later, Hailey Baldwin showed off her sculpted figure again - this time in a cropped red turtleneck with light wash denim. The 21-year-old put her toned midsection on full display in the casual look while grabbing a cup of coffee in Los Angeles. Flawless: Hailey Baldwin showed off her sculpted figure again - this time in a cropped red turtleneck with light wash denim on Monday The starlet headed to Starbucks during a break in rain on Monday in the Southern California city. Hailey chose a crimson turtleneck with oversized sleeves and a cropped cut. The model chose to cuff her jeans at the hem, pairing them with black lace up boots. Hailey covered up in her black square shaped sunglasses by Vera Wang while opting to go makeup free, revealing her natural beauty. Looking good: The 21-year-old put her toned midsection on full display in the casual look, adding combat boots and a large framed sunglasses from Vera Wang Tanned and fit: The starlet headed to Starbucks during a break in rain on Monday in the Southern California city The cover girl pulled her pink dyed tresses up into a top knot to round out her chic look. On Sunday, Hailey wowed in a textured lace gown with see-through panels for the InStyle And Warner Brothers Golden Globes party in Los Angeles. The frock, by Dsquared2, is from their spring/summer 2018 collection. The gown, which featured black underwear-style bottoms and a sheer bodice, had ruffled detailing and a dotted pattern. A goddess: On Sunday, Hailey wowed in a textured lace gown with see-through panels for the InStyle And Warner Brothers Golden Globes party in Los Angeles Stunning lady: The frock, by Dsquared2, is from their spring/summer 2018 collection Hailey paired the glamorous dress with Jimmy Choo heels and Jennifer Fisher jewelry. The cat walker, who flashed her pert derriere, styled her blush locks up into a bun with pink glossed lips and shimmery cheeks. She posed up a storm with the equally stunning Kendall Jenner, who wowed in her Alexandre Vauthier Fall 2017 sheer frock and Christian Louboutin heels. She posed up a storm with the equally stunning Kendall Jenner, who wowed in her Alexandre Vauthier Fall 2017 sheer frock and Christian Louboutin heels Cool girl: Hailey posed for cheeky photos for her Instagram page Playful: the beauty pretended to fix her lipstick in one candid shot shared on Sunday It's been mere months since Nine announced the shock departure of Today host Lisa Wilkinson. And Nine's Today series has once again experienced a shake-up thanks to the arrival of new Weekend Today hosts Peter Stefanovic and Allison Langdon. According to News Corp this week, the former 60 Minutes reporters will take over from former hosts Deborah Knight and Tom Steinfort, and will present the show every Saturday and Sunday from January 20. Nine's Today series has once again experienced a shake-up thanks to the arrival of new Weekend Today hosts Peter Stefanovic (L) and Allison Langdon (R) Jayne Azzopardi will also continue as the show's newsreader. Deborah announced her departure from the breakfast program last month, Tweeting: 'So I have some news... a new role at @Channel9.' She also linked a story published by Nine Honey reporting that Deborah is set to present the Sydney evening news bulletin on Friday and Saturday evenings. Moving on: Deborah Knight announced her departure from the breakfast program last month, Tweeting: 'So I have some news... a new role at @Channel9' The publication also claimed the TV personality would be on hand in 2018 to fill in for regular Today's new host Georgie Gardner, newsreader Sylvia Jeffreys and Today Extra's Sonia Kruger. 'I always take the view that you should take opportunities when they arise and they don't always arise when you want them to so when they do, just grab them with both hands. That's what I do,' she told Nine Honey at the time. Having worked on A Current Affair in the past, Deborah will also be filing special reports for the weeknight program. The perfect fit! Having worked on A Current Affair in the past, Deborah will also be filing special reports for the weeknight program Back in October, Deborah also stepped in for Lisa after she resigned from her co-hosting gig on Today. Lisa has now taken up a position as part of the panel on Ten's The Project on Sunday nights. The onscreen sensation will also become editor-in-chief of the network's new online platform, Ten Daily, in January. She's never been one to shy away from a revealing selfie. And Cheryl Maitland was at it again on Tuesday, with the former Married At First Sight star taking to Instagram to share a topless snap. The 26-year-old wore heavy makeup and a neat up-do in the candid photo, while spruiking beauty products in the caption. Talk about topless! MAFS star Cheryl Maitland poses NUDE to spruik a new beauty book after sparking marriage rumours with beau Dean Gibbs The buxom beauty is back in Queensland with her convicted drug dealer boyfriend Dean Gibbs after they spent most of December sunning themselves in Bali. Cheryl shared images to her Instagram on Sunday as she posed in a skimpy G-string bikini which drew attention to her pert derriere. Last week, she shared a video of her and Dean riding down a busy Balinese street on silver scooters. Living life on the edge! MAFS star Cheryl Maitland flaunts her pert derriere in skimpy G-string bikini on Bali 'honeymoon' after sparking marriage rumours with beau Dean Gibbs Cheryl, wearing a cheeky pair of white shorts and an olive green bikini top, holds the camera up high so it gets a lengthy visual of her chest. The pair look ecstatic, with the brunette beauty laughing during the short clip. On the move! Cheryl flashes cleavage while riding a scooter Are Cheryl Maitland and Dean Gibbs MARRIED? MAFS star shows off holiday dessert congratulating the couple on their 'Honeymoon' Since finding love this year with the former criminal turned plumber Cheryl hasn't stopped gushing about her man. And the first night of the Bali trip, the busty model teased the pair might have finally tied the knot. Sharing a picture of the couple's dessert, the words Happy Honeymoon could be seen iced on the plate. 'We're here and on our Honeymoon,' Cheryl said adding a few laughing emojis, suggesting it was clearly presented to them by mistake. The duo appeared tucking into their dinner for the night. It's not the first time Cheryl has hinted at marriage plans. 'Can't wait to grow old with you!' Cheryl recently hinted at marriage plans when she posted a gushing birthday tribute to her boyfriend Dean Recently in a gushing birthday tribute to her man, Cheryl admitted she couldn't wait to grow old with her man. 'I couldn't imagine my life without you in it, You are the most beautiful soul I've met!' she wrote. 'I'm so thankful I get to spend this day with you and many more. I can't wait to grow old with you,' she added. 'LOVE YOU the most,' Cheryl concluded. 'I couldn't imagine my life without you in it, You are the most beautiful soul I've met!' she wrote Best decision: Cheryl first rose to fame on Married at First Sight where she opted to leave her assigned husband Andrew Posting another candid photo of herself and her man in August, again Cheryl couldn't help but gush over her beau. 'I am so glad that I never settled til I found you,' she wrote taking a slight jab at her TV partner. After the brunette beauty unveiled her boyfriend in March, it wasn't long before it was revealed he carried a criminal record. In 2014, Dean was handed a one-year suspended jail sentence after pleading guilty to five drug-related counts including; trafficking, using cocaine and as well as possessing steroids and ecstasy. His acceptance speech for his Best Actor Golden Globe was beyond awkward as he thanked both his estranged wife and the woman he has left her for. And the morning after, Ewan McGregor stepped out in Los Angeles looking pensive on his own. Having scrubbed up well the night before in a tuxedo, it was a very different story on Monday morning as he strolled past some bins in tracksuit bottoms and a khaki jacket. Scroll down for video Ew-an okay hun? McGregor made a scruffy solo appearance in LA the morning after the Golden Globes... after awkwardly thanking estranged wife AND new girlfriend in speech Squinting in the morning light, the A Life Less Ordinary actor looked scruffy as he shoved his hands into his pockets and sauntered along, solo. On Sunday he thanked both his wife Eve Mavrakis and new love Mary Elizabeth Winstead at the prestigious awards ceremony. The 46-year-old actor was awarded best performance by an actor in a limited series for his role as twins Emmitt and Ray Stussy in Fargo. First he thanked his estranged wife of 22 years Eve, saying: 'I want to take a moment to just say thank you to Eve, who always stood by me for 22 years, he said, 'and our four children Clara ,Esther, Jamyan and Anouk.' The morning after: Having scrubbed up well the night before in a tuxedo, it was a very different story on Monday morning as he strolled past some bins in tracksuit bottoms and a khaki jacket 'Awkward': Ewan McGregor thanked both his wife of 22 years Eve Mavrakis as well as new love Mary Elizabeth Winstead in his acceptance speech at the Golden Globes on Sunday Ewan then went on to mention his Fargo costar Mary Elizabeth, 33, who plays his character Ray's girlfriend Nikki Swango and who is now his real life girlfriend. He continued: 'I've always loved being an actor and I got amazing actors to hang out with, and there wouldnt have been any Emmett without David Thewlis and Michael Stuhlbard and Carrie Coon. 'And there wouldnt have been any Ray without Mary Elizabeth Winstead.' he concluded. Twitter users were quick to react to the Scotsman's speech, calling it 'gutsy' and 'a first'. 'There wouldnt have been any Ray without Mary Elizabeth Winstead' the actor concluded his speech with a shout out to his girlfriend after thanking his wife for 22 years of support Controversial: Numerous people took to Twitter to comment on Ewan's choice to thank both his wife and girlfriend in his speech 'Ewan McGregor using his speech to thank both his mistress AND his wife he left for her is... gutsy' one user wrote. Another added: 'Thanking his wife and the woman he cheated with-thats got to be a first in a speech' Ewan's separation from Eve, 51, came to light in October, after news of the actor's blossoming romance with Mary Elizabeth Winstead emerged. Earlier in the evening Ewan took to the red carpet solo as he arrived at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills. He showed his support for the 'Time's Up' movement, which is protesting the pervasive culture of sexual abuse that has long had a grip on Hollywood, but which is now being widely exposed. It's complicated: After announcing his split from Eve, 51 (left) in October, Ewan is now dating his Fargo co-star Mary Elizabeth, 33 (right) Winner: The Fargo star is seen backstage posing with his award for best performance in a limited series Handsome: The star looked dapper as he posed proudly with his coveted award Stepping out: Earlier in the evening Ewan took to the red carpet solo as he arrived at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills Solidarity: Ewan donned a 'Time's Up' badge, showing his support for the movement, founded in response to the Harvey Weinstein-led sexual misconduct scandal Sticking with the dress code of black, the Scottish screen star - a Golden Globe nominee - cut a dapper figure in a classic tux, teamed with striped shirt and bow tie, as he joined the protest against Hollywood's many powerful figures who have been toppled in the scandal. The Fargo star's solo appearance at the event stood in stark contrast to his other outings to the annual glamorous gala, which he was seen taking Eva to in previous years. And as Ewan stepped out in California, his estranged wife recently shared a shot of herself enjoying her first vacation as a single woman as she shared snaps from a tropical getaway with her children. Eve shares daughters Clara, 20, Esther, 16, Jamiyan, 16, and Anouk, six, with the star and whisked the girls off for a relaxing trip over Christmas and New Year's. Taking to Instagram last Monday to share a snap from their holiday, the production designer showed the girls taking a dip in the sea as they beamed for the camera. Dapper gent: Sticking with the dress code of black, the Scottish screen star cut a dapper figure in a classic tux, teamed with striped shirt and bow tie She captioned the image: 'This will be our Christmas/New Year card. Happy 2018! I am so thankful for my loving, caring girls. Happy, peaceful and adventurous New 2018 to all my friends and family. With love....' Eve also shared a collage of her daughters enjoying the holiday, which she simply captioned: 'Happy.' Last month, Eve broke her silence on her split from Ewan by responding to a comment about her ex's new girlfriend Mary Elizabeth on Instagram. When a comment was posted about Mary Elizabeth, 32, underneath one of her photos, Eve made her feelings about Ewan's new romance known for the first time - in a very public address of their split. Joining the cause: He joined the protest against Hollywood's many powerful figures who have been toppled in the ongoing sexual abuse scandal The comments appear beside a photo on Eve's Instagram account, which was posted to honour a screenwriting pal's birthday in October. Clearly angered by their recent separation, a friend of the 51-year-old French beauty penned underneath: 'I cant believe Ewan would end things with u for that cheap w**re! U are so much better than him!!!! Take him for every penny u can!!!!' To which a distraught Eve, who has four children with the actor, simply replied: 'What can I do?' Ewan had commented on another photo posted by Eve in May 2016 from his verified Instagram account, proving her page to be genuine. Flying solo: The actor made a solo appearance on the red carpet, following his recently announced split from wife Eva Mavrakis Pals: Ewan joined his Fargo co-star David Thewlis, 54, at the Fox Golden Globes after-party Chat: Ewan joined Scott Stuber and Molly Sims for a chat at the Fox after-party Winning ensemble: Ewan joined the Fargo team Nick Grad, Noah Hawley, and Eric Schrier We did it: Ewan looked happy as he chatted to Fargo creator Noah at the party Glittering: Ewan couldn't hide his delight as he cradled his Golden Globe Award MailOnline contacted Ewan and Eve's representatives for comment. Ewan and his co-star's romance came as a shock to fans - as pictures of the pair kissing on a dinner date surfaced before the actor had announced his split from his wife. It has since emerged that Ewan and Eve had split in May - the same month Mary Elizabeth announced her separation from her husband Riley Stearns. However, Eve had shared a photo of the Moulin Rouge star on Instagram in June, captioned: 'My love plays the blues in Montreal'. Estranged: The former couple's separation came to light in October after the actor's new romance with Mary Elizabeth Winstead emerged At this year's ceremony actors and actresses wore black in solidarity with victims of Weinstein and numerous other figures exposed by the harassment and abuse scandal, including Kevin Spacey, Brett Ratner and Dustin Hoffman. Guillermo del Toro's fantasy romance The Shape of Water leads the nominations with seven, while The Post and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri are tied for second, with six each. Overall, 25 awards are given out - 14 for movies and 11 for TV - and, as usual, the 90-member HFPA has sprung more than a few surprises in the nominations, placing horror satire Get Out in the best comedy-musical category. There were no nominations at all for female filmmakers despite huge successes in 2017 for Greta Gerwig (Lady Bird), Patty Jenkins (Wonder Woman), Dee Rees (Mudbound), Kathryn Bigelow (Detroit) and Sofia Coppola (The Beguiled). The Post star introduced her date for the night, director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance and co-director of the Caring Across Generations Campaign, Ai-jen Poo. New romance: Ewan is now dating Mary Elizabeth Winstead. Pictures of the pair kissing on a dinner date surfaced before the actor had announced his split from his wife Speaking out: Eve broke her silence on her split from Ewan by responding to a comment about her ex's new girlfriend Mary Elizabeth Winstead on Instagram late lats year 75TH ANNUAL GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS WINNERS - FILM Best Motion Picture - Drama Call Me by Your Name Dunkirk The Post The Shape of Water Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - WINNER Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy The Disaster Artist Get Out The Greatest Showman I, Tonya Lady Bird - WINNER Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama Jessica Chastain, Molly's Game Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - WINNER Meryl Streep, The Post Michelle Williams, All the Money in the World Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama Timothee Chalamet, Call Me by Your Name Daniel Day-Lewis, Phantom Thread Tom Hanks, The Post Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour - WINNER Denzel Washington, Roman J. Israel, Esq. Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Judi Dench, Victoria & Abdul Margot Robbie, I, Tonya Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird - WINNER Emma Stone, Battle of the Sexes Helen Mirren, The Leisure Seeker Best Director Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water - WINNER Martin McDonagh, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Christopher Nolan, Dunkirk Ridley Scott, All The Money in the World Steven Spielberg, The Post Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy Steve Carell, Battle of the Sexes Ansel Elgort, Baby Driver James Franco, The Disaster Artist - WINNER Hugh Jackman, The Greatest Showman Daniel Kaluuya, Get Out Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture Mary J. Blige, Mudbound Hong Chau, Downsizing Allison Janney, I, Tonya - WINNER Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird Octavia Spencer, The Shape of Water Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project Armie Hammer, Call Me by Your Name Richard Jenkins, The Shape of Water Christopher Plummer, All the Money in the World Sam Rockwell, "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri" - WINNER Best Original Score in a Motion Picture Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri The Shape of Water - WINNER Phantom Thread The Post Dunkirk Best Original Song Home from Ferdinand Mighty River from Mudbound Remember Me from Coco The Star from The Star "This Is Me" from The Greatest Showman - WINNER Best Screenplay in a Motion Picture The Shape of Water Lady Bird The Post Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - WINNER Molly's Game Best Motion Picture - Foreign Language A Fantastic Woman First They Killed My Father In the Fade - WINNER Loveless The Square Best Animated Feature Film The Boss Baby The Breadwinner Ferdinand Coco - WINNER Loving Vincent Advertisement He's well loved around the world for his roles in Downton Abbey and Paddington. And Hugh Bonneville cut a dashing figure as he promoted the big screen sequel to the beloved children's story on Monday. Promoting Paddington 2 at a special screening hosted by The Moms co-founders Melissa Gerstein and Denise Albert, the 54-year-old actor beamed as he posed clutching a toy replica of the Peruvian bear. Scroll down for video Mum's the word: Hugh Bonneville looks dashing in a green three-piece suit as he promoted Paddington 2 with The Moms at their New York screening Dressed up in a dark green three-piece suit, Hugh cut a fine figure as he stepped out in New York City. Contrasting the forest-green look, Hugh complimented his outfit with a burgundy red tie and lace-up brogues. While outside, the Downton Abbey star protected himself from the cold with a long grey coat, which also had a light-blue satin lining. Looking dapper: Dressed up in a dark green three-piece suit which fit snugly on him, Hugh cut a fine figure as he stepped out in New York City Perfect colour combination: Contrasting the forest-green look, Hugh complimented his outfit with a burgundy red tie and lace-up brogues The special event with The Moms gave families the opportunity to see the film ahead of its release in America on Friday, and guests received a Paddington plush toy and pop-up book all about London. Ditching the tie for the more casual event, Hugh posed alongside Melissa, Denise, and their kids as he promoted the kids film. Using the hastag #PaddingtonMOMS on Twitter, parents attending the event were ecstatic as they went to the screening, and The Moms told fans that 'your Monday is about to get so much sweeter at our #PaddingtonMOMS Mamarazzi'. Premiere party: The Moms' event gave families the opportunity to see the film ahead of its release in America on Friday, and guests received a Paddington plush toy and pop-up book Earlier in the day Hugh went to New York Live to talk about the film, and was candid and witty as he spoke about his character Mr Brown: 'Well [he] gets passed over for promotion and he feels like his world is falling apart, hes getting fat, hes starting to creak, his hair is going grey. 'Obviously Im only 22 so I had to base my character on an old man, luckily Hugh Grant is in the film so I could draw on his physical attributes.' Paddington 2 marks the first time that Hugh shared the same screen as the rom-com actor since they starred in Notting Hill in 1999, which was something that wasn't lost on the hosts of the news programme. 'Basically the restraining order came to an end!' he joked, before adding: 'We finally met again on this film, it was quite weird in rehearsals saying do you realise its been 19 years since weve been rehearsing together?' [But] it was nice because Notting Hill was one of my first films and it was a very happy memory.' Witty remarks: Hugh was witty as he spoke about his character Mr Brown on New York Live, 'Im only 22 so I had to base my character on an old man, luckily Hugh Grant is in the film' The second film in the Paddington franchise sees its ursine hero framed for theft after he tries to get a present for his aunt's 100th birthday. Sent down for the crime, it's up to the Browns to clear his name, and to do that they need to catch washed-up actor Phoenix Buchanan, played by Hugh Grant. The star of the story is entirely animated though, and the Downton Abbey star was keen to talk about how they deal with that on set: 'As far as Im concerned the bear is real, sometimes he doesnt come out of his trailer because hes on a marmalade hit.' Paddington 2 marks the first time that Hugh shared the same screen as Hugh Grant since Notting Hill in 1999, 'Basically the restraining order came to an end!' he joked 'But when hes not there we have an actress whos the same height as Paddington who will walk through the shots with us, or sometimes itll be as exciting as having a stick with a bit of sticky tape on the top,' he continued. 'You just have to project your imagination onto this thing that you know is going to be a cute cuddly bear.' Hugh can next be seen as a guest on season two of The Grand Tour, where he is promoting the sequel and will even be bringing the bear along for the ride. 'Im really not into my cars and the guys who run the show are real petrol heads and I brought Paddington along,' he admitted. 'They put their visitors on a lap, and I had to drive very carefully because I had my bear with me!' She's the PR queen who is known for her extravagant taste in jewellery. And Roxy Jacenko showed off some dazzling pieces this week, including a diamond-encrusted 'Habibi' necklace. The 37-year-old took to Instagram to share a busty selfie, in which she could be seen flashing her expensive bling. All the bling! Roxy Jacenko has showcased one of her recent additions, a nameplate necklace by Nader Jewellers with 'Habibi' (the Arabic word for darling) emblazoned The star wore a cleavage-baring white tank top and a diamond necklace by Nicholas Haywood, believed to be worth $54,000. Roxy's Habibi necklace, gifted to her last year by her jeweller pal David Nader of Nader Jewellers, appears to also be a favourite of the blonde beauty with her wearing out often. Recently, she wore it in a snap with daughter Pixie revealing their special project together yesterday. Favorite! Roxy's Habibi necklace, purchased last year, appears to also be a favourite of the blonde beauty with her wearing out often. Like mother, like daughter: Recently, she wore it in a snap with daughter Pixie revealing their special project together yesterday. The mother-of-two confirmed on Sunday she is writing a fourth book with the help of her six-year-old daughter Pixie Curtis Stunning: Roxy is often hailed for her glamorous selfies on social media The mother-of-two confirmed on Sunday she is writing a fourth book with the help of her six-year-old daughter Pixie Curtis. She told Daily Mail Australia they are working on an illustrated book for children about 'doing the right thing'. 'Pix and I are working on a picture book this afternoon for kids to encourage them to be kind and do the right thing. Coming soon,' The Sweaty Betty founder wrote on Instagram. Roxy told Daily Mail Australia the book is set for release by the end of the year. New project: The Sweaty Betty PR founder told Daily Mail Australia they are working on an illustrated book for children about 'doing the right thing' She explained that writing the book will be a way to teach her daughter to always treat others with kindness. 'Pixie and I are working on an illustrated book together for kids which will promote being kind and doing the right thing, regardless of how others are treating you,' Roxy said. 'It so important to understand how to manage relationships and conflict at a young age. So I wanted to do it with her and help her and others in later life.' Writer: 'It so important to understand how to manage relationships and conflict at a young age. So I wanted to do it with her and help her and others in later life,' Roxy said The news comes after Roxy revealed Pixie had been teased at school over her father Oliver Curtis' 12-month jail stint for insider trading. 'She was very upset and hearing "your dad broke out of jail and is a bad person" was something I would never have wanted her to hear,' she told The Daily Telegraph. However, Roxy clarified that the family had 'worked through it' and that Pixie is now looking forward to returning to school later this month. The stars were out in forced at the GQ bash on Tuesday night, celebrating the end of London Fashion Week Men's. And Dermot O'Leary was enjoying a night out with his wife Dee Koppang at the Berners Tavern based event, putting on a cosy display as they left the party together. The X Factor judge looked dapper as ever in a smart grey suit as he proudly stood alongside his stunning wife. Scroll down for video Date night: Dermot O'Leary was enjoying a night out with his wife Dee Koppang at the GQ party, hosted at Berners Tavern in London on Monday night Dee embraced a menswear inspired look, rocking a smart black suit with white stitching running down the legs and on the lapels. She teamed her sombre yet chic look with a poloneck and coordinating white heels featuring black strap detailing. In keeping with her monochrome style, Dee accessorised with a white and black striped clutch bag. Chic: Dee embraced a menswear inspired look, rocking a smart black suit with white stitching running down the legs and on the lapels She wore her brunette locks in loose curls and accentuated her pretty features with bronzer. The TV presenter and Norwegian-born Dee married in Kent back in 2012, one year after he proposed in New York City. His proposal came 10 years after the couple first begun dating. Happy couple: The X Factor judge looked dapper as ever in a smart grey suit as he proudly stood alongside his stunning wife While they are yet to start a family together, Dermot hasn't ruled out having children and in an interview with Fabulous magazine in 2015, he claimed he and his wife were waiting for it to be the 'right time'. He explained: 'I definitely want kids, but I've got a very busy wife with a very busy life. It's not fair for me to say, "I want kids now". 'I do want kids with my wife, but I want them when we both think it's the right thing to happen.' Shanghai (Gasgoo)- On Jan. 8, Blue Avenue, a ride-hailing platform of NEVs owned by SKIO Electric Vehicle Co., Ltd. (SKIO), signed an agreement with Jinniu District, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, aiming to put 30,000 NEVs into operation in Chengdu over the next five years and to radiate out to the whole western region of China gradually. During 2017, Blue Avenue had put thousands of NEVs into operation in Hangzhou, Suzhou and Changsha, as well as in several other central cities. Up till now, Blue Avenue's national network has basically shaped with its deployment in 12 cities and six areas across China. According to Chen Feng, founder of SKIO, Blue Avenue provides a set of new energy solutions to high-frequency mobility. The core characteristics of this mode are operating vehicles plus battery swapping stations. Different from the current charging mode of NEVs, SKIO employs swappable batteries, which can be swapped in 3 to 5 minutes at a battery swapping station. SKIO aims to build up a national battery swapping network in the next five years via the plan of Blue Avenue. Supported by the national swapping network, SKIO is also ambitious to put 250,000 NEVs into operation over the next five years. These tactics will help SKIO to promote the development of NEVs and expand its market shares. At present, Blue Avenue has established a partnership with Didi Chuxing and Dongfeng Motor. Moreover, thousands of battery swappable NEVs under Blue Avenue have been put into operation across China. Blue Avenue has achieved a real operation range of more than 200 million km. SKIO begins with battery technologies, focuses on the application scenarios of ride-hailing vehicles and aims to achieve an all-industry ecological development driven by battery swapping network. Currently, SKIO and Didi, China's ride-hailing giant has established a JV, named Dishi. She's always impeccably dressed for every occasion. But Natalie Dormer was the picture of glamour as she stepped up to reveal the nominees for this year's EE British Academy Film Awards on Tuesday morning. The 35-year-old Game of Thrones star announced the full-lineup alongside Black Mirror's Letitia Wright and both looked perfectly dressed for the occasion, in an outfit by Theory. Scroll down for video Pretty in pinstripes: Natalie Dormer beams in a stunning striped wrap top and red velvet trousers as she revealed the nominees for the 2018 EE British Academy Film Awards in London Dressed in a tight-fitting white pinstriped wrap top, the shirt showed off Natalie's slim figure and sat just below her shoulder. She contrasted the look with a pair of wine-red velvet trousers which hugged her toned legs as she stood there in matching peep-toe heels. The English rose wore her blonde tresses in loose curls and they were swept to one side on her right shoulder. Natalie opted for a pop of colour as she sported bright red lipstick and a slick of black eyeliner that made her blue eyes stand out. Looking good: Dressed in a tight-fitting white pinstriped wrap top, the shirt showed off Natalie's slim figure and sat just below her shoulder Pretty pair: Natalie made the announcement alongside 24-year-old Black Panther star Letitia, who went for a chic glamorous look at the event Completing the outfit: She contrasted the look with a pair of wine-red velvet trousers which hugged her toned legs as she stood there in matching peep-toe heels At the event, the blonde referenced a period of change in Hollywood, which this week witnessed the Golden Globes red carpet turn black in homage to the Time's Up campaign. 'We have drawn a line now,' Natalie told Press Association. 'We are overcoming outdated power structures. Its time to celebrate, and be positive. 'AA change has come. Its not "is it coming?" It has come, its here and we will now see the results of that over the upcoming years, because thats how long it takes to write, fund and shoot movies, so hopefully this is the beginning.' Natalie made the BAFTA announcement alongside 24-year-old Black Panther star Letitia, who went for a chic look at the event. The Guyanese-born British actress looked beautiful in the mid-length black dress which featured green-stitch detailing along the front and sides. Letitia wore her cropped locks loosely on top of her head, and opted for simplistic make-up for the occasion. She completed the look with strapped black heels, and she wore a gold ring with an arrow design on her right hand. Chic look: The Guyanese-born British actress looked beautiful in the mid-length black dress which featured green-stitch detailing along the front and sides Looking good: Letitia wore her cropped locks loosely on top of her head, and opted for simplistic make-up for the occasion Sweeping the board: They revealed that Guillermo Del Toro's The Shape Of Water, starring Octavia Spencer, earned an impressive 12 nominations The pair also appeared alongside Bafta Chief Executive, Amanda Berry and Bafta chairman Jane Lush at the event. They revealed that Guillermo Del Toro's The Shape Of Water, starring Octavia Spencer, earned an impressive 12 nominations while Frances McDormand fronted drama Three Billboards received a total of nine nods. The two films will compete against Call Me By Your Name, Darkest Hour and Dunkirk in the coveted Best Film category. Also proving major contenders are Winston Churchill biopic Darkest Hour, which also scored nine nominations, while World War II epic Dunkirk received a total of eight. Competition: Frances McDormand fronted drama Three Billboards received a total of nine nods. The two films will compete against Call Me By Your Name, Darkest Hour and Dunkirk And pose: The pair also appeared alongside Bafta Chief Executive, Amanda Berry and Bafta chairman Jane Lush at the event High stakes: Frances will go head-to-head with The Shape Of Water's Sally Hawkins for Best Actress in a Leading Role, as well as Annette Benning, Margot Robbie, Saoirse Ronan Frances will go head-to-head with The Shape Of Water's Sally Hawkins for Best Actress in a Leading Role, as well as Annette Benning (Film Stars Don't Die In Liverpool), Margot Robbie (I Tonya), Saoirse Ronan (Lady Bird). Meanwhile, The Shape Of Water's Octavia Spencer has received a nomination in the Best Supporting Actress category, alongside Allison Janney (I, Tonya), Kristen Scott Thomas (Darkest Hour) Laurie Metcalfe (Lady Bird) and Lesley Manville (Phantom Thread). Three Billboards has earned an impressive two Best Supporting Actor nods for both Woody Harrelson and Sam Rockwell, who have been nominated alongside Christopher Plummer (All The Money In The World), Hugh Grant (Paddington 2) and Willem Defoe (The Florida Project). Acting galore: Octavia Spencer has received a nomination in the Best Supporting Actress category, alongside Allison Janney, Kristen Scott Thomas, Laurie Metcalfe and Lesley Manville Two's company: Three Billboards has earned an impressive two Best Supporting Actor nods for both Woody Harrelson and Sam Rockwell The greats: Golden Globe winner Guillermo Del Toro will face off against Martin McDonagh in the Best Director round, alongside Denis Villeneuve, Luca Guadagnino and Christopher Nolan Golden Globe winner Guillermo Del Toro (The Shape of Water) will be facing off against Martin McDonagh (Three Billboards) in the Best Director round, alongside Denis Villeneuve for Blade Runner 2049, Luca Guadagnino for Call Me By Your Name and Christopher Nolan for Dunkirk. Three Billboards has also been nominated for Outstanding British Film alongside Darkest Hour, The Death of Stalin, Gods Own Country, Lady Macbeth and Paddington 2. The film is also in the running for Original Screenplay, Best Cinematography and Best Editing. The 7,580 members of the British Academy of Film and Television Academy have been voting for the nominations since December 15. The BAFTAs will take place in London on February 18. This comes just two days after the Golden Globes, which saw Big Little Lies take home the most awards on the night with Frances McDormand and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri taking top honours in the film category. Host with the most: It was announced that Joanna Lumley will be the new host for the ceremony, following Stephen Fry's decision to step down after fronting the event 12 times British talent: Three Billboards has also been nominated for Outstanding British Film alongside Darkest Hour, The Death of Stalin, Gods Own Country, Lady Macbeth and Paddington 2 As well as the nominees, it was announced that Joanna Lumley will be the new host for the upcoming ceremony, following Stephen Fry's decision to step down from the role after fronting the event 12 times. She declared: 'Who thought I'd turn into Stephen Fry - thrilling! I've been voting for BAFTA for so long. 'I want to thank BAFTA so much for letting me do this. I'll see you on the night!' Fry's affectionate and occasionally innuendo laden teasing of celebrities as well as his unique humour had become a fixture at annual awards. She is bravely facing life as a single mother. And Ferne McCann proved she is juggling life with child perfectly as she was spotted on Monday heading to the gym while accompanied by two-month-old daughter Sunday, who she shares with acid attacker ex-boyfriend Arthur Collins. The 27-year-old former TOWIE star showed off her svelte frame in a tight orange hoodie and complementary leggings while she pushed the pram ahead of what would undoubtedly be a gruelling workout. Scroll down for video Happy days: Ferne McCann proved she is juggling life with child perfectly as she was spotted on Monday heading to the gym while accompanied by two-month-old daughter Sunday, who she shares with acid attacker ex-boyfriend Arthur Collins Ferne looked happy and relaxed as she headed to the gym in her workout wear - comprising of a skin-tight orange zip-up and black leggings. She paired the look with black Nike trainers with a white tick and a white sole while also wrapping up against the chill in a warm black coat. Scraping her newly-darker locks into a high ponytail, Ferne displayed her glowing complexion by going totally make-up free. The former TOWIE star looked incredibly trim for the outing as she showed no sign of baby weight despite only giving birth in November. Svelte: The 27-year-old former TOWIE star showed off her svelte frame in a tight orange hoodie and complementary leggings while she pushed the pram ahead of what would undoubtedly be a gruelling workout Hard times: Last month, Ferne revealed she was ready to move on and concentrate on being a mother to daughter Sunday, following 'the most difficult chapter of her life' Keeping fit: Ferne was sure to keep herself healthy and trim following her first foray into motherhood She's back! Ferne's outing came a week after after she but on a brave face as she returned to This Morning for the first time since her ex was convicted for the April acid attack Ferne's outing came a week after after she but on a brave face as she returned to This Morning for the first time since her ex was convicted for the April acid attack. Ferne looked thrilled to be back to her day job as she went behind-the-scenes of Cilla: The Musical, revealing she was 'so excited' to catch up with leading lady Kara Lily Hayworth, who beat thousands of hopefuls to play the late Cilla Black. 'I'm so excited to finally be here and catch up with Kara. I can't wait to watch the show today and find out how shes' been getting on,' she said. Beaming at the camera, Ferne oozed charisma in the TV segment as she reaffirmed her comeback as a This Morning co-presenter. Mummy dearest: Scraping her newly-darker locks into a high ponytail, Ferne displayed her glowing complexion by going totally make-up free Strutting her stuff: Speaking to Fabulous, Ferne admitted the situation surrounding her pregnancy had been 'completely out of her control' - and that she is already concerned about how she will tell her little girl of the attack in the future Slender frame: The stunning star was going low-key as she prepared for her workout Last month, Ferne revealed she was ready to move on and concentrate on being a mother to daughter Sunday, following 'the most difficult chapter of her life'. Her ex-boyfriend Arthur was jailed for 20 years last month after being found guilty of a horrific acid attack carried out in April. Ferne has now revealed she is ready to move on and concentrate on being a mother to daughter Sunday, after 'the most difficult chapter of her life'. Speaking to Fabulous, Ferne admitted the situation surrounding her pregnancy had been 'completely out of her control' - and that she is already concerned about how she will tell her little girl of the attack in the future. She admitted 2017 had been one of the worst years of her life due to her ex-boyfriend's shocking crime in April - but that the arrival of her daughter had kept her strong. On the up: Looking back at the attack, she said: 'It's been the most difficult chapter of my life to date and the hardest thing I hope I'll ever have to face' Out and a pout: Ferne was looking incredibly svelte in her tight top Guilty: Last month, Collins plead guilty to hiding a mobile phone in prison. Collins, 25, stashed a mobile phone, two SIM cards, two USB sticks and a charger in a pair of crutches when he was on remand for the attack Looking back at the attack, she said: 'It's been the most difficult chapter of my life to date and the hardest thing I hope I'll ever have to face. 'It was all completely out of my control. The only thing I can control now is how I raise my daughter.' Last month, Collins plead guilty to hiding a mobile phone in prison. Collins, 25, stashed a mobile phone, two SIM cards, two USB sticks and a charger in a pair of crutches when he was on remand for the attack. He needed the crutches after fracturing both his heels trying to escape police while on the run from Wringer and Mangle E8 nightclub in Hackney, east London. He is said to have called his ex Ferne while in jail on remand when she was pregnant with their daughter. He could be facing a further two years added to his sentence. Keeping fit: The stunning star was looking chic in her low-key ensemble She is known for her envy-inducing figure, which she often shows off on her endless string of holidays. And Imogen Thomas showed no signs of stopping on Sunday, as she stripped to her swimsuit to soak up the sun in Miami, Florida. The former Big Brother star, 35, sizzled in a vibrant striped one-piece, which plunged at the neck to display her newly-reduced cleavage, as she relaxed by her hotel pool. Scroll down for video Svelte: Imogen Thomas showed off her enviable figure on Sunday, as she stripped to her swimsuit to soak up the sun in Miami, Florida Taking the plunge: The former Big Brother star, 35, sizzled in a vibrant striped one-piece, which plunged at the neck to display her newly-reduced cleavage, as she relaxed by her hotel pool The brunette was the picture of confidence in the colourful swimsuit - which tightly clung to her svelte frame. Pulling into a deep halter neckline, the one-piece also teased at her newly-petite bust, having undergone a life-changing breast reduction over the summer. Formed of bold orange, pink and blue stripes, the garment then plunged into a completely open back in a stylish finishing touch. Slinky: The brunette was the picture of confidence in the colourful swimsuit - which tightly clung to her enviably svelte frame and slim waist New and improved: Pulling into a deep halter neckline, the one-piece also teased at her newly-petite cleavage to all, having undergone a life-changing breast reduction in August Vibrant: The swimsuit, from her own collection Chasing Summer, embraced the sunny weather with its bright orange, pink and blue stripes Pins on parade: The swimsuit also cut off high at her thigh, to leave her long and slender legs on show Glamorous: She accessorised with a chunky gold bangle and retro rounded sunglasses, with trendy blue lenses Slicking her wet hair back after a dip in the pool and adding retro round sunglasses, the mother-of-two was effortlessly chic as she topped up her tan while away. Imogen rose to fame on Big Brother back in 2006 but has since turned her hand to designing, and recently released her own swimwear collection Chasing Summer. Sporting one of her own skimpy creations in Miami, the beauty was more confident than ever - having gone under the knife to reduce her 'saggy' E-cup breasts in August. The reality star was incredibly open about her insecurities over her chest, telling MailOnline ahead of the op: 'It's so hard because I'm naturally a curvy woman. Effortless: She kept her wet hair slicked back, to display her striking natural beauty and glowing skin to all Leading lady: Sporting one of her own skimpy creations, the beauty was more confident than ever - having gone under the knife back in August to reduce her 'saggy' E-cup breasts Struggle: Imogen has spoken about feeling uncomfortable with her breasts, telling MailOnline: 'Getting older it's hard to maintain your figure. I hate my hips. I hate my boobs, they're too big' In she goes! The star was later seen throwing herself into the water during her time away 'But after having kids and getting older it's hard to maintain your figure. I hate my hips. I hate my boobs, they're too big.' The brunette has two daughters, Ariana, four, and Siera, two, with her city trader partner Adam Horsley, who she has been dating since 2011. While still recovering from the surgery, carried out at London's St John & Queen Elizabeth hospital, she cheekily admitted Adam 'couldn't wait to get his hands' on her new cleavage. She told New! magazine at the time: 'He's seen them with the dressings on. I'm sure he can't wait to get his hands on them but that won't happen any time soon!' before adding: 'I think he's going to love them.' She is best known for her role on long-running soap Home And Away. And Kate Ritchie, 39, channelled her inner drama queen for a recent photo shoot. The brunette beauty took to Instagram this week to share a behind-the-scenes snap of herself posing poolside for the cover of Facon magazine, which was released last year. Poser! Kate Ritchie, 39, channelled her inner drama queen as she posed poolside for a recent photo shoot Wearing a white body suit, paired with matching trousers and a sheer red button down, she lay languidly on ground. Her bold red lip and defined brows stood out from the pictorial. 'Yes. I agree. My job can be ridiculous...,' Kate captioned. Channeling her inner actress: 'Yes. I agree. My job can be ridiculous...,' Kate wrote in the caption of her post Fans of the former actress loved her dramatic styling on the ground with a few even jumping in to joke about the photo, including one who said: 'Drunk by the pool! Haha.' Another referred to her Nova co-host Marty Sheargold, who likes to occasionally poke fun at Kate, writing: 'Marty's gonna luuuurve that! Lol' Meanwhile someone else added: 'Nothing like laying around the pool in Giorgio Armani and Akira Isogawa.' Time of their life! Kate's hilarious behind the scenes snap comes after she and her three-year-old daughter Mae recently visited Disneyland Hong Kong Shopping time! The duo enjoyed their time visiting all the attractions, including shopping for costumes from the movie Frozen Kate's hilarious behind the scenes snap comes after she and her three-year-old daughter Mae recently visited Disneyland Hong Kong. The duo enjoyed their time visiting all the attractions, including shopping for costumes from the movie Frozen. In December she, her husband Stuart Webb and Mae recently made a rare appearance together at Carols in the Domain. The couple married in 2010 and welcomed Mae in 2014. Hugh Grant is reportedly set to become a father for the fifth time. The 57-year-old actor's girlfriend Anna Eberstein's mother Susanne is said to have spoken to Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet, saying: 'I'm very happy to be getting another grandchild. She's due rather soon.' Hugh and Anna, who attended the Golden Globes in LA on Sunday, were seen touching down in New York on Tuesday afternoon just hours after baby news surfaced. MailOnline has contacted representatives for Hugh for comment. Scroll down for video Happy days: Hugh Grant is reportedly set to become a father for the fifth time, after his girlfriend Anna Eberstein's mother confirmed their happy news shortly before they were seen touching down in NYC after the Golden Globes Hugh and Anna have two young children together - a son John, born in 2012, and a second child, born in December 2015. Clearly delighted at the prospect of becoming a grandmother once again, Susanne reportedly spilled the beans to the magazine. Hot-on-the-heels of the announcement, the couple were seen arriving in NYC where Hugh could not stop beaming while Anna looked chic in black. She sported a stylish blazer with boots and jeans while she kept her stomach hidden in her all-black ensemble. Strutting her stuff: Hot-on-the-heels of the announcement, the couple were seen arriving in NYC where Hugh could not stop beaming while Anna looked chic in black Happy days! Anna's mother reportedly spoke to Swedish magazine Aftonbladet , as she said: 'I'm very happy to be getting another grand child. She's due rather soon' (pictured at Sunday's Golden Globes) Happy days: The duo are said to be expecting another baby (pictured together last year) Hugh's children September 2011 - Hugh became a father for the first time, to a daughter Tabitha with receptionist Tinglan Hong, after 'a fleeting affair' September 2012 - The actor later became a father for a second time to John Mungo, his first baby with Anna December 2012- After a brief reunion, Hugh and Tinglan had another child, as she gave birth to a boy called Felix although this only became publicly known when a birth certificate leaked when he was 16-months-old December 2015 - Anna and Hugh became parents once more to a second child, although they have never announced the child's name Advertisement Later that day, a weary Hugh emerged in New York for promotional activity on his new film, Paddington 2. Fresh off the flight from Los Angeles, Hugh was smiling broadly. The name of the couple's second child still remains a mystery, but back in 2015 the birth was confirmed by Anna's mother to a Swedish newspaper. In the statement released at the time, she said: Anna Eberstein from Sundsvall has had her second child with film star Hugh Grant. The newest member of the family saw the light of day for the first time last Wednesday. Her mother, a judge and prominent left-wing politician, confirmed to Swedish newspaper Ornskoldsviks Allehanda the baby, her second grandchild, was born. She went on: 'I can confirm that I have another grandchild. It is wonderful that we now have grandchildren (more than one grandchild).' A close friend of the family told MailOnline at the time: I heard from Annas parents that she had given birth last Wednesday. It was a little girl. Everything seemed to have gone okay. Hugh also has two other children - a daughter Tabitha, six, and son Felix, four, with Chinese beauty Tinglan Hong. The Notting Hill star went from having no children to being a father of four in just four years. At the time of Tabitha's birth, Hugh's spokesman said: 'He and the mother had a fleeting affair and while this was not planned, Hugh could not be happier or more supportive. He and the mother have discussed everything and are on friendly terms.' When Ms Hong gave birth to Felix, Mr Grant wrote on Twitter: 'In answer to some journos. Am thrilled my daughter now has a brother. Adore them both to an uncool degree. They have a fab mum.' All smiles: Later that afternoon, Hugh was seen during promotional activity for ABC's Good Morning America in New York Sleepy: After a flight from Los Angeles, the star looked a little weary, yet happy In 2014, he spoke for the first time about his son. Speaking to Swedish newspaper Nojesbladet, he said of Anna: We are very good friends and shes a very good mother. The actor said he had plenty of contact with his son. He said: 'I see him all the time, all the time - most days'. His relationship with the boy was excellent, he said, adding: I love him very much. He also spoke warmly about the charms of Sweden, which he has visited several times. Happy days! Hugh also has two other children - a daughter Tabitha, six, and son Felix, four, with Chinese beauty Tinglan Hong. The Notting Hill star went from having no children to being a father of four in just four years She's the bubbly brunette who failed to find love with Blake Garvey on The Bachelor. And even though she's currently still single, glamazon Laurina Fleure was more than happy to put on a display for her Instagram fans this week, posting a throwback picture from her time inGreece. The 34-year-old can be seen tilting her head seductively to one side on the island of Naxos, her gym-honed abs popping in the sunlight. Abs-olutely fabulous! The Bachelor's Laurina Fleure posts a bikini photo in a skimpy tropical swimsuit amid rumours she's found love with Michael Turnbull on Bachelor In Paradise Her tropical bandeau bikini was the only green-coloured item in the shot, with the blue ocean a prominent fixture in the background. Her followers were quick to label her 'gorgeous' and 'amazing' - words the socialite seems to attract on most of her other sensual images posted to social media. She also enjoys catching up with Bachelor rejects like Keira Maguire and Leah Costa, with the former linked to Sophie Monk's runner up lover Jarrod Woodgate. Hot off the press! Her followers were quick to label her 'gorgeous' and 'amazing' - words the socialite seems to attract on most of her other sensual images posted to social media And a selfie! Her tropical bandeau bikini was the only green-coloured item in the shot, with the blue ocean a prominent fixture in the background Rumours also circulated late last year surrounding Laurina's relationship with Bachelor hunk Michael Turnbull - the pair both rumoured to be featuring on the upcoming season of Bachelor In Paradise. It comes after ladies man Michael Turnbull admitted he had his eyes set on Laurina ahead of filming for the show. Speaking to KIIS FM's Kyle and Jackie O show, Michael was asked who he'd like to hook up with and promptly responded by naming Laurina. Best friends! She also enjoys catching up with Bachelor rejects like Keira Maguire (pictured) and Leah Costa, with the former linked to Sophie Monk's runner up lover Jarrod Woodgate 'In relation to girls from the past seasons of The Bachelor I think Laurina Fleure,' he said. 'I'd like to get to know her.' It's unclear whether Michael was successful in his romantic pursuits. The show is set to air this year but no official release date has been given yet by Network Ten. He's one of the world's most in-demand music producers. And Jack Antonoff has opened up about the past twelve months working on both Lorde and Taylor Swift's latest albums. The 33-year-old music-maker, who also fronts his own act named Bleachers, told The Herald Sun this week that there's been lots of inspiration, stating: 'This past year there's been a lot there'. A huge year: Jack Antonoff is one of the world's most in-demand music makers after working on Taylor Swift and Lorde's latest albums Jack co-wrote six songs with Taylor Swift for her latest album, Reputation, which sold a stunning 2 million records in its first week of release. Similarly, with Lorde he penned ten songs for her sophomore release, Melodrama, which has been now been nominated for a Grammy for Album of The Year. Of the award nomination, the talented music man gushed: 'Its unbelievable. The whole year has been humbling for lack of a better word.' 'Its unbelievable. The whole year has been humbling for lack of a better word': Lorde's album has been nominated for a Grammy (Jack and Lorde pictured together) In the interview, he also revealed he did much of the writing in the Brooklyn apartment he shared with girlfriend of five years, Girls actress Lena Dunham. On Monday, reps for the high-profile couple confirmed that they had split. The shock break-up is more negative news for besieged Lena, who has just resurfaced after a self-imposed public exile nearly two months after calling a young rape accuser a liar. Split: On Monday, reps for Lena and Jack have confirmed that they had split Beseiged: Lena's stocks have taken a significant hit in the wake of her defense of Murray Miller In November, the Girls star called actress Aurora Perrineau a liar when she claimed she was raped by a writer from Girls. Lena and producer Jenni Konner said that Murray Miller was innocent and that Aurora- who said that she was 17-years-old when she was raped in 2012 - was 'one of the three-percent of assault cases that are misreported every year'. While the divisive starlet's stocks have taken a significant hit, Jack's fortunes continue to rise. Bleachers will arrive in Australia for a highly anticipated tour with pop band Paramore next month. Irina Shayk welcomed daughter Lea De Seine only 10 months ago but is already rocking a bikini better than most models. On Monday the 31-year-old girlfriend of Bradley Cooper shared a stunning shot to Instagram where she had on very little. The Vogue beauty was wading in the waters of a mystery location that looked like paradise. Loving her life: Model Irina Shayk shard this photo to Instagram on Monday taken on a white sand beach Happy gal: The beauty looked incredible while wading in the waters of a mystery location that looked like paradise. Her only caption was a sun emoticon The beauty also shared a photo of a Crustacean that seemed intent on hiding in his shell. In the image, a wedding band can be seen on her ring finger, though it is not know if she has tied the knot with Cooper. In another image Irina shows off the beauty of her tropical location. She was last seen in Santa Monica in December. The cover girl and daughter Lea De Seine were spotted leaving a Mommy And Me class. Another amazing vacation: Several months ago the star posed in a yellow bikini The model cuddled and carried her nine-month-old little girl in her arms as she approached her car. Irina was dressed to impress in her grey ankle boots and stylish yet sporty track suit. She had a chic baby blue purse slung over her shoulder and scraped her locks back into a low ponytail. Band of love? The beauty also shared a photo of a Crustacean this week. In the image, a wedding band can be seen on her ring finger, though it is not know if she has tied the knot with Cooper Looks like a screensaver: In another image Shayk shows off the beauty of her tropical location Bradley recently moved into Irina's apartment in Manhattan's West Village. The catwalk queen splits her time between their place in NYC, and Los Angeles. Irina and Bradley welcomed little Lea on March 21, and the leggy model has returned to working as a model. She's done modelling work for the Italian lingerie company Intimissimi and Riccardo Tisci's collection with Nike. They click well: The actor and the model have been dating since 2015; seen in September She's a permanent fixture on the London party circuit, frequently letting her hair down at some of the city's most exclusive hot spots. So it was a surprise to see Lottie Moss mark her 20th birthday with a menial trip to the gym on Tuesday, as the beauty was spotted shunning her typically glamorous style for some modest workout gear. Despite her special day, the sister of supermodel icon Kate Moss didn't look in the best of spirits as she dashed to an awaiting car after spending part of the afternoon working out. Birthday girl: Despite her party girl reputation, Lottie Moss instead kicked off her 20th birthday with a trip to the gym on Tuesday While she might frequently flash her phenomenal figure in scantily-clad social media snaps, the ex-girlfriend of Alex Mytton opted for gym gear of a more demure nature. Ensuring she was covered up her her workout, Lottie sported leggings and a neon orange vest worn beneath a loose-fitting top. She banished the chilly British weather by exiting the fitness centre in a padded black jacket, which boasted a pretty fur-lined hood. Demure: The beauty shunned her typically glamorous style for some more modest workout gear A Lottie on show! Lottie regularly flaunts the fruits of her labour with scantily-clad snaps on Instagram Showing off her natural beauty, Lottie kept her flawless complexion free of make-up and swept her blonde tresses into an easy ponytail. Flaunting the fruits of her labour over the weekend, the model stripped down to a series of sexy bikini snaps taken during her Bahamas getaway. One of the shots saw Lottie flash serious side-boob as she posed in a gaping baroque print swimsuit. Simple style: Ensuring she was covered up her her workout, Lottie sported leggings and a neon orange vest worn beneath a loose-fitting top Wrapping up: She banished the chilly British weather by exiting the fitness centre in a padded black jacket, which boasted a pretty fur-lined hood Meanwhile, Lottie celebrated the morning of her 20th in the company of close friend Emily Blackwell. Sharing a picture of the fun on her Instagram story, the social media savvy star awoke to a small chocolate cake and a lavish gift from jewellery store Pandora. It came before she joked she was suffering from 'birthday loneliness' as she and the Made in Chelsea star hung out alone on the sofa. Effortless: Showing off her natural beauty, Lottie kept her flawless complexion free of make-up and swept her blonde tresses into an easy ponytail The youthful demeanour was back on display as Trinny Woodall hosted her regular fashion segment on Tuesdays edition of This Morning. The popular TV stylist, 53, revealed a remarkably smooth complexion while talking show hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield through this seasons must have wardrobe essentials. Embracing the current trend for generously flared trousers, Trinny opted for a chic burgundy variation beneath a distinctive blue and white Gingham blazer. Scroll down for video Looking good: The youthful demeanour was back on display as Trinny Woodall hosted her regular fashion segment on Tuesdays edition of This Morning A soft blue blouse tempered her look, while seventies themed wedge heels added a playful flourish by virtue of their striking multi-coloured design. Rounding off her ensemble with thick burgundy socks, Trinny ensured she claimed the spotlight during her fleeting segment on the daytime chat show. With soft make-up and an understated, centre-parted hairstyle drawing further attention to her smooth features, Trinny was in high spirits while introducing guests alongside her two co-hosts. Striking: The popular TV stylist, 53, revealed a remarkably smooth complexion while talking show hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield through this seasons must have wardrobe essentials Fashion first: Embracing the current trend for generously flared trousers, Trinny opted for a chic burgundy variation beneath a distinctive blue and white Gingham blazer Trinny previously revealed how her world unravelled when she was hit by financial woes and troubles in her private life before she bounced back to find new love and launch a fresh business venture. Speaking in an exclusive interview with todays You magazine in October, she recalled how the success she enjoyed with Susannah Constantine in What Not To Wear juddered to a halt. We were no longer flavour of the month, she said. 'I rented out my own house and rented this [smaller] one, and the difference pays the mortgage. I sold off my wardrobe. Ive had periods of real extravagance and times when money has been tight. Striking: A pair of seventies themed wedge heels added a playful flourish by virtue of their striking multi-coloured design, which she teamed with socks Upbeat: The presenter was evidently in high spirits during her latest TV appearance Sitting pretty: Trinny ensured she claimed the spotlight during her fleeting segment on the daytime chat show In November Trinny reflected on her struggle to become a mother after suffering two heartbreaking miscarriages. The TV presenter teared up as she told how she went through nine rounds of IVF after she failed to fall pregnant naturally with her late husband Johnny Elichaoff. Speaking on This Morning, Trinny revealed she lost two babies and had started to think she might never have children before she finally fell pregnant with her daughter Lyla, now 13. However she suffered a scare during the pregnancy when she started bleeding while presenting on the Oscars red carpet, which she described as her 'lowest point.' Hard at work: The presenter was on hand to help members of the public with their wardrobes She said: 'It's a tough one because when you start [IVF] you have great hope because below age 39 you know you have lots of eggs and so you take lots of drugs which give you more eggs that they put in a test tube, and lots of complicated things. 'I kind of felt ''Oh I'm so bloated with these eggs inside me, one of them's got to make a baby'' and the second time I did it, I was successful and then I lost that baby, quite late. 'Then I got pregnant again and then I lost that so I had a few times of feeling ''I'm pregnant'', then not being pregnant.' Arizona Governor Doug Ducey pledged 80 percent of his new budget priorities toward education during his state of the state address Monday. But some Flagstaff-area officials are waiting to see the details of his budget and how he plans to fund those projects before getting on board. Some of Ducey's priorities included money to help fund all-day kindergarten, career and technical education, computer coding and science, reducing waitlists at high performing schools that have them, closing the achievement gap and new school buses for districts. He also included one goal from last year, funding high-speed internet for rural schools. Ducey did not detail in his speech how he would fund the improvements but said his budget, due to be released on Friday, will include a full commitment to accelerate the states K-12 investment, and restore long standing cuts from the recession made before many of us were here. Julie Pastrick, the president and CEO of the Greater Flagstaff Chamber of Commerce, attended the speech as a guest of Representative Bob Thorpe, R-Flagstaff. The focus on funding for K-12 education was a highlight of the speech for her, which also touched on chamber priorities. "K-12 has to be a top priority," she said. "We won't know the details until his budget is released Friday, but it should have a substantial amount and mechanism for K-12, with a focus on teacher pay." Pastrick said she was also happy to hear Ducey plans to continue funding for career and technical education (CTE) programs. "CTE education has been a priority of the chamber because it is a personalized approach to education," she said. "You have your choice of if you want to learn welding or culinary or any of the other types of skills." An increased investment in K-12 and higher education will help supply Arizona business with skilled workers, which will aid business attraction and retention, she said. Ducey's comments about Arizona's trade relationships with the Mexican state of Sonora were also exciting for Pastrick. "Sonora and Arizona are working together to make sure we have a vibrant economy between the two states," she said. Pastrick said businesses in Arizona, both big and small, rely on trade with Mexico for parts and finished goods. Flagstaff Unified School District Governing Board member Kate Kozak said Duceys list of education projects would be an incredible boost to all of the school districts in the state, including FUSD. But she was curious to see how and if they would be funded. FUSD Board member Kara Kelty was also curious to see how the governor planned to fund the improvements. "This is what we expected when (Prop.) 123 passed," she said, referring to Ducey's list of projects. "It's the investment Arizonans deserve. I hope it's not just electioneering. Arizonans are less patient with promises of investment in education when those promises don't match the actions of the legislature and the governor's office." Expect More Arizona CEO Christine Thompson said the organization was glad to hear of Duceys pledge to prioritize education in his budget. New money this year will be another important step toward adequately funding education, but the aggressive goals outlined in the Arizona Education Progress Meter and the teacher recruitment and retention crisis will not be solved in just one year. Arizonas education system K through 12, community colleges, and universities requires continued, reliable investments over time to continue to improve, she said. LEGISLATOR WEIGHS IN Thorpe, the Flagstaff representative, also said he's holding off on making any definite comments on Ducey's education plans until he sees the governor's budget numbers. Thorpe supported last year's legislation expanding the program that provides vouchers to parents to send their children to private and parochial schools. Opponents have since gathered enough signatures to put the law to voters this November, but Thorpe said he wouldn't rule out a bill that revises the original legislation, which would derail the voter referendum on the issue unless new signatures are gathered. Thorpe said he was encouraged to hear about the reduction in recidivism that Ducey mentioned and said he is supportive of sentencing reform, which has been mentioned by legislators on both sides of the aisle. Thorpe said he likes the idea of "double tracking back" to reexamine sentencing guidelines "as well as ways we can reduce the impact, especially on people on the lower end of the economic scale." In light of the poor state of some of the state's roads, Thorpe said he wants to prioritize finding another funding source for the Department of Public Safety, so that funds meant for roads maintenance don't keep getting diverted to that department. Thorpe said he'd like to see a separate funding stream for DPS, such as an extra charge on car registration. Pamela Anderson has described the 'uncomfortable' Uber ride which is making her demand that all drivers face criminal background checks. The model-turned-actress spoke to DailyMail.com exclusively on Tuesday to reveal how vulnerable she felt when she took an Uber for the first time by herself. 'I was very uncomfortable even though it was the premiere class, which is supposedly the best. 'I was in a long evening gown and could see him staring at me in the mirror and over his shoulder. 'It was very uncomfortable, very late and a long ride home. It made me think of vulnerable young girls alone late at night after a few drinks,' she said. Her discomfort prompted her to share a PSA for the National Limousine Association's latest campaign to implement more rigorous checks on drivers. The campaign demands that drivers have to pass a fingerprint test to rule them out for having criminal histories which include sexual crimes before they are allowed to accept passengers. Scroll down for video Pamela Anderson revealed to DailyMail.com how she was once left feeling vulnerable and 'very uncomfortable' by an Uber driver who she said kept staring over his shoulder at her during a ride. She is seen above in her recent PSA calling for tougher checks on ridesharing drivers Speaking on Tuesday, she called on other actresses to do more to fight the good fight and further the MeToo movement, urging them to take action rather than just stage symbolic protests or tweet. 'Awareness is important, but I think action is more important. 'I encourage people to follow their passion and live their lives with meaning and purpose, but also to not think theyve accomplished anything with just a hashtag by itself. 'Everyone must protect themselves by using common sense, and we must teach our children to be safe,' Anderson, 50, said. The remarks came in the shadow of the Golden Globes, where dozens of actresses and actors wore black in a show of solidarity for the Time's Up movement which calls for an end to gender inequality and sexual misconduct. Anderson did not attend the Los Angeles ceremony but said it was 'great' and 'heartfelt' to see so many stars take a stand. Anderson, a mother-of-two, also implored Uber and other ride-sharing companies to start taking responsibility for their drivers by naming them as employees instead of third-parties. The technicality absolves them of responsibility if and when the drivers break the law. 'Modern technology is all very interesting, but we must not allow tech to advance so quickly that citizens are unsafe. I urge everyone to be smart and proactive in keeping ourselves and our children safe. 'People have a false sense of security with these apps. Its imperative that passengers not just assume its safe because everyone else is doing it,' Anderson said. While her colleagues fight the good fight in Tinseltown, Anderson is watching from afar in her adopted home country of France. Anderson, 50, is calling for all ride-sharing app drivers to have to undergo fingerprint tests to ensure none have histories of sexual crimes The 50-year-old is pictured filming the National Limousine Association PSA in a faux fur coat and glamorous sunglasses 'The USA is a bit crazy right now, with a lot of talk that I just really, really hope gets put into action,' she said, adding that life in France 'is a dream'. Anderson has not been quiet on the issue of sexual harassment since it took Hollywood by storm in October with the revelations against Harvey Weinstein. The Playboy darling said she knew Weinstein, 65, had a reputation for preying on young actresses when she started out in the business and that she learned early on to avoid him. 'You know what you're getting in to if you go to a hotel room, alone,' Anderson told Megyn Kelly last month. Anderson, who is living in France, said her life there is a 'dream' and acknowledged things in the USA had become a 'little crazy' in the wake of the celebrity sexual harassment scandals In what appeared to be a jibe at his victims, she said it was 'no excuse' to presume the meetings were safe just because they were set up by agents, a claim which has been made by actresses including Gwyneth Paltrow as they detailed their run-ins with Weinstein. 'I just think there's easy ways to remedy that. That's not a good excuse,' Anderson said. Earlier, she said she had long learned how to avoid being put in the very situation many of Weinstein's accusers described. 'I learned not to put myself in those positions. When I came to Hollywood, I had a lot of offers to do private auditions and things that just made no sense, just common sense. 'Don't go into a hotel room alone. If someone answers the door in a bathrobe, leave. Accusations against Uber and Lyft drivers sexually assaulting female passengers have plagues both companies over the last year. In London, the problem became so severe that the company has been outlawed by transport agencies. They are appealing the decision. She was delighted to welcome a little girl named Rosie in November. And Sam Faiers already bounced back into shape once again when she made a stylish arrival with her newborn at London's Intercontinental Hotel on Tuesday. The Mummy Diaries star, 27, paraded her very slender post-baby body in skintight flares, which accentuated her tiny waist, just two months after giving birth. Scroll down for video Fabulous figure: Sam Faiers paraded her VERY slender post-baby body in skintight flares as she cuddled her newborn Rosie on arrival at London's Intercontinental Hotel on Tuesday Reality star Sam pulled off a sleek look with her monochrome plaid top which flattered her fabulous figure after she snapped back into shape. The former TOWIE star was every inch the hands-on mum as she affectionately cradled her two-month-old daughter close to her chest. Mother-of-two Sam dressed Rosie in a fleece bear onesie and she bundled a baby pink blanked around her for added warmth to keep the 7 degrees chill at bay. Doting mum: The former TOWIE star was every inch the hands-on mum as she affectionately cradled her two-month-old daughter and she held her close to her chest Recently celebrating her 27th birthday with her beau Paul and their brood, the fashionista highlighted her youthful features with a shade of pink lipstick. The reality star slicked her glossy tresses back into a low ponytail, accessorised with huge golden hoops and a pair of sexy shades. At her 2.9million dream house in Hertfordshire, the style maven raises her children with her long-term partner Paul who she has been loved-up with for three years. Mother's instinct: Sam was quick to notice the striking resemblance between her two children, two-month-old Rosie and two-year-old Paul As the ever doting mum, Sam was quick to notice the striking resemblance between her two children two-month-old Rosie and two-year-old Paul. She wrote on Instagram: 'Guess whos 2 months old today my little Rosie Knightley chubby cheeks, we cant believe how big you are getting. Rosie looks so much like baby Paul at this age.' (sic) They are preparing to air the third series of their reality show The Mummy Diaries, which will document every detail of Sam's second pregnancy. Happy family! Back in Essex, the style maven raises her children with her long-term partner Paul (pictured with their son) who she has been loved-up with for three years She posted an inspirational message about starting over, just one day after her split from long-term boyfriend Jack Antonoff was confirmed. And Lena Dunham was spotted out for the first time since the break-up on Monday, getting a comforting hug from a pal in Los Angeles. Though newly-single star, 31, wrote about having a fresh start on social media, she did reveal she would continue to wear the ring Jack gave her. Stepping out: Newly single Lena Dunham was spotted for the first time since her split from long-time boyfriend Jack Antonoff was announced Comforting: Dunham pulled her pal in for a warm huge during their outing in Los Angeles on Tuesday While stepping out on Monday, Dunham smiled as she was pulled in for a comforting embrace by a friend. The Girls star wore a funky blazer, black leggings, a brown sweater, and loafers as she faced the rainy day. That same day Dunham posted an inspirational message on her Instagram account, which read, 'Starting over is the beautiful moment where you choose yourself.' 'forever love,' she captioned the image, along with two heart emoticons. Split: Dunham and Antonoff called it quits after five years together, and have been living separately since December, according to E! Online 'Forever love': Lena Dunham has posted an inspirational message on new beginnings, just one day after her break-up from her long-time love was confirmed. 'I'll always wear it': Lena also revealed in a live Instagram video that she was still wearing the ring her ex gave to her, and that she planned on always wearing it Dunham also revealed in a live Instagram video that she was still wearing the ring her ex gave to her, and that she planned on always wearing it. 'I'm wearing this ring that Jack gave me, and I'll always wear it, because love is a really cool, powerful, eternal thing,' explained Dunham as she wore an array of rings, but showed off a large silver one to the camera. 'It doesn't have to be defined the way that we in Western culture define as beginnings and ends... you're a drop of water and then you re-enter the ocean.' She also thanked fans for supporting her during her journey. Moving on: Antonoff stepped out to the Gibson Rocks opening in Las Vegas that same day Friendship: The star happily pulled her pal in for a hug Fun fashion: While stepping out on Monday, Dunham smiled as she was pulled in for a comforting embrace by a friend Dunham and Antonoff called it quits after five years together, and have been living separately since December, according to E! Online. While no reason has been given for the pair ending their relationship, the split was mutual, a source told Eonline. 'Jack and Lena were growing apart and it just made sense for them to end their relationship where it was,' said the source. Peace! The pair both flashed a peace sign Still good friends: The former couple split on good terms; they are seen last year and (right) Lena posted a new video story to Instagram on Monday 'They want the best for each other no matter what. They are both moving on.' The split announcement continues a bad run for Dunham, who endured a torrid end to 2017 after she called actress Aurora Perrineau a liar when she claimed she was raped by a writer from Girls. Dunham and Girls producer Jenni Konner said that Murray Miller was innocent and that Perrineau - who said that she was 17-years-old when she was raped in 2012 - was 'one of the three-percent of assault cases that are misreported every year'. Going it alone: Lena attended the Golden Globes on Sunday night The backlash against the pair led to Harvery Weinstein accuser Rose McGowan labeling Dunham a 'slut shamer'. The HBO star apologized and then went into a self-imposed social media exile and made no public appearances until the Golden Globes in LA on Sunday evening, where she was seen with former co-star Allison Williams. Indeed, the split is a slight shock, considering that in an interview earlier this year Lena, 31, insisted that she and Jack were blissfully in love, though had no plans to wed. Stepping out: Lena Dunham was seen for the first time at Sean Penn's JP HRO Gala in Los Angeles since defending Girls co-writer Murray Miller after he was accused of rape by actress, Aurora Perrineau Back at it: Weeks after laying low following the scandal, the actress also made her return to social media on Saturday, as she was seen on her Instagram Stories relaxing with two of her cats and reading Back in November, Rose McGowan blasted Lena Dunham for slut-shaming after the Girls actress came to the defense of Miller. 'Lena Dunham, Jenni Konner. Good old-fashioned elitist slut shaming. Way to go,' McGowan tweeted to them at the time. Dunham and her co-show runner Jenni Konner had just released a joint statement expressing support for Murray Miller, who is accused by actress Perrineau of sexual assault. 'While our first instinct is to listen to every woman's story, our insider knowledge of Murray's situation makes us confident that sadly this accusation is one of the 3% of assault cases that are misreported every year,' Dunham and Konner wrote. Lena's Book Club: The pop culture phenom showed off some of the titles she's reading 'Lena Dunham, Jenni Konner. Good old-fashioned elitist slut shaming. Way to go,' McGowan tweeted during the controversy back in November The Girls actress issued an apology on Twitter following the backlash 'It is a true shame to add to that number, as outside of Hollywood women still struggle to be believed. We stand by Murray and this is all we'll be saying about this issue.' However, the next day, Dunham issued an apology, writing in part on Twitter: 'I naively believed it was important to share my perspective on my friends situation as it has transpired behind the scenes over the last few months. I now understand that it was absolutely the wrong time to come forward with such a statement and I am so sorry. 'Every woman who comes forward deserves to be heard, fully and completely, and our relationship to the accused should not be part of the calculation anyone makes when examining her case. Every person and every feminist should be required to hear her.' Aurora Perrineau claims she was raped by Murray Miller in 2012 when she was in LA Many Twitter users supported McGownan's criticism of Dunham and Konner. Dunham has been vocal about her own experience with sexual assault, retelling her story during a gala in 2015 of how she was raped. At Variety's Power Of Women event two years ago, Dunham gave a speech that detailed her own brush with sexual assault while she was an undergraduate at Oberlin College. 'When I was raped, I felt powerless,' she told the star-studded audience. Miller (left) vehemently denies the allegations and said that he has proof that the accusations are false Lena - who chronicled her sexual assault in her essay collection Not That Kind Of Girl - shared her rape upon accepting the honor for her work with GEMS, an organization created to serve and empower girls and young women of sexual assault. In the wake of a Hollywood sex abuse scandal centering on disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, Dunham also posted a tweet recounting a previous experience with a sexual assailant. 'Can't sleep remembering that I cried because my rapist passed me in the library and i didn't say hi.' Through his attorney, Miller has called the allegations categorically false, adding that he has proof of his innocence. 'Mr. Miller categorically and vehemently denies Ms. Perrineau's outrageous claims,' attorney Don Walerstein said in a statement in November. At 72 years old, Eric Clapton is due to play Hyde Park and adamant about continuing to work. Yet the musician has now admitted that he is suffering from deafness and struggling to strum the guitar. The guitar legend has revealed he's anxious about being able to play the instrument and sing 'proficiently' due to the ailments he has including tinnitus, a ringing coming from inside the ear. Scroll down for video Losing his touch? Eric Clapton (here in September 2017) has admitted his fears that he will embarrass himself at 2018 shows, after revealing he is going deaf and has tinnitus In an interview with Steve Wright on BBC Radio 2 on Tuesday, Eric shared: 'I am still going to work. I am going to do a show at Hyde Park [British Summer Time Festival] in July. 'The only thing I am concerned with now is I am going deaf, I've got tinnitus, my hands just about work. 'I mean, I am hoping people will come along and see me, me more than I am a curiosity. I know that is part of it, because it's amazing to myself that I am still here.' The former Cream star was speaking in promotion of his new film, Eric Clapton: A Life in 12 Bars, which hits cinemas on Friday (12.01.18), and said it's hard to watch the movie in full because it looks back at some tough times he's experienced. He admitted: 'It's difficult to sit through because it goes on so long about the difficult part of my life. 'I think it's important for people to see that there is a happy ending, it's like a redemption concept. If you are going to go and see it, be prepared for a heavy ride.' The 'Layla' hitmaker revealed last year that he's been in pain after damaging his nervous system, which is why he's finding it hard to perform, however, he's 'come to terms with it'. World's greatest guitarist: The rocker (here in 1975) spoke about his former demons, after spending most of the 60s and 70s under the influence of alcohol and drugs until his sobriety in 1987 He said at the time: 'I've had quite a lot of pain over the last year. It started with lower back pain, and turned into what they call peripheral neuropathy. '[It's] hard work to play the guitar and I've had to come to terms with the fact that it will not improve.' Clapton, who spent most of the 60s and 70s under the influence of alcohol and drugs until his sobriety in 1987, had said that he would limit the number of concerts he does to avoid 'embarrassing himself'. He said: 'What I'll allow myself to do, within reason, is carry on recording in the studio. I don't want to go off the boil to the point where I'm embarrassing myself.' Last March, Eric was forced to pull out of two gigs in Los Angeles at short notice because of 'severe bronchitis'. The 71-year-old star, lauded by many as one of the world's greatest guitarists, said he was 'very sorry' for having to postpone the shows following doctor's orders. 'Due to severe bronchitis and under doctor's advisement, Eric Clapton is rescheduling this weekend's two shows at The Forum in Los Angeles,' read a statement released on the Tears In Heaven hitmaker's behalf. Doesn't want to embarrass himself: Clapton was forced to pull out of shows last March due to illness During Tuesday's interview, he admitted at the height of his alcoholism he would drink a self-made potent cocktail to mask just how much booze he was sinking. The 72-year-old music legend managed to kick his addiction to drink and his abuse of prescription drugs, cocaine and heroin many years ago and in 1998 he founded the Crossroads Centre on Antigua, a medical facility for recovering addicts. Clapton openly admits his binge drinking at its worse was out of control and he would often mix super-strength Carlsberg Special Brew lager with spirit vodka creating a strange brew to satisfy his insatiable thirst for alcohol. He shared: 'For at least 20 years I was a basket case, and that is putting it lightly. I drank more than you can imagine, a Special Brew with vodka. It looked like you were just drinking larger, but in fact, you weren't.' However, the 'Layla' hitmaker believes his battles with substance abuse were beneficial to his blues inspired rock music as he was able to channel his struggles and pain into his songs. Clapton - who is a three-time inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, once as a solo artist and as a member of The Yardbirds and also Cream - added: 'There is no doubt. I went into a cave of self-pity and despair and the only thing that was the light at the end of the tunnel was this music.' Advertisement Supermodel Alessandra Ambrosio is worth an estimated $60m thanks to her incredible curves. And the 36-year-old former Victoria's Secret standout has a knack for reminding her followers that even though she is not a millennial like Gigi Hadid or Kendall Jenner, she still is one of the best-looking women in the world with one of the fittest bodies. The siren was at it again on Monday as she flaunted her perfectly sculpted 5ft9in frame in a tiny bikini that left little to the imagination. Supermodel in the swim! Alessandra Ambrosio showed off her $60m body as she hit the beach in Florianopolis, Brazil on Tuesday afternoon Not overdressed: The leggy wonder had on very little fabric as the black bikini with brown trim barely took up any real estate on her lean body She has ink on her back: In fact, the briefs were so small they showed off part of her tattoo on her bottom The leggy wonder had on very little fabric as the black bikini with brown trim barely took up any real estate on her lean body. In fact, the briefs were so small they showed off part of her tattoo on her bottom. And the suit was far from dull as it had gold accents on the edge of the material as well as on the end of the strings. Ambrosio accessorized with several bracelets, rings and a gold necklace adding purple and yellow tinted aviator glasses that had black frames. The Versace model had her long highlighted locks pulled into a ponytail. She sure knows how to shine: And the suit was far from dull as it had gold accents on the edge of the material as well as on the end of the strings Bling it on, baby: Ambrosio accessorized with several bracelets, rings and a gold necklace adding purple and yellow tinted aviator glasses that had black frames Lots of locks: The Versace model had her long highlighted locks pulled into a ponytail, but no one was looking at her hair After strutting her stuff on the pristine shores for a while, the Giorgio Armani model picked up a small blue Boogie board and headed up to the surf. She did not seem to get much action, however, as the waves were not the most conducive to Boogie boarding, and spent much of her time floating about. The star later sat on the beach where she modeled a nifty straw hat before plunking tummy down on her towel where she applied sunscreen. Workout time: After strutting her stuff on the pristine shores for a while, the Giorgio Armani model picked up a small blue Boogie board and headed up to the surf Lazy day: She did not seem to get much action, however, as the waves were not the most conducive to Boogie boarding, and spent much of her time floating about Laughs here and there: After she caught a tiny wave the Calvin Klein model showed off her pearly whites The Elle model at one point got hungry and was seen nibbling on a cob of corn she bought from a local vendor. She was not alone as some friends were spotted next to the Casino Royale movie star. The mannequin has been in Brazil for several days already. And on Sunday, she also took to Instagram to share more snapshots from her Latin American adventures, as her travels took to her Costa Esmeralda. Spray it on: The star later sat on the beach where she modeled a nifty straw hat before plunking tummy down on her towel where she applied sunscreen Yummy: The Elle model at one point got hungry and was seen nibbling on a cob of corn she bought from a local vendor A pretty pal by her side: She was not alone as some friends were spotted next to the Casino Royale movie star In the shots, the beauty displayed her lithe form in a flattering white bikini as she took to the welcoming azure waters for a paddleboarding session. Shielding her eyes from the sunshine with a stylish pair of shades, the mother-of-two wore her glossy brown locks in a high ponytail as she posed for the envy-inducing snapshots, which she captioned: 'Sunday fun day.' A day before, she put on quite the cheeky display for her 9million followers, when she shared an image of herself pulling up her bikini bottoms to reveal her pert posterior as she waded in the waters of Praia Brava. No need for a cover up: Though at one point the Louis Vuitton model put a white wrap on her shoulders, it didn't seem to stay on for very long Taking care of her mini me: Alessandra also squeezed in some mom duty as she fixed her daughter Anja's hair; the child is nearly 10-years-old and her dad is businessman Jamie Mazur, founder of RE/DONE jeans This trip comes after a major announcement. In November, Alessandra said she was leaving Victoria's Secret after walking in an incredible 17 shows - most recently the 2017 presentation in Shanghai, China. Confirming the rumours via her Instagram page, she wrote: 'Words cannot describe how grateful I am to have been working for this amazing brand that inspires me and women all over the world. 'In my wildest dreams I would have never imagined doing 17 Victorias Secret Fashion Shows. Thank you Ed, and all my Victorias Secret family for making these memories unforgettable. 'Last night was so emotional to say goodbye to my angel sisters but we put on the biggest and best show ever. I could not have done this without all the love and support from my fans. Twinning on the beach: In this Instagram photo shared on Tuesday, Alessandra matched Anja's leopard print swimsuit; her caption read, 'Where the wild things are' Her pals are gorgeous too: Proving that she doesn't have unattractive friends, Alessandra shared this image with the caption, 'All day everyday' 'It gives me great pride to be part the Victorias Secret movement! I will always be cheering for you! Love you forever.' The model kicked off her fashion career at the tender age of 12, and went on to appear in her first show for the lingerie brand in 2000. In the 2008 edition of the show, the mother-of-two famously returned to the runway just three months after giving birth to her first child, daughter Anja. She was selected to wear the coveted 'Fantasy Bra' on two occasions; modelling a $2.5 million version in 2012 and joining fellow Brazilian bombshell Adriana Lima, 36, to showcase the Dream Angels Fantasy Bras, worth $2 million apiece, in 2014. The model raises daughter Anja and son Noah with businessman fiance Jamie Mazur, 36, to whom she has been engaged to since 2008. Making waves: On Sunday, she shared a pair of shots of herself paddleboarding in Praia Brava Wow: The supermodel wowed in a white Aexae bikini, in which she displayed her enviable physique Alessandra previously said her body has improved since she gave birth to her two children, because she never used to workout before becoming a mother. She told The EDIT magazine in 2014: 'Your body will never go back to exactly what it was before pregnancy, whatever people tell you. It can't. 'But I think I have a better body now than before I had kids. It's partly because I work out, whereas before I didn't, but also to do with the shape - it just looks more formed now and I feel better about it than I did.' Soaking up the sun: Ambrosio took to Instagram to share a racy shot of herself soaking up the sunshine in Brazil over the weekend Break: The brunette beauty has been enjoying an extended break in her sun-soaked homeland Tamzin Outhwaite gave a superb performance as Mel Owen in her shock return to Albert Square a veritable masterclass in how an ex-star should make an entrance in EastEnders. She suddenly walked in to the final scene after 16 years away, appearing on screen for 14 seconds and saying four words, pausing (or pouting) for dramatic effect, before the doof doofs. Classic. Nice to be back... Owen/Outhwaite stated, not particularly sounding as if she meant it. Scroll down for video Comeback Queen: Tamzin Outhwaite gave a superb performance as Mel Owen in her shock return to Albert Square a veritable masterclass in how an ex-star should make an entrance in EastEnders Admittedly it might have taken a second for the audience to recognise the blonde bombshell, even those veteran viewers who remembered her characters romantic (mis)adventures with Steve Owen, Dan Sullivan, and, um, Ian Beale, who Mel not only got together with but married. (Id say you had to be there but it barely made more sense when it happened - on New Years Eve 1999. What a way to start the new Millennium.) Here, Mel emerged from the darkness of the Walford night stepping into The Arches looking more sinister than was probably intended, slightly alarming in fact: her face gleaming from all the foundation, daubed in too much eye shadow, and sporting a nasty dye job that was even brighter and more yellow than Sharons (although not as luxuriant/ludicrous, obviously.) 16 years on she looked like a Terrahawk version of Mel Owen or an enthusiastic drag queens tribute to the sophisticated, elegant, businesswoman who had so enthralled Real Men played by Craig Fairbrass and Martin Kemps characters. (Adam Woodyatt, not so much.) Spooky: Here, Mel emerged from the darkness of the Walford night stepping into The Arches looking more sinister than was probably intended Unusually for such a headline grabbing name, Ben Mitchell was distinctly under-whelmed, barely looking up as he dismissed her as merely another customer, barking: Sorry love, if youre looking for a service were chocca Of course Ben was too young to know who Mel was, or care i.e. like the majority of the shows fans nowadays, judging by the number of teenagers and kids Albert Square has become infested with. Despite this, the return of Ms Owen/Outhwaite confirmed EastEnders reputation as the Hotel California of soaps: You can check out any time you like but you can never leave. Underwhelmed: Unusually for such a headline grabbing name, Ben Mitchell was distinctly under-whelmed, barely looking up as he dismissed her as merely another customer Classic: Mel suddenly walked in to the final scene after 16 years away, appearing on screen for 14 seconds and saying four words, pausing for dramatic effect, before the doof doofs. Classic Mel was preceded a week ago by Masood, and Tiffany, while the likes of Kathy Beale, Stacey, Whitney, Grant, Michelle Fowler, and Tanya Branning have all re-appeared. (Admittedly Tanya has gone missing again possibly to Waterloo Road - even though her daughters newborn baby is in hospital and Abi is brain-dead.) Now a new producer (John Yorke) bringing stars like Outhwaite back might smack of desperation but frankly its preferable to the sub-plots in this episode such as the comic/hypocritical nonsense as Masoods deceit about his finances and the owner of the launderette (Mr Papadopoulos junior) giving Karen Taylor a job. This was despite the racist way she greeted him when they first met in yesterdays episode, walking in as he was inspecting his property and shouting: We dont need no asylum seekers squatting round here, so go back to wherever you came from! Comic: Now a new producer (John Yorke) bringing stars like Outhwaite back might smack of desperation but frankly its preferable to the sub-plots in this episode such as the comic/hypocritical nonsense as Masoods deceit about his finances and the owner of the launderette (Mr Papadopoulos junior) giving Karen Taylor a job As he pointed out this was Hampstead. That wasnt personal, she explained in Tuesdays show or rather the writers tried to make Taylor sympathetic again. I didnt think you woz you. I was being public spirited. This was drivel, as Papadopoulos junior indicated when he frowned: Are you from some sort of home? I meant go back to Hampstead she claimed/lied. Inexplicably he gave her job mostly because the (perennially unemployable) racist layabout was (also inexplicably) the only applicant for the job. I start every conversation thinking "no way!" What is it about you Miss Taylor? he mused, as if she had charmed him. We had no idea. Meeting: This was despite the racist way she greeted him when they first met in yesterdays episode, walking in as he was inspecting his property and shouting: We dont need no asylum seekers squatting round here, so go back to wherever you came from! Spirited: As he pointed out this was Hampstead. That wasnt personal, she explained in Tuesdays show or rather the writers tried to make Taylor sympathetic again. I didnt think you woz you. I was being public spirited Having been in EastEnders for nearly four years between 1998-2002 theres not time to go into who Mel Owen is/was. Why she has reappeared in Walford we might find out on Thursday but Tamzin Outhwaite has hinted it will concern Mels son Hunter (fathered by Steve Owen). Theres also Mels connection with Phil Mitchell, one of her many exes and the man who paid her bail when she was arrested on drugs charges before she fled to Portugal. It could also be to do with Bens other reason for trying to give Mel the brush off. The previous nights episode had revealed that Ben was the mystery person responsible for the mystery disappearance of the jewels and several hundred thousand pounds in cash (according to Aidan Maguire) stolen during Walfords version of The Italian Job. Drivel: This was drivel, as Papadopoulos junior indicated when he frowned: Are you from some sort of home? I meant go back to Hampstead she claimed/lied Understanding: Inexplicably he gave her job mostly because the (perennially unemployable) racist layabout was (also inexplicably) the only applicant for the job. I start every conversation thinking "no way!" What is it about you Miss Taylor? he mused, as if she had charmed him Ben - Albert Squares answer to Columbo - had analysed his dad Phil, Aidan, and Billy to get hold of the jewels of Mrs Maguires jewels and a few hundred thousand in cash. Smart thinking smarter than Phil, Vincent, Mick, or Keanu anyway. Admittedly not saying much. Unfortunately this picture of Ben as a criminal mastermind didnt last long. Ingeniously, Ben had stored all the cash in The Arches, under his desk covered by a towel where Aidan, his wife, or the police would never think of looking. Tuesdays show opened with the young garage owner arranging a meet to sell the jewellery in a cafe. I usually do evaluations at the shop, the dodgy geezer pointed out. Well anyone can walk in there cant they? Ben replied, seemingly not having considered that anyone could walk into a caff too and that two blokes crouched over a bag of rings and bracelets would be considerably more suspicious than in a Jewellers. Hiding place: Ingeniously, Ben had stored all the cash in The Arches, under his desk covered by a towel where Aidan, his wife, or the police would never think of looking Making moves: The next part of Bens cunning plan had involved disappearing for a while, like his father. (Phil was in Italy - a spin-off Special episode that budget cutbacks at the BBC had deprived us of sadly.) The next part of Bens cunning plan had involved disappearing for a while, like his father. (Phil was in Italy - a spin-off Special episode that budget cutbacks at the BBC had deprived us of sadly.) Ben had told his mother he was visiting Grant Mitchells daughter. You havent mentioned Courtney in months, Kathy pointed out (rather unfortunately as it was true). Ben then presented his dear old mum with a farewell gift - (you guessed it) a huge, bling-y, necklace from the robbery. You can rest assured Kathy will wear it, showing it off to all her customers in the caff until Aidan or his missus sees it. Surprise: Ben then presented his dear old mum with a farewell gift - (you guessed it) a huge, bling-y, necklace from the robbery. You can rest assured Kathy will wear it Heist: Ben - Albert Squares answer to Columbo - had analysed his dad Phil, Aidan, and Billy to get hold of the jewels of Mrs Maguires jewels and a few hundred thousand in cash Minutes later, Bens scheme unravelled further when he returned to the garage to find the padlock had been levered off and Jay found him holding a lovely wad of fifty pound notes. You are playing with fire ! Jay warned him. If Aidan finds out you took it How can he?! Ben shrugged brightly. Only you and me know, and I aint gonna tell him ! Although there is also whoever bust the door to the Arches open Ben kept having the feeling he was being watched but even with no padlock on the Arches entrance still didnt seem to consider moving the money - or worry when a mysterious stranger with a dodgy criminal past then walked in. The way Mel made her entrance, said nice to be back and waited for the doof doofs should have told him she was trouble. He went into hiding after being branded 'Australia's most hated man' for dumping Sam Frost following The Bachelor 2014 finale. But despite being on the celebrity 'missing persons list' for several months, it appears that Blake Garvey is, indeed, alive and well. The reality TV 'love rat' was pictured at Perth's Cottesloe Hotel last Saturday, getting rather flirty with a glamorous blonde. He's alive! The Bachelor 'love rat' Blake Garvey finally emerged last Saturday after being in hiding for months, as he put on a flirty display with a Louise Pillidge lookalike in Perth The topless waiter-turned-real estate agent appeared in high spirits as he shared a friendly conversation with two other guests. Blake dressed casually for the occasion in a white polo shirt, laughing animatedly as he got flirty with a mystery woman. His new friend looked remarkably similar to his ex Louise Pillidge, who Blake dated after unceremoniously dumping Sam. In high spirits: Blake dressed casually for the occasion in a white polo shirt, laughing animatedly as he got flirty with a mystery woman who resembled his ex He's got a type! His new friend looked remarkably similar to his ex Louise Pillidge, who Blake dated after unceremoniously dumping Sam Frost following The Bachelor 2014 series finale In 2014, Blake earned his reputation as a 'love rat' after breaking up with Sam just weeks after proposing in The Bachelor finale. The Perth auctioneer presented her with a $58,000 engagement ring, which Sam later sold (at auction, no less) for $31,720. She was later announced as Australia's first Bachelorette and, last year, parlayed her reality TV career into a dramatic role in Home And Away. Reality TV star: Blake rose to fame on the 2014 season of The Bachelor Controversial: In 2014, Blake earned his reputation as a 'love rat' after breaking up with Sam just weeks after proposing in The Bachelor finale (pictured) Following his split with Sam, Blake began a relationship with third-place contestant Louise Pillidge. However, rumours circulated at the time that he had also tried to hook up with the runner-up Lisa Hyde. Blake attempted to revive his TV career with a stint on Celebrity Apprentice in 2015 - but he was voted out after just two episodes. Adding insult to injury, Blake's short-lived turn on The Apprentice coincided with Sam's appearance on ratings smash The Bachelorette. But his run of bad luck continued, as Blake split with Louise in April 2016 after 18 months of dating. The former couple announced their separation in New Idea and raised eyebrows with a cringeworthy 'breakup photo shoot'. That's unfortunate! Blake broke up with Sam despite proposing to her on national television Shock coupling: Following his split with Sam, Blake began a relationship with third-place contestant Louise Pillidge. Pictured in December 2014 In the accompanying magazine interview, Blake blamed their split on public opinion. 'We've both tried so hard to make it work, but the negativity that has surrounded us has changed us as individuals,' he said. 'We felt like we were walking on eggshells around each other, always trying to say the right thing. It was suffocating.' After the breakup, Blake appears to have tried to distance himself from The Bachelor, deleting his public social media accounts. Nice try! Blake attempted to revive his TV career with a stint on Celebrity Apprentice in 2015 - but he was voted out after just two episodes Dumped: Blake was evicted from the show just two episodes in, preceded only by Gabi Grecko Parted ways: His run of bad luck continued, as Blake split with Louise in April 2016 after 18 months of dating. Pictured in November 2014 He briefly resurfaced in September 2016 when his LJ Hooker real estate profile emerged - which made no reference to his reality TV past. Blake appears to have since left the agency and started his own company, Elite Auctions, in early 2017. However, no trace of the real estate company can be found online. 'He has put the message out there that he doesn't want to be contacted,' a source close to Blake told Fairfax Media last July. Sam Frost revealed in August she hadn't heard from Blake, telling Nova's Fitzy and Wippa he was 'on the missing persons list'. 'He's like disappeared from the face of the planet,' she said, adding: 'Well, after he broke up with Louise, he was like, "That's it, I'm out".' 'The negativity that has surrounded us has changed us as individuals': In an interview with New Idea magazine, Blake blamed their breakup on public opinion 'He has put the message out there that he doesn't want to be contacted': Blake has kept a low profile since 2016, deleting his public social media accounts. Pictured in November 2014 'He's like disappeared from the face of the planet': Sam Frost revealed in August she hadn't heard from Blake, telling Nova's Fitzy and Wippa he was 'on the missing persons list' Sam appears to have had the last laugh over the failed relationship, dressing up as her own personal 'nightmare' last Halloween. She was pictured on Instagram holding a rose and wearing an outfit similar to her Bachelor 2014 promotional photo. The caption read: 'Re-living my nightmare... getting engaged for 12.3 seconds on national TV.' Daily Mail Australia has contacted Blake for comment. Flight of the Conchords star Jemaine Clement has revealed that a reboot is happening. The 43-year-old confirmed to ET Online that filming will take place this year after their HBO show ended in 2009. 'We'd do something,' Jemaine told the outlet, keeping mum on details. They're back! Flight of the Conchords star Jemaine Clement (R, seen with co-star Bret McKenzie) reveals a reboot is in the works 'We're going to film a little something this year,' he added. He also said the pair will shoot an hour 'thing' and wouldn't confirm if HBO was part of the new work. Jemaine's Flight of the Conchords sidekick is Bret McKenzie, with the comedy duo both hailing from New Zealand. Incoming: 'We're going to film a little something this year,' he added The duo are set to tour the UK in March. They first formed the Flight of the Conchords in 1998 after meeting at university in New Zealand. It has been rumoured that there would be a Flight of the Conchords movie. Success: The duo are set to tour the UK in March. They first formed the Flight of the Conchords in 1998 after meeting at university in New Zealand Jemaine and Bret have teased fans saying they had been writing material for a film. Rhys Darby - who starred in the HBO show - spoke about the possible movie. I have heard nothing other than the rumours which Im pretty sure the Conchords just start themselves and then go back home and carry on with their lives,' Rhys told Metro.co.uk this month. He added: 'We just need to get together at some point and make it. But theres been no progress on it other than, yeah we should do it!, which generally happens every year. I still sit by the phone.' The Australian musical theatre industry was rocked when actor Craig McLachlan was accused of indecent assault and sexual harassment by three women during the Rocky Horror Show musical in 2014. And musical theatre performer Lucy Durack has now broken her silence on the ongoing investigation. Speaking to Nine's Today show on Wednesday, the 35-year-old said: 'I definitely stand by and stand with Christie (Whelan Browne) and Angela (Scundi) and Erika (Heynatz). I think they have been incredibly brave this week.' She added: 'Of course, I stand with any victims of any assault or harassment.' 'I definitely stand by and stand with them': Musical theatre star Lucy Durack (pictured) breaks her silence on Craig McLachlan allegations and praises actresses Christie Whelan Browne, Angela Scundi and Erika Heynatz for coming forward Lucy, who is recognised for playing Glinda in the Australian production of Wicked and Elle Woods in the Australian production of Legally Blonde: The Musical, admitted she hasn't worked with Craig in the past. In a joint investigation by The Sydney Morning Herald and the ABC on Monday, three women (Christie, Angela and Erika) who appeared with McLachlan during the Rocky Horror Show musical in 2014 have alleged they were 'abused, harassed or assaulted' by the star. Today host Sylvia Jeffreys responded to Lucy's comments: 'It takes great strength, I think, for anybody to speak out, particularly at the risk of their own career. 'There is obviously plenty more to come and Craig McLachlan, as we know, has denied all these allegations. But (it's) important for everyone to stick together, I think, in the industry at the moment and work towards a better future for everyone on the stage.' 'I stand with any victims of any assault or harassment': Lucy was interview on Channel Nine's Today show on Wednesday Denial: Australian actor Craig McLachlan has vehemently denied allegations of indecent assault and sexual harassment put forward by multiple women in a joint investigation by The Sydney Morning Herald and the ABC on Monday The allegations made against Craig relate to his behavior both on and off the stage and come after a video reemerged of him acting like a 'drunk uncle' at an awards ceremony in 2016. In response to the claims, the 52-year-old told the Herald via e-mail: 'I have NEVER done anything like this.' He further told the ABC: 'Frankly, they seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety. In either event, they are to the best of my knowledge utterly and entirely false.' It also emerged on Monday that McLachlan had withdrawn from the current production of the Rocky Horror Show in light of the allegations. Cast: The 2014 cast of the Rocky Horror Show musical, with Craig McLachlan pictured centre front and Erika Heynatz seen at centre back The show's producers, the Gordon Frost Organisation, say they have spoken with McLachlan and have agreed that it is not appropriate for him to continue in the current production. 'We will be conducting a full internal investigation and will cooperate fully with authorities,' GFO said in a statement on Monday. McLachlan, who has described the allegations as 'made up', had been until today on tour in Adelaide starring in a new Rocky Horror production. Craig McLachlan has withdrawn from the current production of The Rocky Horror Show amid allegations he sexually harassed and bullied his former co-stars GFO said they were not aware of the allegations until Monday, claiming legal correspondence received before Christmas contained no details of the victims or their claims. 'While we clearly cannot comment on the details of this particular case, sexual assault in any form is unacceptable, and we will work diligently within this industry to support the right of all people to be protected in the workplace, and stand by those who are victims of inappropriate behaviour,' the statement read. 'In order to clarify media reports, we wish to state that we were not aware of any details of these allegations until they were published in the media today. We received correspondence from a law firm shortly before Christmas however this contained no details of the claims or the claimants. 'The response from our lawyers was based on this lack of information and was not in any way directed at the women who have come forward and made these allegations.' Allegations: Erika Heynatz, who once hosted Australia's Next Top Model and had a recurring role on Home And Away, is one of the women who has made allegations against McLachlan Daily Mail Australia has contacted Craig McLachlan for comment. Actress Erika Heynatz, who once hosted Australia's Next Top Model and had a recurring role on Home And Away, is one of the women who has made the allegations against McLachlan. According to the Herald, Heynatz alleges that she 'experienced unwanted sexual advances from the star.' Among other claims, the actress says on one occasion McLachlan straddled her on a lounge in a green room and kissed her without permission. Speaking out: Christie Whelan Browne alleges McLachlan 'indecently assaulted her during the show' Rocky Horror co-stars Christie Whelan Browne and Angela Scundi also made allegations. Two of the three women have taken their case to the Victorian police and all three have sought legal advice in pushing for an investigation. Whelan Browne alleges McLachlan 'indecently assaulted her during the show.' While on stage and only visible to the audience from the waist up, she accuses McLachlan of once pulling up her underwear and kissing her buttocks while he was obscured by public view. He has refuted that the incident occurred. Angela Scundi, another woman who appeared in the musical, alleges McLachlan made inappropriate comments about her breasts and exposed himself to her. Co-star: Angela Scundi, another woman who appeared in the musical, says McLachlan made inappropriate comments about her breasts and exposed himself to her Scundi has made a 'lengthy statement to police'. McLachlan denies the allegation. During the Rocky Horror Show production, McLachlan played the lead role of transvestite scientist, Dr Frank N. Furter. Footage has also resurfaced from the 2016 Logie Awards purporting to show McLachlan acting like a 'drunk uncle'. The clip show his behaviour towards co-star Miranda Tapsell, 30, leading up to the announcement of the Silver Logie for Most Outstanding Supporting Actress at the awards show. Awkward footage of Craig McLachlan presenting an award at the 2016 Logie Awards has re-emerged in the wake of allegations of sexually inappropriate behaviour made against him The pair began with a humorous dig at the age gap between them, with McLachlan acting the part of the vain, older star, and Tapsell knocking him down. Towards the end of their presentation, McLachlan wrapped his arm around the popular actress, who appeared to wince at his touch. During the presentation, the pair had kept their distance, with Tapsell clutching her hands together or crossing her arms for the duration. Musical: The cast of the 2014 production of the Rocky Horror Show, where McLachlan played the lead role of transvestite scientist, Dr Frank N. Furter As the skit came to an end and the announcement of the nominees approached, McLachlan did not move away from the microphone, forcing Taspell to move in close to him to have her voice heard. As she began reading the nominees, McLachlan let out a high-pitched laugh and awkwardly put his arm around her. Clips of the audience during the announcement showed the awkwardness of the crowd, with many wincing or looking uncomfortable with the display. Heynatz, Whelan Browne and Scundi told the ABC 'they have never sought money [from McLachlan] and they want reassurances the current cast of the show is not at any risk.' The women said they made complaints to producers at the time but said they felt pressured not to push the issue further. One of Australia's most iconic actors, Craig McLachlan first appeared in a guest capacity on The Young Doctors, before playing Kylie Minogue's on-screen brother in Neighbours. Starring role: McLachlan as he appeared on Neighbours in the late 1980s He won the prestigious Gold Logie Award for Best Personality on Australian Television for his role on the popular soap. For two years in the early 1990s, he starred as Grant Mitchell in Home And Away, and has had recurring roles in beloved Australian dramas McLeod's Daughters and Packed To The Rafters. More recently, the actor has appeared in The Wrong Girl and The Doctor Blake Mysteries. McLachlan was raised on the NSW Central Coast and met his first wife Karen Williams during a school theatre production. His second marriage was to Neighbours star Rachel Friend. They divorced after 18 months. He has a teenage son, who lives in the UK. A 2005 newspaper report claimed that McLachlan 'regularly visits his son in London' despite living in Australia. Recent role: McLachlan recently won acclaim for his role in the Doctor Blake Mysteries Hugh Grant looked weary as he stepped out in New York on Tuesday amid claims he is expecting his fifth child. The 57-year-old actor was in New York promoting his new film, Paddington 2, and flashed a smile following his appearance on ABC's Good Morning America. His outing came shortly after his girlfriend Anna Eberstein's mother Susanne revealed that she is 'getting another grandchild', leading to pregnancy rumours. Scroll down for video All smiles: Hugh Grant looked weary as he stepped out in New York on Tuesday amid claims he is expecting his fifth child The actor, who has been BAFTA nominated for his role in Paddington, seemed in good spirits on the outing, as he mustered a smile and waved at fans. The Notting Hill actor looked dapper for his appearance, donning a fitted black suit and navy tie beneath a jacket as he made his way into his waiting car. He was no doubt keen to head back to his girlfriend, Anna, who accompanied him on the trip. Good spirits: The 57-year-old actor was in New York promoting his new film, Paddington 2, and flashed a smile following his appearance on ABC's Good Morning America Stepping out: His outing came shortly after his girlfriend Anna Eberstein's mother Susanne revealed that she is 'getting another grandchild', leading to pregnancy rumours Chirpy: The actor, who has been BAFTA nominated for his role in Paddington, seemed in good spirits on the outing, as he mustered a smile and waved at fans Suited and booted: The Notting Hill actor looked dapper for his appearance, donning a fitted black suit and navy tie beneath a jacket as he made his way into his waiting car Hugh and Anna, who attended the Golden Globes in LA on Sunday, were seen touching down in New York on Tuesday afternoon just hours after baby news surfaced. Anna's Susanne mother is said to have spoken to Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet, saying: 'I'm very happy to be getting another grandchild. She's due rather soon.' MailOnline has contacted representatives for Hugh for comment. Cute couple: He was no doubt keen to head back to his girlfriend, Anna, who accompanied him on the trip, amid claims they are set to welcome a baby together Hugh and Anna have two young children together - a son John, born in 2012, and a second child, born in December 2015. Clearly delighted at the prospect of becoming a grandmother once again, Susanne reportedly spilled the beans to the magazine. Hot-on-the-heels of the announcement, the couple were seen arriving in NYC where Hugh could not stop beaming while Anna looked chic in black. She sported a stylish blazer with boots and jeans while she kept her stomach hidden in her all-black ensemble. Strutting her stuff: Hot-on-the-heels of the announcement, the couple were seen arriving in NYC where Hugh could not stop beaming while Anna looked chic in black The name of the couple's second child still remains a mystery, but back in 2015 the birth was confirmed by Anna's mother to a Swedish newspaper. In the statement released at the time, she said: Anna Eberstein from Sundsvall has had her second child with film star Hugh Grant. The newest member of the family saw the light of day for the first time last Wednesday. Her mother, a judge and prominent left-wing politician, confirmed to Swedish newspaper Ornskoldsviks Allehanda the baby, her second grandchild, was born. She went on: 'I can confirm that I have another grandchild. It is wonderful that we now have grandchildren (more than one grandchild).' Happy days! Anna's mother reportedly spoke to Swedish magazine Aftonbladet , as she said: 'I'm very happy to be getting another grand child. She's due rather soon' (pictured at Sunday's Golden Globes) A close friend of the family told MailOnline at the time: I heard from Annas parents that she had given birth last Wednesday. It was a little girl. Everything seemed to have gone okay. Hugh's children September 2011 - Hugh became a father for the first time, to a daughter Tabitha with receptionist Tinglan Hong, after 'a fleeting affair' September 2012 - The actor later became a father for a second time to John Mungo, his first baby with Anna December 2012- After a brief reunion, Hugh and Tinglan had another child, as she gave birth to a boy called Felix although this only became publicly known when a birth certificate leaked when he was 16-months-old December 2015 - Anna and Hugh became parents once more to a second child, although they have never announced the child's name Advertisement Hugh also has two other children - a daughter Tabitha, six, and son Felix, four, with Chinese beauty Tinglan Hong. The Notting Hill star went from having no children to being a father of four in just four years. At the time of Tabitha's birth, Hugh's spokesman said: 'He and the mother had a fleeting affair and while this was not planned, Hugh could not be happier or more supportive. He and the mother have discussed everything and are on friendly terms.' When Ms Hong gave birth to Felix, Mr Grant wrote on Twitter: 'In answer to some journos. Am thrilled my daughter now has a brother. Adore them both to an uncool degree. They have a fab mum.' In 2014, he spoke for the first time about his son. Speaking to Swedish newspaper Nojesbladet, he said of Anna: We are very good friends and shes a very good mother. The actor said he had plenty of contact with his son. He said: 'I see him all the time, all the time - most days'. His relationship with the boy was excellent, he said, adding: I love him very much. He also spoke warmly about the charms of Sweden, which he has visited several times. Karen Van Winkle-Swift was born in upstate New York in 1946. Through adolescence she spent many years in the woods with her maternal grandmother developing a love of nature and learning to chop wood. In addition to the love of biology, her grandmother instilled in her a love of and respect for teaching as a profession. Not surprisingly, she ended up with a bachelors degree in science education from Cornell University. Ironically, it was while teaching eighth grade earth science that she rediscovered the true nature of science and the joy of discovery. She returned to school intending to focus on science education but found herself drawn to original research which led to her receiving a Ph.D. in Zoology from Duke University. She held teaching/research positions at San Diego State University and Texas A&M, but then found the perfect position at Northern Arizona University. This position provided her with the opportunity to unabashedly express her love for teaching on the same level as research with no embarrassment. For her teaching and research Karen earned numerous accolades including promotions, awards, and publications that could be listed here, but she felt that these were not the sort of things that defined her and were not what really mattered. Retirement offered a chance to reunite with nature in a different way (hiking, kayaking, and wood gathering). It also allowed her time to build deeper friendships; friendships that catalyzed discussions of what really matters and why we are here. During this time she also developed a deepened interest in Buddhism and mindfulness meditation. Upon receiving a diagnosis of metastatic ovarian cancer and in making her treatment decisions, she displayed her understanding of the Buddhist teaching that there is a difference between giving up and letting go. She leaves behind two loving 19 year old cats, four very large goldfish, and 65 houseplants. She requested that there be no memorial service but asked that, in lieu of a remembrance of her, you simply recognize and hug a friend. A policy that allowed Victorian schools to go three days without telling parents about truant children has been changed after a boy nearly died in a hot car. The eight-year-old was rushed to hospital in November after spending a 30C day accidentally locked in his mum's car. He was discovered only after being reported absent from school. "The policy has changed, schools will have to say as early as practical on that day if a child is absent," Deputy Premier and Education Minister James Merlino told 3AW on Tuesday. Victoria is safe, insists Acting Premier James Merlino, who has refused to say whether state and federal governments have discussed the issue of African youth crime. Mr Merlino returned to the job on Tuesday, after a Christmas break during which public debate on youth gangs escalated following a series of crimes committed by people of African appearance. While Victoria is safe, Mr Merlino said "there are communities that do fear about the level of safety in their community" and the government is taking the issue seriously. A woman has died and a man is in a critical condition after their car veered off a NSW Central Coast highway and slammed into water pipes. The smash happened at Erina on Tuesday morning, police said in a statement. The female passenger died at the scene while the male driver is being airlifted to a Sydney hospital. Meanwhile, a young man has died in hospital after he was struck by a van while running across a Central Coast road late on Sunday night. The 23-year-old was hit on Kanwal's main road and helped by passers-by before being taken to Newcastle's John Hunter Hospital where he later died, police said on Tuesday. An experienced Northern Territory police officer has been rescued from crocodile-infested floodwaters after his car was washed off a causeway. The Northern Territory Police, Fire and Emergency Services posted a photo on Facebook of the man on the roof of his car in the middle of the Mann River, abour 320km east of Darwin, just before his rescue on Sunday afternoon. The Northern Territory Police said the officer had driven through the same crossing the previous day, but that road conditions had changed quickly. The police vehicle is yet to be recovered. Two 11-year-old boys have been questioned over a deliberately-lit bushfire in Tasmania's north. The January 2 fire at George Town threatened lives and homes, and Tasmania Police says the boys will be dealt with under the Youth Justice Act. "It's clear that the boys did not mean to cause the damage that they did. While the fire was deliberately lit, they did try to put it out and did not mean for it to spread," Inspector Michael Johnston said in a statement on Tuesday. A Melbourne Christian school has amended its uniform policy after being found to have discriminated against a young Sikh boy because he wore a turban. The Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal in September found Melton Christian College discriminated against Sidhak, aged five at the time, whose parents wanted him to attend the school wearing a patka or children's turban. A joint statement by Sidhak's parents and the school says the uniform policy has been amended "to allow exceptions where genuine medical or religious grounds exist, such that Sidhak will be able to start at MCC in the beginning of the 2018 school year". A skyrocketing number of Australians are raiding their superannuation early to pay for medical bills including for weight loss surgery and IVF. In 2000-2001, $42 million of early super was released compared to $290 million in 2016-17. Four thousand Australians had applied for early release super on medical grounds in 2010-11 and that's grown to 15,000 in 2016-17. Acting federal treasurer Kelly O'Dwyer said the rules hadn't been changed for 20 years and the government was undertaking a review which will report back in early 2018. She said it was important to strike a balance between showing compassion and protecting retirement savings. "Of course, we want to make sure that people have access to their money where it is appropriate," Ms O'Dwyer told reporters in Melbourne on Tuesday. IVF and weight loss surgery were among the top reasons for people dipping into their super to pay for health bills. Australian Medical Association President Michael Gordon said Australia's superannuation system was never designed to be a safety net for the health system. Dr Gannon said the majority of bariatric surgery patients who dipped into their super had been told there were no public weight loss services or the waiting list to access them was two or three years. He said there are grossly inadequate bariatric services in Australian public hospitals. "Things like weight loss surgery, things like infertility are highly emotive, we're talking about vulnerable patients," he told reporters in Perth. "What we don't want is vulnerable patients being taken advantage of in a system and making financial decisions they might regret in the future." Consumers Health Forum chief executive Leanne Wells said actual medical fees far outstrip the benefits paid by Medicare and even when people have health insurance, they can still face gaps of thousands of dollars. "High out of pocket costs, running into thousands of dollars for many patients, are contributing to the widening gap of two-tiered medicine where access to medical treatment is dependent on your means rather than need," she said. Public submissions for the Treasury review into the early release of superannuation benefits close on February 12. The government is also separately reviewing out-of-pocket health care costs. The clean-up of debris, including charred animal carcasses, from a still smouldering abattoir east of Adelaide is set to begin after a massive fire. The Environment Protection Authority will coordinate the clean-up of the Thomas Foods International plant at Murray Bridge, after a blaze that caused millions of dollars of damage, with carcasses being moved to landfills on Tuesday. "It's now been assessed as safe to remove the carcasses, which were hanging in chiller storage rooms in the abattoir at the time of the fire," primary industries spokesman Mehdi Doroudi said. Rafael Nadal appears to have passed his Australian Open fitness test with flying colours despite losing his practice match at the Kooyong Classic. The world No.1 fell to veteran Frenchman Richard Gasquet 6-4 7-5 in their exhibition match in Melbourne on Tuesday but, more importantly, the Spaniard looked to be moving freely on his troublesome knee. "It was a good test for me and good practice," Nadal said. "I'm good and I am here so that's good news and my idea is just to keep practicing the next couple of days to be ready for the beginning of the Australian Open." It was Nadal's first match in almost three months and first since withdrawing from the ATP Tour Finals in mid-November after an opening three-set loss to David Goffin. He looked rusty with some erratic forehands but it was a big step forward as he targets a second Australian Open title. Kooyong officials hastily organised the practice match for Nadal after he withdrew from last week's Brisbane International saying he was underdone. Former champion Agnieszka Radwanska has ended Johanna Konta's Sydney International title defence with a straight-sets first-round win over the Brit. Unseeded Radwanska won 6-3 7-5 to book a second-round meeting with American qualifier Catherine Bellis. The defeat of world No.9 Konta follows the early eliminations of a raft of top seeds. Third-seeded French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko, fifth seed Kristina Mladenovic, sixth-seeded US Open winner Sloane Stephens and eighth seed Anastasija Sevastova have all crashed out in the first round. Konta had been playing her first match since retiring from her Brisbane International quarter-final last week with a hip complaint. But the Sydney-born star showed no signs of discomfort in her 1hr 48min centre-court workout. Canberra has declared it will match a 10-year $1.1 billion Northern Territory investment in remote housing but slammed Western Australia for having a "whinge" instead of similarly pledging funds. A separate $776 million commitment by the federal government to the National Partnership Agreement on Remote Housing (NPARH) has meanwhile been slashed to just $100 million and only for homes within the NT. WA Housing Minister Peter Tinley has accused the Turnbull government of turning its back on Aboriginal Australians, saying the cuts will leave South Australia, Queensland and WA with a funding shortfall of hundreds of millions of dollars. But Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion says the WA Labor government is just having "a bit of a whinge" and that the Commonwealth has only discussed the matter with the NT. "At least they've had the gumption to put money on the table," Senator Scullion said. "And we'll be matching that money, significant funds. They've put over $1.1 billion on the table and that's why we're having a conversation with the Northern Territory." Senator Scullion said the WA government hasn't pledged any cash so far. "Show me the money, as they say, West Australia," he said. "This is a shared responsibility." Senator Scullion said Canberra will insist any future investments under the NPARH agreement are tied to employment outcomes. Three men who have robbed NSW service stations armed with guns and a sword have been labelled by police as brazen, violent and unpredictable. Detectives have been searching for the trio for a week after they held up three service stations in Sydney's northwest. During the first incident at Kings Langley last Tuesday, a 42-year-old male employee suffered a cut to his forearm and a partially-severed right thumb which required surgery. The following night the group robbed another service station in nearby Toongabbie. The trio is also believed to be behind the robbery of a North Ryde service station on Monday night during which a 23-year-old male employee was threatened. On each occasion, the men stole cash and cigarettes before fleeing. Detective Acting Superintendent Gary Hutchen says the "brazen" thieves needed to be stopped. "They're quite violent and their behaviour is unpredictable, which makes them dangerous," he told reporters in Sydney. Police aren't sure how the men arrive and leave the service stations despite trawling through CCTV footage. But they believe the same group is responsible for all three crimes because of the similar locations, timing and method. "They have terrorised some of the victims, particularly the 42-year-old male," Act Supt Hutchen said. "He was fully complying with their demands and he received a significant injury." Parents on the federal government's remote work for the dole scheme will now be able to oversee their children's school attendance for welfare. In December Canberra scrapped a program that docks the welfare payments of parents whose kids skip class, stripping $30 million from the NT government over the next four years. At the time Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion slammed the School Enrolment and Attendance Measure (SEAM), which was part of the NT Intervention response, as a failure. But now he's announced that work for the dole participants will be able to meet their employment requirements by getting their kids to school in an effort to curb dismal attendance rates in remote communities. "There are elements of SEAM that will remain and they are the elements that work," Senator Scullion said. But the minister argues the long time lags between truancy offences and Centrelink sanctions will no longer apply. The coalition is revamping its Community Development Program, or work for the dole, which has had more than 350,000 participant compliance breaches in just two years. The controversial initiative forces 35,000 unemployed people in the bush - most of whom are indigenous - to work up to three times longer than city-based jobseekers to receive welfare. While visiting the Arnhem Land community of Gunbalanya, Senator Scullion expressed dismay that jobseekers were delivering municipal services - which shire councils are already funded to do - for very low wages. He said the program needs to employ people locally, instead of engaging fly-in fly-out workers who bring no long term benefit to the community. "Frankly I get pretty sad when I drive past the bloke mowing the lawn in Gunbalanya, and it's a whitefella," Senator Scullion said on Tuesday. Local CDP provider Tracey Beesley says her numbers have risen from eight jobseekers per day two years ago to at least 26, and recommends rewarding and incentivising instead of sanctioning for not showing up. "That's when our financial penalties started dropping and our attendance started going up," she said. Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion has condemned "price gouging" at remote community stores after a tin of baby formula was marked up more than three times its original value in the Torres Strait. A photo of a 900g tin of S-26 Gold Newborn formula selling for $85 at a shop on Thursday Island on Christmas Day has been shared widely on social media. The product usually retails on the mainland for about $20 and Senator Scullion says it's unacceptable businesses are "ripping off the poorest of the poor" by hiking the price of basic goods in the isolated region. "In communities where there is only one option, it is just simply not acceptable to have that sort of level of gouging," he said. Senator Scullion said freight is partly subsidised in outback Northern Territory shops and he vowed to "act within whatever capacity I can" in the far north Queensland area too. "They just need to be exposed ... named and shamed," he said. "It should be a signal to stores, you should not wait for the government to hold you to account." Australia has had its third hottest year on record. Queensland and NSW experienced their warmest years on record in 2017 as the trend of warmer than average temperatures across Australia continued, the Bureau of Meteorology says. "Despite the lack of an El Nino - which is normally associated with our hottest years - 2017 was still characterised by very warm temperatures," its head of climate monitoring Dr Karl Braganza said. The national mean temperature of 22.76C - or 0.95C above the long-term average - was the third highest since records began in 1910. Both day and night-time temperatures were warmer than average, with the maximum for the year the second highest on record. Prolonged high sea surface temperatures led to the first instance of back-to-back years of mass coral bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef. Dr Braganza said dry and cloud-free conditions across much of southeast Australia during June and July led to warm, sunny days and very chilly nights. After a wet start to 2017, the middle of the year was notably dry. June was the second-driest on record nationally and September the driest for the Murray-Darling Basin, Dr Braganza noted. He said there has been a gradual decline of about 10-20 per cent in rainfall during the cooler months of the year. Seven of Australia's 10 warmest years have occurred since 2015. Dr Braganza said 2017 is likely to have been among the three warmest years on record globally. "Australia has been looking at an increased frequency of heatwaves and other extremes that have been positively associated with climate change," he said. A Canadian pilot who died when his seaplane crashed into a river north of Sydney will be farewelled at a funeral service on Wednesday. Gareth Morgan, 44, died on New Year's Eve when the DHC-2 Beaver owned by Sydney Seaplanes crashed into Jerusalem Bay on the Hawkesbury River. His family arrived in Sydney last week and will on Wednesday gather with friends at Waverley's Jubilee Church to lay to rest the man they describe as a "wonderful and caring son and brother". Mr Morgan died along with high-profile UK businessman Richard Cousins, his adult sons Edward and William, his fiancee Emma Bowden and her 11-year-old daughter Heather, when the plane plunged into the water. Mr Morgan's family has thanked police and emergency services, along with several civilians who dived into the river after the crash and attempted to free the plane's occupants. Aviation experts are working to determine what caused the aircraft to crash. The accreditation of a NSW foster care provider is in jeopardy as a 40-year-old woman faces charges over the death of a toddler near Dubbo in 2015. The woman, who can't be named for legal reasons, was refused bail in Dubbo Local Court on Tuesday, a day after she was arrested over the death. The 20-month old boy was taken to hospital after emergency services were called to a Neilrex home, south of Coonabarabran, in March 2015. Police have said there were reports he was coughing and not breathing and now allege the woman killed the boy. NSW Minister for Family and Community Services Pru Goward said she was deeply saddened by the incident. "I have written to the NSW Children's Guardian requesting advice regarding the ongoing accreditation of Uniting Care Burnside," she said in a statement. "As there is now a matter before the court, I am unable to comment further." A Uniting Care spokeswoman said the organisation was also respectful of the judicial process. "Uniting extends its deepest sympathy to the family and shares a desire to achieve justice," they said in a statement. The woman is expected to appear in court again on March 14 via video link. A police search continues for three "violent and unpredictable" men who have used guns and a sword during a series of brazen robberies at Sydney service stations. The trio targeted three businesses in the city's northwest - on Tuesday and Wednesday last week and again on Monday night - and have left employees terrified. One 42-year-old worker who was threatened at Kings Langley suffered a partially severed thumb and a cut to his forearm despite complying with the bandits' demands for cash. The sword was used in the first two robberies along with two guns and on Monday night the offenders were armed with a knife and one gun. Detective Acting Superintendent Gary Hutchen has described the men as violent and unpredictable. "They have terrorised some of the victims, particularly the 42-year-old male," he said in Sydney on Tuesday. The owner of one of the service stations, Nick Patel, says his wife is urging him to sell the business and he now struggles to find staff to fill night shifts. Queensland police are continuing to hunt for up to four people after a man was shot through the closed front door of his Gold Coast home. The 44-year-old required surgery after he was shot in the left forearm about 4pm on Monday. Police believe three men and a woman arrived at the Carrara house in a small green car. One of the members of the group fired the gun through the door within seconds of arriving. They then climbed back into the car and drove away. A woman and child who were home at the time of the incident were not hurt. Detective Acting Senior Sergeant Nicola Brown said on Tuesday investigators hadn't established a motive but it appeared to be a targeted attack. "The actions of the offenders would suggest that their intention was to attend that particular address but, at this stage, there's no known connections between the victims and the offenders," she said. The day after same-sex couples were officially able to tie the knot in Australia, a review into whether there is adequate legal protection for religious freedom is getting underway. Former immigration minister Philip Ruddock and a panel which includes Australian Human Rights Commission President Rosalind Croucher have been tasked with reviewing the issue following the passage of same-sex marriage laws last year. The panel will meet in Sydney on Wednesday and must report back to the government by the end of March. I am ending 2017 and beginning 2018 like I have every New Years since 1962: hunting. I will never understand those who do not hunt. For me, it is a part of my very soul. For a species, homo sapiens, whose very survival for thousands of years depended on hunting only 6 percent of Americans hunt today. We have definitely lost touch with our roots. The good news for hunters is public support for hunting has not changed much for decades, having settled at the 80 percent mark. When asked if they wanted to end hunting only 4 percent say yes. The other interesting thing today is that 35 percent of hunters hunt for the meat. That number has more than doubled since 2006. At a time when there are grocery stores on every corner it is surprising that the meat has become so important. Per pound, game meat is among the most expensive when you add all the costs of hunting. The flip side is you would be hard pressed to find a healthier, leaner source of animal protein than game meat. The second most common reason people say they hunt is to spend quality time with family and friends. A high percentage of non-hunters have consumed game meat. I guess hunters like to share their success. Only 1 percent of hunters say they hunt for the trophy. That is a buzz word for the anti-hunting crowd but the truth is hunters are opportunists and with hunt success rates being so low, 75 percent of hunters go home empty-handed, most successful hunters take the first legal animal they find to fill that freezer. And, even for that 1 percent, it is illegal to not take all the meat home. So, trophy hunting really does not exist in the United States. The critical factor is the cost of wildlife management, and that includes all the animals we hunt and all those we do not hunt. Hunters pay for the management of the desert tortoise, the black-footed ferret, burrowing owls, and Gila monsters just as they do for deer, elk and mountain lions. When you consider Arizona has hundreds of species being managed to one degree or another that is a lot for so few people to pay for. I guess if there is one thing to wish for in 2018 it is that more people would support wildlife management. With our human population growing so fast, gobbling up so much wildlife habitat, wildlife management is more critical than ever. If you can, buy a hunting license. If you cant buy a waterfowl stamp or you can simply make a checkoff donation to wildlife management on your Arizona Tax Return. So many of us enjoy wildlife but so few of us pay for the opportunity to enjoy our wildlife. We just take it for granted that it will always be there and that is an assumption that is being challenged on a daily basis. Rising star Adam Rennie is earning critical acclaim after taking on the lead role in the Rocky Horror Show, vacated by Craig McLachlan amid allegations of sexually inappropriate behaviour. Rennie took to the Adelaide Festival Centre stage on Tuesday night for the first performance since McLachlan agreed to leave the show. Three cast members from the 2014 production of the popular musical have told a Fairfax Media/ABC investigation that the 52-year-old inappropriately touched them or exposed himself. A woman and a man who worked as part of the crew have also gone to Victorian police who are investigating the allegations. McLachlan has denied any wrongdoing and the show's producers say they first learned the details of the allegations in media reports this week. But they have promised to cooperate fully with authorities and conduct an internal investigation. Heading into Tuesday's night's show, fans had mixed views on whether or not he should have withdrawn. But critics praised Rennie's work, the Adelaide Advertiser describing it as a triumph. Audience members also took to Twitter describing him as "incredible" and "genuine and hilarious". The allegations against McLachlan come from actresses Erika Heynatz, Christie Whelan Browne and Angela Scundi. Whelan Browne said McLachlan, who played transvestite Frank N Furter to her character Janet, indecently assaulted her on stage during a sex scene. Scundi alleged McLachlan kissed her passionately onstage even after she had asked that it not be done. The two women have also rejected suggestions the producers weren't told of McLachlan's behaviour. "There were two people in management that I spoke to directly and I can't imagine that they could look me in the face and say that those conversations never happened," Scundi told the 7.30 Report. Whelan Browne said she spoke to the managing director of the production company, John Frost. "I went to John, which he says he doesn't recall, another cast member also spoke to him that day. So, that's two people who spoke to him and if he doesn't recall it, we do," she said. McLachlan has described all the allegations as "baseless". "They seem to be simple inventions, perhaps made for financial reasons, perhaps to gain notoriety," he was quoted as writing. Researchers have shed new light on how muscles "talk" to other parts of the body during exercise, explaining why being active is good for you, from head to toe, and especially for your liver. Australian scientists have exposed new secrets about a kind of "postal system" that muscles use to communicate with other parts of the body, including vital organs. Their findings offer hope to people with an increasingly common form of liver disease that can lead to cancer, and for which there is currently no treatment. Professor Mark Febbraio, from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research, says human muscles have been found to dispatch messages to other parts of the body by releasing protein-packed "packages" called vesicles. These packages appear to carry important messages that tell organs to respond differently during exercise. In the case of the liver, many more of these packages arrive during exercise, delivering a family of enzymes that allow the organ to break down and metabolise sugar rather than store it as fat. The findings have Prof Febbraio excited for sufferers of fatty liver disease who can go on to develop cancer. "Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or NASH, is a tsunami of disease at the moment, and it's very insidious because we know NASH can lead to cirrhosis, which can lead to cancer," Prof Febbraio says. "Liver cancer is going up and one of the major contributers to the increase is obesity and fatty liver. What our paper suggests is that if you have fatty liver disease, exercise is a treatment for that disease." The findings could one day have implications for other forms of disease too. "They don't just go to the liver, and we know from the evidence that exercise has a beneficial effect when it comes to other diseases, such as degenerative brain disease, depressive illnesses, and certain forms of cancer," Prof Febbraio says. He and study co-leader Dr Martin Whitham and colleagues from the University of Sydney and the University of Copenhagen are already planning more research on the body's postal delivery system and how it might be harnessed to fight disease. They intend to carry out a study to tag, transfer and track protein packages in animals, to determine if beneficial ones can be transplanted. "For example, in Alzheimer's disease, we know there are certain proteins that are dysfunctional," he said. "If you had a mechanism of replacing those, by transfer, that's not outside the realms - that this is potentially a therapeutic strategy to treat some of these diseases." The research has been published in the latest edition of the journal Cell Metabolism. Two men have been charged after a NSW probe into online child exploitation. A 40-year-old man from the Northern Rivers area was arrested on Tuesday at and later charged with using a carriage service to procure a person under 16-years-old for sexual activity. He was refused bail and will appear at Lismore Local Court on Wednesday. A 31-year-old man was also arrested at a business at Alstonville on Monday. He was charged with using a carriage service to groom a person under 16-years-old for sexual activity. He was granted strict conditional bail and is due to appear at Lismore Local Court on February 5. Power has been restored to thousands of homes in Sydney and the state's Illawarra region after a severe electrical storm descended on the regions. Emergency crews worked through the night to restore power to the more than 10,000 homes affected by the summer storms, with only 120 people remaining without power on Wednesday morning, an Endeavour Energy spokeswoman told AAP. The storm system delivered another impressive lightning show and significant rain in Sydney's eastern suburbs on Tuesday night, but had made its way north by Wednesday morning. The NSW SES received a total of 385 calls for help across the state - 136 of them for the Sydney metro area. The Bureau of Meteorology on Wednesday said the system would hit regions on the state's mid-north coast and Northern Tablelands. "We are expecting it to become more widespread through the afternoon," he told AAP on Wednesday. An Irukandji jellyfish has been caught on the western side of Queensland's Fraser Island, prompting a warning for swimmers to stay out of the water to avoid deadly stings. The highly venomous jellyfish was found in a stinger drag by Surf Life Saving Queensland on Sunday and sent to jellyfish expert Professor Jamie Seymour who confirmed it as an Irukandji. "We're urging everyone to stay out of the water entirely on that western side of the island while conditions are hot and humid," Surf Life Saving Queensland regional manager Craig Holden said. The jockeying for disgraced former Labor senator Sam Dastyari's upper house seat continues with a union calling for fresh blood instead of former NSW Premier Kristina Keneally. Ms Keneally is yet to show her hand after her unsuccessful tilt at last year's by-election for the Sydney seat of Bennelong. Labor frontbencher Mark Butler said it was a matter for Ms Keneally. "I'd like to see her in the federal parliament," he told ABC Radio, adding she had an enormous capacity to contribute. NSW Health Services Union secretary Gerard Hayes is keen for fresh blood rather than Ms Keneally, The Australian reports. Transport Workers Union National Secretary Tony Sheldon is also expected to put his hand up. Mr Dastyari announced he was quitting politics late last year amid scrutiny of his dealings with a Chinese businessman and political donor. Victoria is ditching the national mobile black spot program because of "a complete lack of transparency" from the federal government. The Andrews Labor government will use the $11 million it planned to invest in the third round of the Commonwealth Mobile Black Spot Programme to build new mobile towers in regional Victoria. "The decision to leave the federal government's program is due to the commonwealth failing to properly consult when choosing sites and a complete lack of transparency about how sites are chosen," Innovation Minister Philip Dalidakis said in a statement on Wednesday. Angered by the publication of a bombshell book that raised doubts over his mental faculties, Trump took to Twitter this weekend to describe himself as "a very stable genius," and "like, really smart" Donald Trump's scheduled medical exam this week won't include a psychiatric evaluation, the White House said Monday as questions mount over the US president's mental fitness. Responding to queries on the subject, spokesman Hogan Gidley said simply: "No." "He's sharp as a tack," Gidley told reporters on board Air Force One. Trump, 71, will be examined at the Walter Reed military hospital in a Washington suburb Friday and the results are set to be made public. During the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump published a letter by his long term doctor Harold Bornstein that stated he was in "excellent physical health." Bornstein had previously written about Trump's health in glowing terms, stating in 2015 he would be "the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency." Angered by the publication of a bombshell book that raised doubts over his mental faculties, Trump took to Twitter this weekend to describe himself as "a very stable genius" and "like, really smart." Tonga's Prime Minister Akilisi Pohiva (R), pictured in September 2017, was admitted to Vaiola Hospital when he became ill Tonga's recently re-appointed Prime Minister Akilisi Pohiva was said to be in a stable condition in an intensive care unit Tuesday recovering from an undisclosed illness. Pohiva was admitted to Vaiola Hospital when he became ill last week and was transferred to the intensive care unit when his condition worsened on Sunday, medical authorities said. A medical evacuation to New Zealand was planned but later cancelled. Vaiola physician Sione Latu said the 76-year-old fell ill last week and was now responding to treatment. The Prime Minister's Office has not issued any statement about his condition, however the Kaniva Tonga website quoted his daughter Ana Pohiva Koli as saying he was "comfortable and fine". Pohiva was only returned to power for a second term three weeks ago, just months after the Pacific island's king effectively sacked him by dissolving parliament and calling a snap election. But while the prime minister's position has now been filled following the November 16 polls, the prime minister's office has been unable to reveal what is happening with nominations for cabinet. The king never explained why he dissolved parliament, although media reports said there were concerns the government had acted unconstitutionally by signing international agreements without the monarch's approval. Hyundai vice chairman Eui Sun Chung (R) and Aurora Innovation founder Chris Urmson present the Nexo, a hydrogen fuel-cell powered vehicle, at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas Hyundai unveiled Monday a hydrogen fuel-cell powered vehicle aimed at showcasing its newest technologies, bucking the all-electric trend of most rival automakers. The South Korean manufacturer used the 201 Consumer Electronics Show to debut its Nexo, a sport utility vehicle that uses voice commands, artificial intelligence and can be transformed into an autonomous car. "We call this the next future utility vehicles," said Hyundai vice president Ki-Sang Lee. Hyundai said it plans to sell the Nexo in California later this year, in a bet on hydrogen even as many rivals turn to battery power. The company said it resolved a number of issues in developing the Nexo, including starts in extreme cold weather and extending the range to nearly 600 kilometers (375 miles). While a handful of companies have showcased fuel cell technology, obstacles include the lack of hydrogen stations and a low ratio of energy efficiency in producing fuel. "We all understand that technological challenges and innovations are a never-ending process that will continue until we realize a mobile society of maximum convenience, zero accidents and no emissions," vice chairman Woong-chul Yang. To promote its efforts in self-driving technology, Hyundai has formed a partnership with Silicon Valley startup Aurora Innovation, headed by former Google car executive Chris Urmson, who appeared at the media event. A South Korean soldier stands guard outside a pavillion spanning the military demarcation line at the truce village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between North and South Korea Among a row of sky-blue huts straddling the border between North and South Korea, soldiers from both sides face off against each other on the world's last Cold War frontier. Panmunjom in the Demilitarised Zone, where officials from North and South Korea met Tuesday, is a traditional point of contact on the border but also a physical representation of the 1950-53 Korean War's enduring effects. Millions of Koreans died in the conflict, with the armistice signed at Panmunjom leaving the peninsula divided and the two Koreas technically still at war in the absence of a formal peace treaty. Despite its name, the DMZ separating the two Koreas is one of the world's most heavily fortified frontiers, brimming with minefields and watchtowers. Panmunjom is the only place in the DMZ where the two sides come face to face, with the border marked only by a low concrete divider. The Korean peninsula It has witnessed a number of dramatic incidents. Most recently, a North Korean soldier dashed across the border in an extremely rare and dramatic defection in November, when his comrades fired at least 40 rounds in an effort to kill him. There have been previous defections at Panmunjom, most notably in 1984 when a Russian student from Moscow sprinted across the border and triggered a 30-minute gun battle that left four people dead -- although he was unhurt. Another gun battle was recorded in 1967 when a senior journalist from the North's state-run Korean Central News Agency defected while covering military talks. And there were fears of a full-scale conflict in 1976, after a group of North Korean troops axed to death two American soldiers who were trimming a nearby tree. - Direct line - US presidents visiting South Korea have often gone to DMZ as a symbolic demonstration of Washington's commitment to defend Seoul. North Korean soldiers look at the South side at the truce village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) on the border between North and South Korea But bad weather forced Donald Trump to call off a surprise trip there in November -- after his office earlier labelled such visits a "cliche". North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un made a rare trip to Panmunjom in 2012, with state media carrying pictures of him looking across the border at the South through a pair of binoculars amid heightened tensions. Over the years, the site has turned into a major attraction for visiting foreigners. Tourists to the southern side are given ample warning against actions that could antagonise the North Korean soldiers before they cautiously begin capturing snapshots of the division. A man walks past a military fence covered with ribbons calling for peace and reunification at the Imjingak peace park near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the two Koreas at the border city of Paju "It's very upsetting that a country is so divided," said Julia Ahn, a 24-year-old student from New York, on a trip to Panmunjom. "It's good information but very hard to swallow." Tuesday's discussions, the first between the Koreas in more than two years, were being held at the Peace House, on the southern side of the neutral area -- the North also has a talks venue on its side, Tongilgak. North and South are so deeply divided that there are no direct telephone communications between them for ordinary citizens -- but both buildings are connected to Seoul and Pyongyang so the discussions can be closely monitored by officials in the two capitals. Iraqi schoolchildren pose in a classroom in the battered city of Mosul on December 27, 2017 On a classroom whiteboard in the battered city of Mosul the words "rediscovering how to smile" outline the heartbreaking task of Iraqi teachers striving to heal their students' mental scars after brutal Islamic State group rule. Dozens of Iraqi teachers -- many battling trauma themselves -- have gathered at a university, where instructor Nazem Shaker seeks to guide them in helping children still struggling to cope months after IS was driven from the devastated city. Shaker has drawn a "problem tree" on the board whose roots are a litany of anguish: "relatives killed", "witnessing beheadings", "destruction" and "poverty". Iraqi children clamber over rubble as they head to school in Mosul on December 27, 2017 He hopes that through a programme of games, mime and sport, teachers will be better able to help students reach the goals outlined in the top branches of his diagram, where "hope" and "optimism" join the aspiration to smile again. "How to live together and eradicate violence," he says are key lessons that have to be passed on. The teachers must help show students how to reconstruct their lives and escape the stress, pressures and bad memories that haunt them, he adds. - 'Executions, deaths, explosions' - It is not just the years of IS rule that haunt the waking lives and sleeping hours of the children in Iraq's second city. The ferocious nine months of urban combat that saw Iraqi troops force out the jihadists in July with the help of airstrikes by a US-led coalition have left deep marks -- both physical and mental. A class on how best to handle students suffering from trauma, held at a university in the battered city of Mosul on December 27, 2017 School headmaster Noamat Sultan encounters the destructive impact of the psychological trauma daily. "One of our students was very aggressive and kept on picking fights with his classmates," he tells AFP. "We had a long discussion with him and discovered that his father and brother had been killed recently in an explosion." With the help of the boy's older brother and more attention from teachers, he has gradually been coaxed back to himself. "We have already managed to convince him not to drop out of school," said father-of-eight Sultan. Physical education teacher Rasha Ryadh has seen the heavy toll from the "psychological pressures caused by seeing executions, deaths, explosions and the loss of loved ones", but is sure the students can recover. "They are ready to respond positively to the rehabilitation programmes because they want to banish the thoughts and memories that drag them back to the period of Islamic State group rule," she says. Such is the case for 12-year-old schoolboy Ahmed Mahmud, who despite his youth says he is "exhausted" by everything he has seen. "When I sit down in class I don't have the will to study," Mahmud says. "I think back to the time of IS and I remember those who were executed like my uncle. They threw people off buildings and forced us to watch." - 'Didn't say a word' - The 900 students at head teacher Sultan's school are able to study in just half of the building after fighting reduced the rest to rubble. The few remaining classrooms are seriously overcrowded, and benches meant for two pupils often have five or more crammed on them. Twelve-year-old Osama is not yet among them. Iraqi teachers in Mosul, some of whom are themselves traumatised, are being taught how best to handle pupils still struggling to cope He is still reeling from seeing an air strike send most of the other houses in his street crashing down on top of his neighbours. "For weeks he didn't say a word," says his mother Umm Osama. The boy still needs help to dress, wash and eat, and often seems lost inside himself. "Sometimes without warning he'd leave the house and just wander around aimlessly for hours," his mother says. "Several times it was hard to find him." Martin Guptill blasted 55 off 31 balls after the rain break to be unbeaten on 86 as New Zealand took an eight-wicket win over Pakistan in a rain-shortened second ODI in Nelson Martin Guptill was at his belligerent best as New Zealand thrashed Pakistan by eight wickets in Nelson on Tuesday, although captain Kane Williamson admitted a rain delay had done the hosts a favour. The second one-day international was evenly poised when rain forced the players from the field for more than two hours with New Zealand 64 for two after 14 overs in reply to Pakistan's 246 for nine. When play resumed under the Duckworth-Lewis system New Zealand's target was revised to 151 in 25 overs meaning they had 11 overs left to make 87. "Pakistan showed some real resistance at the end and put some partnerships together which would have been a tricky total on that surface," Williamson said, adding the rain break "worked in our favour a little bit". But the New Zealand skipper also hailed the "brilliant" partnership involving Guptill and Ross Taylor to get New Zealand home with seven balls to spare. Pakistan's Mohammad Hafeez hit a solid 60, the 33rd ODI half-century for the veteran right-hander as he held the first half of the innings together against New Zealand Guptill, 31 off 40 at the break, was 86 not out off 71 deliveries at the end. Taylor advanced from 14 in as many balls to 45 off 43. "For Martin and Ross to come out after that rain break... and play so beautifully and to see Martin play with freedom at his best was great to watch," Williamson said. "And (with) Ross a calming influence at the other end... it was a brilliant partnership to get us across the line." It left Pakistan winless after two rain-affected matches in New Zealand with both decided under the Duckworth-Lewis method. "We are very disappointed with our batting," said captain Sarfraz Ahmed. "The first 10 overs is very important and we lost too many wickets in the first 10 overs. "Our batting is not performing well but later on our lower order batted really well." After Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat Mohammad Hafeez (60) held the first half of the innings together as Pakistan struggled to 141 for seven in the 37th over before Shadab Khan (52) and Hasan Ali (51) struck out with a 70-run partnership for the eighth wicket. Pakistan still harboured hopes of levelling the series when they made early inroads into the New Zealand innings claiming Colin Munro for duck and Williamson for 19 to have New Zealand at 47 for two in the 10th over. However, the momentum changed when Taylor joined Guptill in the middle. New Zealand now lead the five-match series 2-0 ahead of game three in Dunedin on Saturday. The statue will pass through the streets of old Manila, a journey that usually takes 20 hours or more A sea of heaving, towel-waving humanity swarmed a black statue of a cross-bearing Jesus Christ in the Philippine capital Tuesday as the Catholic faithful joined one of the nation's largest religious festivals. In a frenzied display of religious fervour, men, women and children climbed over heads and shoulders and flung themselves at the centuries-old Black Nazarene that they say performs miracles. Devotees pulled on stout ropes to move the carriage forward as the procession drew more than half a million people wearing maroon and yellow shirts and waving towels while chanting "Viva" ("Long live"), Manila police said. The statue was passing through streets of old Manila lined with bystanders on Tuesday afternoon en route to its home in the Quiapo church in a lengthy parade that usually takes 20 hours or more. The Black Nazarene was brought to Manila by missionaries in 1606 and is believed to have survived disasters and calamities "It is really tough climbing to get to the Nazarene. I get squished, and people step on my face. But I have a devotion," Honey Pescante, a 24-year-old housewife from Bataan province, told AFP. The Philippines is Asia's Catholic bastion with a flock of more than 80 million. Spain colonised the archipelago in the 16th century and spread the faith. The wooden Black Nazarene was brought to Manila by missionaries in 1606 and is believed to have survived calamities. A devotee for 30 years, 61-year-old Julio Castillo watched from the sidelines of the procession Tuesday after both his feet were fractured in a motorcycle accident last month, leaving him in a wheelchair. - 'Test of faith' - Pilgrims risk life and limb to touch the icon with towels believing the Black Nazarene has miraculous powers that will be transferred to the cloth "I came here because this is my devotion. I hope my family will have good health and a prosperous life, that we will have no illness and I will heal," he said. More than 700 people were injured in Tuesday's procession, one of them with a suspected cracked spine in a fall while attempting to climb onto the carriage, the Philippine Red Cross said. Pilgrims risk life and limb to touch the icon with towels believing the Black Nazarene has miraculous powers that will be transferred to the cloth. In 2016, two participants were killed. The near-suicidal displays of devotion have drawn frequent criticism in the Philippines, with some saying it resembles pagan worship. The vast religious procession winds its way through Manila But sociologists say many devotees regard the event as a test of faith. "Filipino Catholicism follows the belief that the presence of a higher being can only be made real through the body and via the material," Maria Yohana Frias, an ethnology researcher at the National Museum of the Philippines, told AFP. "Enduring a challenging procession where devotees walk barefoot is also seen as a test of faith for some." This year's procession came as the Catholic church voiced criticism to the killing of thousands of people under President Rodrigo Duterte's drug war. Nearly 4,000 suspects have been killed by security forces less than two years into Duterte's rule, according to government figures, while thousands more have died under mysterious circumstances. However, surveys have shown popular support for the drug war despite criticism from rights groups. Yangon's streets have transformed from sedate thoroughfares to car-choked arteries in just a few years Surrounded by a trove of tools and spare parts, trishaw maker Aye Zaw works on his latest model of the pedal-powered three-wheeler, readying it for the clogged roads of Myanmar's biggest city. Undeterred by the rapid transformation of Yangon's streets from sedate thoroughfares to car-choked arteries in just a few years, the 46-year-old revels in defying the changing times with his traditional form of transport. "I love the work very much," the craftsman tells AFP from a workshop bursting with wheel rims, springs, piping and tools. "I am always finding ways to make trishaws better and better." He joined the family business aged 16, learning the trade from his father, and now works with his younger brother, Htay Zaw, to make around seven trishaws every month. Trishaws cost upwards of around several hundred dollars The cheapest model costs 430,000 kyats ($315) but customers who pay a little more can opt for a flashier version with steel trimmings. The brothers' reputation has even spread outside of Myanmar, with one creation snapped up by an American tourist and another by an Israeli embassy official leaving the country. But Yangon's streets are unrecognisable from a few years ago. Myanmar has seen an explosion in vehicle numbers since a military-backed government launched reforms in 2011 that opened the country to the outside world after decades of isolation. Car import rules were relaxed and traffic now moves infuriatingly slowly. Myanmar has tried to improve the congestion by overhauling the bus system, building flyovers, upgrading a circular railway line, and most recently, introducing water taxis. But the streets remain jammed. Sixty-year-old Aung Ba is one of the city's 25,000 licensed trishaw drivers and has been pedalling Yangon's streets for 30 years, earning about 10,000 kyat ($7.5) each day. Some 25,000 trishaw riders are licensed to ply their trade in Yangon, battling through the city's congested streets The busier roads are more dangerous, but Aung Ba says there is still a place for the three-wheelers. "It wouldn't be good to drive a car. But riding a trishaw, I can find my way through as I want," he says sitting beside his vehicle in the city's northern Mayangon Township. Aye Zaw is also confident the iconic vehicle will not disappear from Yangon's streets just yet and would be happy for his son to take over the business. "I don't want to force my son into making or not making trishaws," he says. "But if he loves the trade then of course he should do it." Indian environmentalist Kamal Meattle ignored doctors' advice to move away from the polluted capital Delhi for his health and instead created a greenhouse at his office Political apathy over the poisonous smog choking India's capital has led many like businessman Kamal Meattle to take matters into their own hands, with an office building he says pumps air as fresh as from the Swiss Alps. From the outside, the Paharpur Business Centre looks like any modern office block. But inside it is a virtual jungle where rooms and corridors are lined with more than 7,000 potted plants and creepers. The greenhouse terrace, with artificial grass and green walls, houses an "air washing" system that moves polluted outside air through a series of cleaning filters. It is then pushed through the greenhouse where the plants remove bacteria, fungus, carbon dioxide and other toxins, before the air conditioning pumps it to workers on the floors below. "It would be like working in Gulmarg in Kashmir or Davos in Switzerland in this building," 73-year-old Meattle told AFP as he looked out at the smog from the protection of the lush rooftop nursery. "You are actually right now sitting in an air tank," he said, referring to the greenhouse where PM2.5 -- the most harmful particulates in the air -- registered nearly zero compared with 415 outside, according to Paharpur's monitoring system. The outside level is more than 16 times the World Health Organization's safe limit. - 'I wanted a solution' - A Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate and trustee of Al Gore's Climate Reality Project, Meattle began thinking about a clean office project years ago when he rejected doctors' advice to move away from the polluted capital for his health. "I wanted a solution for myself and I didn't want to leave Delhi," he said. His centre, whose tenants include Amazon, Samsung and Microsoft, is now rated the city's healthiest building by the Indian government, and Meattle says people who work there benefit from improved blood oxygen levels, better brain function, and fewer asthma and eye irritation cases. Delhi chokes every winter as cool air traps a toxic blend of pollutants from crop burning, car exhausts, open fires, construction dust and industrial emissions close to the ground Delhi chokes every winter as cool air traps a toxic blend of pollutants from crop burning, car exhausts, open fires, construction dust and industrial emissions close to the ground. The annual scourge has been particularly bad this season, and short-term measures -- such as shutting factories and restricting car use -- have failed to have a significant impact. In November, doctors declared a public health emergency and schools were shut across the capital. Fumes from backup generators are a central ingredient in the noxious cocktail, but one company is turning them into ink and paint with technology that can capture up to 90 percent of dangerous pollutants. Chakr Innovations, started by graduates from the Indian Institute of Technology, has capitalised on the smoke-belching machines that can be heard across the city. - Black is the new green - Its Chakr Shield is fitted to generators and converts carbon and other fine particles, including the most harmful PM0.3 and PM2.5 specks, into liquified soot through chemical and heat-exchanging processes. The captured carbon is washed down with a solvent and processed into ink pigment and paints. "What would have otherwise been a waste is captured and reborn to be used as a raw material again," said co-founder Arpit Dhupar, donning a t-shirt that says "black is the new green". Dhupar was inspired by seeing a diesel generator that was running a roadside sugarcane juice stall and turning the wall behind it black in the process. Chakr co-founder Arpit Dhupar stands near a device in Delhi that can be fitted to diesel generators to capture particulates and turn the pollutants into ink Chakr has fitted machines at more than 18 Delhi offices, and 30 other companies have signed up for the technology, including US giant Dell Computers, which will be using Chakr's ink for printing on its cardboard boxes. Dhupar said that in 18 months, the machines had collected enough carbon to pollute about 1.5 billion litres of air. "We are running out of clean, breathable air in Delhi and our definitive objective is to make the access to clean air a basic right for everyone," he said. Others want to ensure that right extends to animals, including the high-performance ponies that compete on Delhi's thriving polo circuit. The Army Polo and Riding Club recently ruled that horses used by the Delhi Army polo team must be allowed twice as many breaks to alleviate the physical stress of playing matches in toxic conditions. "By sheer logic and the levels of pollution that were there in Delhi we thought that it may cause a problem. The longer the pony plays, the exhaustion is that much higher," said the club's chief executive, Colonel Ravi Rathore. Cliven Bundy, seen here in Utah in 2016, as well as four others including his sons Ryan and Ammon Bundy, were charged with six federal offenses for their confrontation with federal agents in 2014 in Nevada Cliven Bundy, leader of a group of armed protesters who led a 2014 confrontation with federal authorities over cattle-grazing fees, was released Monday after a judge declared a mistrial. His attorney Bret Whipple said Bundy walked free at 11:00 am (1900 GMT) after the prosecution had withheld evidence that might have helped the defendants. Bundy and four others, including his sons Ryan and Ammon Bundy, were charged with six federal offenses for their confrontation with federal agents in 2014 in Nevada. Judge Gloria Navarro had declared a mistrial in the case, held in Las Vegas, in December. Bundy's dispute with authorities had been festering for 20 years before the confrontation. The government demanded that he pay a million dollars for having illegally used federal land for cattle grazing, which was rejected by the rancher, who claimed that his family had owned that land since the end of the 19th century. He became an icon for the anti-government rightwing after engaging in an armed standoff with government agents who attempted to confiscate his cattle. Bundy was also arrested in February 2016 for helping his sons carry out a 41-day siege that once again put the spotlight on a long-running dispute over millions of acres of western public land. The Oregon takeover ended with the dramatic surrender of four holdouts, including one who threatened to commit suicide in a phone call with mediators that was streamed live. The question of land rights has been a thorny issue for decades in western US states, where the federal government owns most of the land. Many conservative politicians and ranchers like the Bundys argue that the land has been mismanaged and should be handed over to states or turned into private property. A heat-stricken bat in Sydney. Hundreds of the animals have died in sweltering conditions in Australia, with many dropping from their perch as the scorching temperatures 'fried their brains' Hundreds of bats have died in sweltering conditions in Australia, with many dropping from their perches as the scorching temperatures "fried their brains", wildlife officials said Tuesday. A record-breaking heatwave saw the mercury rise to 45 Celsius (113 Fahrenheit) in Sydney's western suburb of Campbelltown on Sunday where hundreds, if not thousands, of the animals fell from trees after succumbing to the heat. "They basically boil," Campbelltown flying fox colony manager Kate Ryan told the local Camden Advertiser. "It affects their brain -- their brain just fries and they become incoherent. It would be like standing in the middle of a sandpit with no shade." The flying fox, Australia's largest bat, is listed as a "vulnerable" species nationally with its survival ranked as a "critical priority" under local laws. Sydney recorded its hottest day since 1939 on Sunday when the suburb of Penrith reached 47.3 Celsius. Rescuers were able to save the lives of more than a hundred bats, but many scattered across the ground perished and others died still clinging to trees New South Wales Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service (WIRES) said the loss of bats to the brutal conditions could run into the thousands. Rescuers were able to save the lives of more than a hundred of the animals, but many scattered across the ground perished and others died still clinging to trees. "In extremely trying conditions volunteers worked tirelessly to provide subcutaneous fluids to the pups that could be reached and many lives were saved but sadly many were lost too," WIRES said on Facebook. Rafael Nadal said his knee held up "fine" during his lose to Richard Gasquet at the Kooyong Classic tournament in Melbourne World number one Rafael Nadal lost his first match of the year 6-4, 7-5 to Richard Gasquet at the Kooyong Classic on Tuesday, but said he was happy after his troublesome knee held up "fine". Nadal's knee injury hampered the end of his 2017 season and forced him to skip last week's Brisbane International, but he was able to give it a workout at the non-tour event in Melbourne. Though he lost in straight sets, the Spaniard said he would keep working hard until the start of the Australian Open at Melbourne Park on Monday. "I"m very happy to be back in Australia," he said. "I had a heavy year in 2017 and I started my preparation later than usual. "But I've arrived in plenty of time. It's great to get the feeling once again of playing a match. "This was a good test for me after some good training, that's the most important thing." The 16-time Grand Slam winner was far from his best in the exhibition encounter against a player he has beaten 15-0 on the ATP Tour in a rivalry dating back to junior days. Nadal, 31, heads the entry list for the Australian Open and said he will be ready to front up for the first round. "The knee is fine," he said in answer to the inevitable question. "I'm here. "If I was not feeling good I would not be here, so that's good news. "I'll train hard over the next few days for the Australian Open, I will be ready." - 'Best in history' - Nadal is not playing any more matches at Kooyong, but he is also scheduled to turn out for a Tie Break Tens tournament at Melbourne Park on Wednesday evening. Gasquet, who missed Kooyong last year through illness and injury, was happy to get even an informal win over the Spaniard. Richard Gasquet, who missed Kooyong last year through illness and injury, was happy to get even an informal win over Rafael Nadal "It's always a pleasure to play Rafa -- I hope to beat him one day on the ATP before retiring. He's a friend of mine and it's great to play him," he said. "I'm happy with how I'm playing after a test against Rafa, who along with Federer is the best in history." Gasquet took the opening set, relying on a single break for 5-4 before serving it out against an opponent still trying to shake off the rust of inactivity. The Frenchman found himself in more of a battle in the second set despite going up a double break for 3-0. The deficit barely bothered Nadal, who showed some of his classic form in closing the gap to 3-3. Gasquet forced Nadal to save break points throughout as the pair stayed level-pegging. But the Frenchman finally broke for 6-5 and claimed victory with a smash winner on his first match point a game later. Separately, Spain's Pablo Carreno Busta defeated Belgian world number seven David Goffin 1-6, 7-6 (7/4), 6-3. In the women's competition, Germany's Andrea Petkovic rallied to defeat Australian teenager Destanee Aiava 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 in windy conditions. The oil was allegedly stolen from Shell's Pulau Bukom industrial site in western Singapore, which the Anglo-Dutch energy giant describes as one of its most important production sites in the world Singaporean authorities have arrested 17 men for allegedly stealing fuel from a major Shell refinery, and seized an oil tanker and millions of dollars in cash, police said. The suspects, aged between 30 and 63, were detained in raids across Singapore on Sunday after the Anglo-Dutch energy giant first alerted police in August. Several of the suspects were Shell employees. A total of Sg$3.05 million ($2.3 million) in cash was recovered along with a 12,000-tonne tanker, which police believe was where the stolen oil was being transferred. The suspects' bank accounts have also been frozen, police added. Authorities charged 11 of the men in court on Tuesday, including eight Singaporean employees of Shell and two Vietnamese men -- a crew member and the captain from the oil tanker Prime South. The 11th suspect was a Singaporean who did not work for Shell. The other six are still under investigation. The oil was allegedly stolen from the Pulau Bukom industrial site in western Singapore, which Shell describes as one of its most important production centres in the world. The fuel was taken on at least three occasions, according to court documents seen by AFP. On November 21, five Shell employees were alleged to have taken fuel worth nearly Sg$1.28 million. Meanwhile, a further three Shell employees were alleged to have taken Sg$438,000 worth of fuel on January 5. On Sunday, four of the Shell workers together with a fifth man not employed by the oil giant, were alleged to have stolen fuel worth Sg$688,000. The two Vietnamese crew of the Prime South have been charged with "dishonestly receiving stolen property". No plea was taken and the men will appear in court again later this month. Shell confirmed that eight of the men were "former or current" employees, adding that the company contacted the police last August after an internal investigation. In a statement late Monday, Shell said the company anticipates a "short delay in the supply operations at Bukom, but at this point we expect to continue to meet our contractual supply obligations to customers". Singapore is one of the world's largest oil trading hubs with huge quantities of crude from the Middle East passing through the city-state before going on to East Asia, and several oil majors have local refineries. Seoul's foreign minister Kang Kyung-wha said it was an "undeniable fact" that both governments had formally endorsed the comfort women deal, adding Seoul would not try to renegotiate it South Korea will not seek to renegotiate a deal with Japan on wartime sex slavery, it said Tuesday, despite new President Moon Jae-In saying on the campaign trail he "could not accept" the agreement. The issue of women forced into sexual slavery for Japanese troops during World War II is a hugely emotional one that has long marred ties between the South and its former colonial ruler. Ousted president Park Geun-Hye sought to end the decades-long row with a 2015 agreement that included a Japanese apology and payment of one billion yen ($8.8 million) to survivors. But under the deal, Japan did not admit legal responsibility for the abuses, drawing anger from some survivors who refused to take the money. Ties between the two neighbours -- both of them US allies threatened by nuclear-armed North Korea -- remain tense over statues placed outside Japanese diplomatic missions by South Korean activists in memory of the victims. Last month, Moon slammed the agreement as "seriously flawed" and told officials to re-examine it. But now Seoul's foreign minister Kang Kyung-Wha has said it was an "undeniable fact" that both governments had formally endorsed it. "Considering that, our government will not demand renegotiation of the deal," Kang told reporters Tuesday. But Seoul will not use any more of Tokyo's money for the survivors, replacing the funds from its own budget, Kang said, urging Tokyo to offer a "voluntary and sincere apology". The financial move seeks to take the moral high ground and avoid perceptions that Tokyo has settled the issue by way of reparations. Japan has urged South Korea to stick with the 2015 deal, saying any attempt by Seoul to revise it "cannot be acceptable whatsoever" and would leave bilateral ties "unmanageable". Tokyo's foreign minister Taro Kono renewed a call for Seoul to "firmly implement the agreement as a final and irreversible one", after Kang's remarks on Tuesday. "Amid efforts to address threats from North Korea, this agreement should be a crucial foundation for cooperation between Japan and South Korea... for building a forward-looking bilateral relationship," he told reporters. It is the second time the left-leaning Moon's government has avoided implementing a campaign promise made to appeal to his base on practical grounds -- a pledge to phase out nuclear power in the resource-poor South was outsourced to a "citizen jury", which decided that the country needed atomic energy. Mainstream historians say as many as 200,000 women -- mostly from Korea but also other parts of Asia, including China -- were forced to become sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during the war. The Japanese government denies it is directly responsible, insisting that "comfort women" were recruited by civilians and that the army brothels were commercially operated. Pro-democracy protesters rally outside a Hong Kong court as activists appear inside for a pre-trial hearing Founders of Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement that sparked mass rallies in 2014 appeared in court Tuesday in the latest case brought against activists. The nine defendants face public nuisance charges related to the Umbrella Movement demonstrations, which shut down several major roads in the semi-autonomous Chinese city for 79 days. Hong Kong's government has brought a raft of protest-related cases against democracy campaigners in the past few months. Supporters of the activists see them as political prosecutions under pressure from an increasingly assertive China. The most high-profile case so far saw the jailing of leading student activists including Joshua Wong. The founders of the protest campaign known as Occupy Central with Love and Peace, Benny Tai, Chan Kin-man and Reverend Chu Yiu-ming, were among the nine who appeared Tuesday. Their campaign galvanised momentum behind the idea of a mass protest in the heart of Hong Kong to put pressure on Beijing and the local government to introduce democratic reforms. After student groups joined the campaign and police fired tear gas to disperse protesters, it exploded into the Umbrella Movement. Defence lawyers at a pre-trial review Tuesday questioned why the three Occupy founders faced separate charges of conspiracy to commit public nuisance, incitement to commit public nuisance and incitement to incite public nuisance. Lawyer Gerard McCoy told the court it was "prosecution overload... unnecessarily and artificially bringing charges to increase pressure on the defendants". He said a more appropriate charge would be unauthorised assembly, which carries a lesser sentence. Public nuisance charges carry a maximum sentence of seven years. The other six defendants, including serving pro-democracy lawmaker Tanya Chan, face either one or two public nuisance charges. Prosecutor David Leung said the offences were "separate and distinct" and the prosecution would not change its position. Other leading pro-democracy campaigners were in the packed court to support the defendants. Dozens of supporters outside shouted "Shame on political prosecution!" and "The Umbrella Movement is innocent!" Lawmaker Chan said she had confidence in the judicial system. "I hope we are going to have a fair trial today and in the future," she told reporters. "God bless judicial independence and the rule of law," she added. The hearing continues Wednesday. ey-lm/sm The Japan Canoe Federation said it will consider expelling Yasuhiro Suzuki permanently as he has a history of sabotaging competitors Japan's anti-doping body has banned a top canoeist for eight years after he spiked a rival's drink with a banned substance to boost his own chances of selection for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. The Japan Anti-Doping Agency slapped sprint canoeist Yasuhiro Suzuki, 32, with the eight-year ban, the Japan Canoe Federation announced Tuesday, slamming his offence as "extremely evil". According to the federation, Suzuki confessed to putting a banned muscle-boosting substance into the drink bottle of rival Seiji Komatsu, 25, during a domestic competition in September. "Suzuki's conduct is totally contrary to the spirit of sporting fair play," the Japan Canoe Federation said in a statement. The canoe body said it will consider expelling Suzuki permanently as he has a history of sabotaging competitors, including by stealing their equipment. Suzuki admitted spiking the drink after receiving an intensive anti-doping lecture during a training camp, according to the federation. "I was fretting. I did it as I thought he would overwhelm me. I didn't expect he'd actually test positive," public broadcaster NHK quoted Suzuki as telling the federation. Komatsu won the race but was later provisionally suspended after he tested positive to the drug, which he strenuously denied using. His suspension has now been lifted. Both Suzuki and Komatsu were among the top candidates to represent Japan at the forthcoming 2020 Olympics. Israel acknowledges carrying out dozens of air strikes in Syria to stop what it calls advanced arms deliveries to Hezbollah The Israeli army carried out air strikes and fired rockets at targets in Syria overnight, causing damage near a military position, the Syrian army said Tuesday. Israel's military has carried out several attacks on the Syrian army and its ally Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah since the start of the conflict in Syria in 2011. The Israeli air force conducted strikes on the Qutayfeh area northeast of Damascus, causing the Syrian army to retaliate and "hit one of its planes", the Syrian army said in a statement. Syrian air defences intercepted one rocket, but several more hit "near a military position, causing material damage," it added. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said the air strikes targeted Syrian army and Hezbollah weapon depots. The strikes sparked "successive explosions and fires, causing material damage" in the depots, where land-to-land missiles have been stored among other weapons, the Observatory said. The Syrian army also said Israel launched land-to-land missiles into Syria from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, but it intercepted them. In a letter to the United Nations, Syria's foreign minister called on the UN Security Council to "condemn these blatant Israeli aggressions... and to adopt firm and immediate measures to put an end to them," official news agency SANA reported. Israel seized 1,200 square kilometres (460 square miles) of the Golan Heights from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the international community. Map of southern Syria and northern Israel, locating a reported Israeli airstrike in the Qutayfeh area Syria and Israel remain technically at war, and the Jewish state fought a devastating war against Hezbollah in 2006. Israeli officials worry that Hezbollah and Syrian regime ally Iran are gaining a strategic foothold in Syria alongside the government's key backer, Russia. In December, Israeli fighter jets bombed areas near Damascus including a scientific research centre and warehouses where weapons and ammunition of the regime and its allies were stocked, the Observatory said. In September, Israeli strikes hit a weapons depot by Damascus airport, targeting a warehouse belonging to Hezbollah, the monitor said. Israel rarely confirms these raids, but has admitted to carrying out strikes against convoys of weapons intended for Hezbollah. In November, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would take military action in Syria when it saw fit as it sought to ensure Iran-backed forces stay away from its territory. On Tuesday he reiterated his warning. "We have a longstanding policy to prevent the transfer of game-changing weapons to Hezbollah from Syrian territory," he told journalists. "This policy has not changed. We back it up as necessary with action." Israel has long accused Iran, its main enemy, of taking advantage of Syria's civil war to send its Revolutionary Guard and its ally Hezbollah into southern Syria, close to the Israeli border. Syria's war has killed 340,000 people and displaced millions since it started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests. Fiery Cross Reef is an outcrop that Beijing turned into an artificial island and which now appears to house a military base The Philippines will lodge a diplomatic protest with China after Manila questioned if Beijing had reneged on a pledge not to militarise a disputed South China Sea reef. Beijing claims nearly all of the sea and has been turning reefs in the Spratly and Paracel chains into islands, installing military facilities and equipment on them. Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana Tuesday said Manila was investigating reports of recent Chinese activity on Fiery Cross Reef, an outcrop that Beijing turned into an artificial island and which now appears to house a military base. Lorenzana spoke out despite recent moves by President Rodrigo Duterte to ease tensions with China. "According to them they are not militarising (the reefs) and it was for peaceful purposes only like tourism," Lorenzana said. "But if it is true and we can prove that they have been putting soldiers and any weapons, defensive (or) otherwise, that would be a violation of what they said". Lorenzana said he had also received reports Philippine fishermen had been "harassed" by Chinese coastguards. Asked about the Philippine complaints, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China "is conducting peaceful construction in our own territory", and that Beijing "has the need to build necessary territorial defence equipment". He added: "It's not targeted at any country. I need to point out that China and the Philippines are friendly, neighbours." Last month, a US think tank released new satellite images showing deployment of radar and other equipment in disputed South China Sea islands. The Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI) said the buildup continued despite rival claims across the sea from Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan. Over 2017, China installed infrastructure to support air and naval bases, such as "large radar and sensor arrays", the Washington-based think tank said. Fiery Cross Reef saw the most construction last year, with building work spanning 27 acres, or about 110,000 square metres, AMTI said its analysis of satellite images showed. The Philippines had previously been one of the most outspoken countries in standing up to China's claim to most of the South China Sea. This culminated in Manila's complaint to a United Nations-backed tribunal that ruled in July 2016 that China's territorial claims in the sea were without legal basis. But since Duterte took office in mid-2016, he has decided not to use the ruling to pressure China but has instead chosen to build closer ties in return for billions of dollars in investment and aid. Tunisian police track down rioters in Ettadhamen on the outskirts of Tunis late on January 8, 2018 after price hikes ignited protests in the North African country Protests hit several parts of Tunisia where dozens of people were arrested and one man died in unclear circumstances amid anger over rising prices, authorities said Tuesday. Several buildings were damaged during overnight scuffles with police, the interior ministry said, after activists and political parties denounced new austerity measures expected to increase the cost of living. Authorities are to carry out an autopsy on Tuesday to determine the cause of death of the 43-year-old man in the town of Tebourba, west of Tunis, spokesmen for the interior and health ministries said. The interior ministry denied he had been killed by police, saying the man's body showed no sign of any violence. Spokesman Khalifa Chibani said the man suffered from "respiratory problems". Across the country, 11 officers were wounded including after being hit by stones and Molotov cocktails, while four police vehicles were damaged, National Security chief Walid Ben Hkima said. He denounced "acts of violence and ransacking". In the central impoverished city of Kasserine, dozens of youths set tyres ablaze and threw stones at members of the security forces, who retaliated with tear gas, an AFP reporter said. In the central town of Sidi Bouzid, epicentre of the 2011 uprising that unseated dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, rocks and tyres blocked the roads, another AFP correspondent said. On Monday, Tunisians held a peaceful protest in the town against price hikes following austerity measures including increased value-added taxes and social security contributions. An interior ministry spokesman said at least 44 people had been arrested, including 16 in Kasserine and 18 in working-class areas near Tunis. The unrest "had nothing to do with democracy or social demands", Khalifa Chibani told the Shems FM radio station. A car pound in Kasserine was ransacked, he said, and buildings of the security forces damaged in the southern town of Hamma. Several groups called for protests in the Tunis city centre on Tuesday starting from midday (1100 GMT). Protests are common in the North African country in the month of January, when Tunisians mark the anniversary of the 2011 revolt that led to Ben Ali's ouster. Tensions have been running high seven years since the uprising, including over the new austerity measures implemented on January 1. On Sunday, Tunisian police dispersed a protest in the capital against the price hikes. In December, unemployed protesters and activists marched through the streets of Sidi Bouzid angry over the lack of jobs and opportunities that continue to plague the central town. On December 17, 2010, street vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set himself alight in Sidi Bouzid in a deadly protest over unemployment and police harassment that spiralled into Ben Ali's overthrow. Fang is under investigation for corruption A former chief of staff of China's military is under investigation on "suspicion of bribery", state media said Tuesday, as Xi Jinping's sweeping anti-graft crackdown claimed another top general. Fang Fenghui was appointed to the PLA's top post in 2012. But he was abruptly replaced in late August amid a stand-off with India over a territorial dispute and just days after he had met US top brass to discuss North Korea. The general has been "transferred to the military prosecution authority on suspicion of bribery" said Xinhua news agency without providing further details. Fang was one of two senior generals who did not appear on a list of delegates to the Communist Party's twice-a-decade congress last October, sparking speculation he had run afoul of Xi's anti-corruption campaign. The other, Zhang Yang, committed suicide in Beijing in November after being investigated over connections to two graft-tainted former senior military officers. Xinhua said the state military commission decided to hold "talks" with Zhang on August 28 -- just days after Fang's removal -- about his links to Guo Boxiong and Xu Caihou, top army officials who were expelled from the ruling party. Xi promised during October's party congress to intensify graft crackdowns which since 2012 have brought down 1.5 million party officials at various levels -- including top military leadership. Corruption has long been an intractable problem for the country, but many experts argue that the campaign has the hallmarks of a political purge as the Chinese president consolidates his power. Xi has sought to enhance his control over the two-million-strong military, the world's largest, reshuffling its leadership and vowing to make it "world-class" by 2050. In November the military was ordered to pledge to be "absolutely loyal, honest and reliable to Xi" in new guidelines released by the Central Military Commission. Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gives a speech in Tehran on January 9, 2018 Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday praised a "massive movement of the people against the plots of the enemies", accusing the United States and Israel of inciting anti-government demonstrations. Pro-government rallies have been held across the country since late December, according to Iranian state media, following several days of opposition protests which sparked violence that left 21 dead. Such a "popular mobilisation against the enemy's plots targeting the regime... doesn't exist anywhere (else) in the world," Khamenei said in a speech broadcast by Iranian media. He accused the United States and "the Zionists" of spending months preparing demonstrations in small towns in the hope that they would spread to the capital. "This will not go unanswered," he said. "The money came from the rich governments of the Persian Gulf and the perpetrators were the criminal Monafeghin group," he added. Monafeghin ("hypocrites" in Persian) is a label Iranian authorities use for the People's Mujahedeen of Iran, an outlawed opposition group. The anti-government protests had used the slogan "no to high living costs", which "pleases everyone", he said. "But the people, who were not very many, quickly dissociated themselves (from the movement) when they realised the real objectives" of the instigators, he said. Khamenei said there was a distinction between "the just demands of the people and the wild and destructive actions of this group". He said protests for rights had nothing to do with "burning the Koran, insulting Islam, insulting the flag and burning mosques". The anti-government demonstrations were the biggest such movement in the tightly controlled country since protests over a disputed election in 2009. Egyptian police officers cordon off an area following a deadly gun attack outside the Mar Mina church south of Cairo, on December 29, 2017 Egyptian lawmakers on Tuesday extended for three months a state of emergency first declared following deadly April church bombings, state TV reported. Egypt had extended the state of emergency for a second time in October. The latest extension is set to come into effect on Saturday, according to the official gazette. The emergency law expands police powers of arrest, surveillance and seizure, and can limit freedom of movement. Under Egypt's constitution, the three-month state of emergency can only be renewed once, but the president can subsequently reinstate it. Parliament approved the current state of emergency in April last year, after two suicide bombings at churches on Palm Sunday, claimed by the Islamic State group, killed at least 45 people in the cities of Tanta and Alexandria. The local affiliate of IS, based in North Sinai, claimed the attacks and threatened further violence against Egypt's Coptic Christian minority. Jihadists in May shot dead almost 30 Christians as they headed to a desert monastery south of Cairo. IS claimed responsibility for a gun attack last month on a church south of Cairo that left at least nine people dead. The group also claimed a Cairo December 2016 attack in which a suicide bomber blew himself up in a church during Sunday prayers, killing 29 people. While the jihadists have also targeted other civilians, including more than 300 Muslim worshippers massacred at a mosque last November, they have focused on the ancient Coptic community. Egypt had been ruled for decades under a state of emergency, which was cancelled a month before Islamist president Mohamed Morsi took power in 2012. Following Morsi's 2013 military overthrow led by current President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, a state of emergency was declared for a month. That came after clashes between police and Islamist protesters which killed hundreds, and also followed attacks on Christian properties by mobs of Morsi supporters. Israel's relocation programme is targeting an estimated 38,000 people, mainly from Eritrea and Sudan The United Nations on Tuesday called on Israel to scrap a new programme forcing thousands of African migrants out of the country, condemning it as incoherent and unsafe. The programme is targeting an estimated 38,000 people, mainly from Eritrea and Sudan. Israel has offered them $3,500 (2,900 euros) and a plane ticket if they leave by March, warning they may face arrest after the deadline. The plan was widely criticised when first unveiled last year, but the UN refugee agency sounded a fresh alarm after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's announcement last week that the programme had begun. "UNHCR is again appealing to Israel to halt its policy of relocating Eritreans and Sudanese to sub-Saharan Africa", the agency said in a statement. UNHCR spokesman William Spindler told reporters in Geneva that the programme was not "coherent" and "has been implemented not in a very transparent manner." Israel has not clearly said where the migrants will go, but tacitly recognises it is too dangerous to return the Sudanese and Eritreans home. No caption As a result, according to activists in Israel, it has signed deals with Rwanda and Uganda, which agree to accept departing migrants on condition they consent to the arrangement. Uganda has publicly denied any such deal. Rwanda has also dismissed its involvement, according to the UN. Spindler said the fact that the purported host countries were denying their role made it impossible for the UN to follow up. UNHCR said it had spoken to 80 people who were flown with the $3,500 to Rwanda before heading north, travelling to Rome through conflict zones in South Sudan, Sudan and Libya. "Along the way they suffered abuse, torture and extortion before risking their lives once again by crossing the Mediterranean to Italy", UNHCR said in a statement, explaining that its staff interviewed the migrants in Rome. Spindler called on Israel to find alternative solutions to the problem, stressing that the UN was ready to help with formal resettlement through official channels. A video released on by Islamist group Boko Haram shows their fighters during a Christmas Day attack on a military checkpoint in Nigeria Troops from Nigeria and neighbouring countries have launched major offensives against the two Boko Haram factions and their leaders, the military said on Tuesday. Soldiers from Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria are targeting Abubakar Shekau in the Sambisa Forest, and Mamman Nur, on and around Lake Chad, both in Borno state, northeast Nigeria. According to the Nigerian military, scores of jihadists have been killed and hundreds of others have been forced to surrender in recent days. Top brass in Abuja have claimed that Nur had been injured and one of his wives killed in an aerial bombardment, and that Shekau was "a spent horse, waiting for his Waterloo". Army spokesman Brigadier General Sani Usman on Tuesday said the operation, codenamed "Deep Punch 2", had been making "tremendous progress". But he said four soldiers had "paid the supreme price" and nine others were wounded in a suicide car bomb attack against a military vehicle near Shekau's camp on Monday. Separate senior military and civilian militia sources spoken to by AFP gave a higher death toll of 10. Two Cameroon security sources meanwhile said two of its troops had been killed in the Sambisa Forest, although it was not clear if they were among those mentioned by Usman. Boko Haram has been fighting to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria since 2009. The violence has killed at least 20,000 and displaced more than 2.6 million. Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler who is expected to seek a second term of office next year, was elected in 2015 on a promise to defeat the insurgents. He and his senior military commanders have repeatedly insisted the Islamic State group affiliate is a spent force but regular attacks still occur in the remote region. The Nur faction, which goes by the name Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), last Friday claimed a late December raid on a Nigerian military base that killed nine soldiers. Shekau appeared in a new video last Tuesday and claimed a series of recent attacks in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, and the border towns of Gamboru and Damboa. A founding member of Palestinian Islamist group Hamas was hospitalised in critical condition on Tuesday after reportedly shooting himself in the head while inspecting his gun. Imad al-Alami, a former member of the organization's highest political body, was wounded while 'inspecting his personal weapon in his home and is in critical condition', Hamas spokesman Fawzy Barhoum said in a statement. There was no independent confirmation of that account. Hamas leader Ismail Haniya arrives to visit Imad al-Alami at the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, after he was hospitalised in critical condition Alami was rushed to hospital in Gaza City, where he was visited by Hamas leader Ismail Haniya, Gaza chief Yahya Sinwar and his deputy Khalil al-Hayya, an AFP photographer said. Hayya told journalists the version of events described in the statement was based on 'testimony of family and witnesses at home'. He said doctors had operated on him but he remained in critical condition. Alami has for decades been a senior member of Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip. Israel has accused him of planning multiple attacks. In 2003 the United States declared him and five other Hamas leaders 'specially designated global terrorists'. He lived in exile for more than 20 years but returned to Gaza in 2012. His home in Gaza was bombed by Israel during the most recent war between the two sides in 2014. Israel has previously assassinated senior Hamas leaders, including the group's wheelchair-bound founder Ahmed Yassin. However, radical Islamist groups have targeted Hamas, with an Islamic State affiliate recently calling for attacks against them. In October 2017 the head of security in Gaza was injured in an apparent assassination attempt, with a small explosion in his car. In March a senior party leader, Mazen Faqha, was shot dead inside Gaza, with Hamas accusing Israel of responsibility. Palestinian protesters wave their national flag near the Israel-Gaza border east of the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Yunis as they demonstrate efforts to close UNRWA and possible US cuts Palestinian aid Sweden, a big donor country that has recognized Palestine as a state, warned Tuesday that any US decision to withdraw funds to the UN agency for Palestinians would be destabilizing for the Middle East. Sweden's UN Ambassador Olof Skoog said he had raised his concerns with US Ambassador Nikki Haley following reports that the US administration had withheld $125 million in funds due on January 1 for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinians. "My concern is that as we talk about regional stability, withdrawing funding for UNRWA would be very negative, both in terms of humanitarian needs of over five million people but also of course it would be destabilizing for the region," Skoog told reporters at UN headquarters. The Swedish ambassador said he did not rule out raising the issue at the Security Council, which is scheduled to hold its regular meeting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on January 25. US President Donald Trump earlier this month threatened to cut US aid to the Palestinians, saying on Twitter that Washington gets "no appreciation or respect" from the Palestinians. "We pay the Palestinians HUNDRED OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year and get no appreciation or respect," Trump tweeted on January 2. "With the Palestinians no longer willing to talk peace, why should we make any of these massive future payments to them?" In Washington, a senior State Department official said Monday that "contrary to reports that we have halted funding to UNRWA, the decision is under review." "There are still deliberations taking place, and we have missed no deadline," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Sweden was the first EU country to recognize Palestine as a state in 2014 and is among the top 10 donors to UNRWA along with Britain, Germany, the European Union, Saudi Arabia and the United States. Human Rights Watch director Kenneth Roth called the US move "vindictive" and a "bullying tactic," as he urged other governments to step in and fill the gap if the United States decides to definitely cut funding. UNRWA provides services including schools and health clinics to 5.3 million refugees in the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. "It is vindictive for the US government to deprive the UN of money to feed and educate Palestinian children in order to blackmail the Palestinian Authority into rejoining Trump administration-led peace negotiations," Roth said in a statement. US Vice President Mike Pence will travel to the Middle East next week, with stops scheduled in Egypt, Jordan and Israel. The Promo & Destock kosher store in Creteil, south of Paris, has been completely destroyed in a suspected arson attack A French kosher grocery store was gutted in a suspected arson attack Tuesday, reviving anti-Semitism fears three years to the day since an assault on a Jewish supermarket by an Islamist gunman. Prosecutors said the store in the southern Paris suburb of Creteil caught fire in the early hours, days after it was vandalised with anti-Semitic graffiti. "I just feel sick," said the store's owner, a 44-year-old Muslim who asked to remain anonymous. "I'm Muslim. I work in a Jewish shop. There is no incompatibility there," said the businessman, who was briefly hospitalised with shock after seeing the extent of the damage. Anti-semitism watchdog BNVCA said that the attack was intended to "punish" the Muslim owner for his links with the Jewish community. A source close to the police probe said it was "too soon to discuss motives", though Creteil prosecutor Laure Beccuau said investigators do not believe the fire was an accident. The Promo & Destock store was one of two neighbouring kosher shops in working-class Creteil that were daubed with swastikas last Wednesday. The second store was also slightly damaged in the fire. Israel's ambassador to France Aliza Bin Noun called the fire a "shameful provocation" on the third anniversary of the January 9, 2015 attack at the Hyper Cacher supermarket in eastern Paris. Jihadist gunman Amedy Coulibaly killed three customers and an employee in an attack that triggered deep concern over anti-Semitism. That attack came two days after Coulibaly's close friends Said and Cherif Kouachi gunned down 12 people at the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, the first of a wave of jihadist attacks in France. - 'Deep-rooted' anti-Semitism - French President Emmanuel Macron paid his respects on Sunday outside the Hyper Casher supermarket where three shoppers and a Jewish employee were killed three years ago. A record 7,900 French Jews emigrated to Israel the year of the Hyper Cacher attack, many of them citing fears over anti-Semitism. Though the exodus has since slowed, a string of anti-Semitic crimes have continued to worry one of Europe's biggest Jewish communities, numbering an estimated half a million. In 2017, a Jewish woman was pushed to her death from a third-floor window by a Muslim neighbour, while a Jewish family was beaten, held hostage and robbed in what rights groups said was a hate crime. The northern Paris suburb of Sarcelles, nicknamed "Little Jerusalem" due to its large Jewish population, was rocked by anti-Jewish violence during the 2014 war in Gaza. Several shops were set on fire or vandalised, including a kosher grocery. Former prime minister Manuel Valls told Europe 1 radio that more needed to be done to tackle anti-Semitism, which he said had become "deeply rooted" in France. "What has changed over the past three years is the awareness of this level of anti-Semitism," he said. Valls said French society had failed to mobilise in support of Jews following attacks such as the 2012 Islamist shooting at a Jewish school in Toulouse, in which four people were killed, three of them children. "These are crimes that must be prosecuted and condemned," he said. "We need to do more." Screen grab from a Boko Haram video, released on January 2, showing an attack on a military checkpoint at a village on the outskirts of the northeast city of Maiduguri on December 25 Four west African states have launched a major offensive against the Boko Haram jihadist group in Nigeria, the military said on Tuesday. Soldiers from Nigeria and the neighbouring countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger are targeting a Boko Haram faction led by Abubakar Shekau in the Sambisa Forest, and another led by Mamman Nur, on and around Lake Chad. Both locations are in Borno state, northeast Nigeria. According to the Nigerian military, scores of jihadists have been killed and hundreds of others have been forced to surrender in recent days. Top brass in Abuja have claimed that Nur had been injured and one of his wives killed in an aerial bombardment. Shekau was "a spent horse, waiting for his Waterloo," army spokesman Brigadier General Sani Usman said on Monday. On Tuesday, he said the operation -- codenamed "Deep Punch 2" -- had been making "tremendous progress". But he said four soldiers had "paid the supreme price" and nine others were wounded by a suicide car bomb attack against a military vehicle near Shekau's camp on Monday. Separate senior military and civilian militia sources spoken to by AFP gave a higher death toll of 10. Two Cameroon security sources meanwhile said two of its troops had been killed in the Sambisa Forest, although it was not clear if they were among those mentioned by Usman. - Repeated attacks - Boko Haram has been fighting to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria since 2009. The violence has killed at least 20,000 and displaced more than 2.6 million. In 2015, the four neighbours joined forces with Nigeria's tiny western neighbour, Benin, to set up a Multi-National Joint Task Force, designed seize back territory lost to the jihadists. Nigeria's president, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military general who is expected to seek a second term next year, was elected in 2015 on a promise to defeat the insurgents. He and military commanders have repeatedly insisted the Islamic State group affiliate is a spent force but regular attacks still occur in the remote region. The Nur faction, which goes by the name Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), last Friday claimed a late December raid on a Nigerian military base that killed nine soldiers. Shekau appeared in a new video message last Tuesday and claimed a series of recent attacks in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri and the border towns of Gamboru and Damboa. - Heavily fortified - Shekau, Boko Haram's leader since 2009, pledged allegiance to IS in 2015, just as the military counter-insurgency began to make gains. But he was enraged in August 2016 when IS gave its backing to the faction led by Abu Mus'ab Al-Barnawi, the son of Boko Haram founder Mohammed Yusuf. Nur -- Shekau's former right-hand man and the mastermind of the 2011 UN office bombing in Abuja -- is seen as the faction's de-facto leader and Al-Barnawi the figurehead. The operations against Shekau are concentrated on his hideout in the Parisu area of Borno, according to military and civilian militia sources. One militia leader said the suicide car bomb attack that killed the troops happened at Lagara village, where soldiers had been forced to stop because of Boko Haram landmines. "There are mines all over the marshland leading to the Shekau camp, which makes it difficult for troops to get to the camp," he said. "Once the soldiers cross the river, they are in Parisu. Shekau is within their grasp this time because he is holed up." - Previous escape - Shekau, whom the authorities have claimed to have killed on a number of occasions, has been surrounded and managed to escape before. In December 2016, he evaded troops who overran his Camp Zairo enclave in the Sambisa Forest. The military claims to have liberated the former game reserve but Boko Haram is now said to be back in the camp. Nur, who is believed to have links with Al-Qaeda affiliates in north Africa, was said to have been injured in an air raid on a militant camp on Tumbin Kare island, on Lake Chad. He had moved there from his headquarters in Tumbin Gini last week, according to the militia leader. "Mamman Nur never stayed in one particular location. He moved around the islands under his control to avoid detection," he added. "He was not lucky this time." Security agencies have warned the public about Barnawi/Nur fighters "attempting to melt into other communities" in the northern states of Kano, Yobe and Jigawa. "The concern is that the terrorists would take cover among the civilian population to wreak havoc," they said. Trump will undergo a physical on Friday at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, shown here in 2015 Donald Trump is headed to the doctor: later this week, the 71-year-old US president will undergo his first physical since taking office at a military hospital just outside Washington. But his critics who have openly questioned his mental health, as well as his supporters looking for proof the attacks are wrong, will be disappointed, as physicians are only looking at his weight, blood pressure and cholesterol levels. No psychiatric tests are planned on Friday at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for Trump, who has described himself as a "very stable genius." In 2015, Trump's personal doctor Harold Bornstein insisted -- in terms seen as a bit too glowing -- that the real estate mogul would be "the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency." But questions persist. A new tell-all book by Michael Wolff paints a portrait of a man whose closest aides doubt his ability to govern. The president has no obligation to undergo an annual physical, and even if he does, he is not required to reveal the results. But it has become something of a tradition. And the White House says that Trump, the oldest man ever to enter the Oval Office, will follow in the footsteps of his predecessors. In the 1980s, during Ronald Reagan's second term, a lively debate erupted over whether his intellectual capacity was deteriorating. Several years after he left office, Reagan announced that he was suffering from Alzheimer's disease. In 1994, former president Jimmy Carter himself raised the alarm bell about such situations, writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association about the "continuing danger" to the nation of a president becoming disabled, especially by "a neurologic illness." But nothing has changed since then about presidential succession, or how presidential health is evaluated. - Draft law - In April, Democratic lawmaker Jamie Raskin proposed a bill that would create a panel of 11 people -- mainly psychiatrists and neurologists -- who could be called upon to assess the president's mental health. The draft had at its core the 25th Amendment to the US Constitution, adopted in 1967, which says the vice president would become president "in case of the removal of the president from office or of his death or resignation." Trump has dismissed questions about his mental health, calling himself a "very stable genius" But the amendment provides no specifics about how the president's mental health would be assessed. "We need this body in general, not just for this presidency but for every future presidency," Raskin told AFP in an interview. "The framers of the 25th Amendment understood the perils of having a president who is somehow incapacitated in the nuclear age," he explained. "I turn on the TV and radio, and people are arguing about whether the president has a neurological incapacity or whether he is mentally fit," Raskin said. "I don't think mental health is a partisan issue... What we really need is a process by which this could be examined if we arrive at a crisis." In a Republican-led Congress, Raskin's draft has no chance of being approved. But it could fuel the larger debate. For now, some media outlets have called on specialists to offer an analysis of the 45th president from a distance. They look at his tweetstorms, his sometimes surprising body language and his sporadic difficulty in speaking -- offering myriad explanations, all of them limited by the fact that they have not examined Trump. White House spokesman Hogan Gidley slammed journalists for what he called an "absolute dereliction of duty" in reporting opinions of "psychiatrists who have never sat down and talked to the president." "It's repugnant," Gidley said Monday. A fireman walks past derailed and burnt train carriages after last week's accident in the Free State Province Two trains collided near South Africa's biggest city Johannesburg on Tuesday, lightly injuring more than 200 people, less than a week after a rail crash killed 19 passengers. "Human error" was responsible for the accident, which occurred at Germiston, east of Johannesburg, the Railway Safety Regulator (RSR) of South Africa said. It said a train was authorised to enter the station while another one was still there, "which subsequently resulted in a rear-end collision." A total of 226 people were slightly or moderately injured, the RSR said. On Thursday, a passenger train travelling from Port Elizabeth to Johannesburg smashed into a lorry at a level crossing near Kroonstad in central Free State and burst into flames, killing four children and 15 other people. South African police have launched a manslaughter investigation, with the lorry driver central to the probe. The RSR said the man was not drunk at the time. The main opposition Democratic Alliance party said "the two accidents are emblematic of poor investment" in rail safety. "In the 2016/17 financial year, 495 fatalities and 2,079 injuries were recorded on South Africas rail network," said shadow transport minister Manny De Freitas. But Transport Minister Joe Maswanganyi defended the government's record, saying the rail network was badly neglected during apartheid rule which ended in 1994. A budget of about 5.6 billion rand ($452 million, 380 million euros) has been set aside for signalling modernisation since 2015 to 2018, he said. "Our rail network has previously been characterised by years of disinvestment by the apartheid regime," he said. The ruling African National Congress often points to the apartheid legacy when attacked on its performance on key issues such as poverty, joblessness and educational standards. A file picture shows a ship carrying food aid docking at the Yemeni Red Sea port of Hodeida on November 26, 2017 Yemen's rebels have threatened to block traffic across the Red Sea unless a blockade by a regional military alliance is lifted, prompting fresh accusations Tuesday of "terrorism" by their rivals. UAE minister of state for foreign affairs Anwar Gargash, whose country is a key member in a Saudi-led camp battling the Huthi rebels, tweeted that the rebels' "open threat to international navigation in the Red Sea is documentation of their terrorist nature". Huthi political chief Saleh al-Samad had warned Monday that the rebels could "turn to strategic options... including cutting off the Red Sea and international navigation" unless a port and airport blockade imposed by Saudi Arabia and its allies were lifted. He did not elaborate. "They pass through our waters in their ships while our people is dying of hunger," Samad said in a statement published by the Huthis' Al-Masirah TV. "But if they are ready to restart negotiations, we are ready as well." Samad made the comments during a meeting with the deputy UN envoy to Yemen Muin Shreim. Along with the Yemeni capital and much of the northern highlands, the rebels continue to control a string of ports along Yemen's Red Sea coastline despite the coalition's superior firepower. The Saudi-led coalition joined the Yemeni government in its fight against the Huthis in March 2015, after the rebels seized control of the capital Sanaa. The coalition has warships positioned in the Red Sea. In early November, the coalition tightened a pre-existing blockade on Yemeni ports and airports in response to a missile fired by the Shiite Huthis intercepted near Riyadh airport. The blockade has massively reduced the amount of food and relief reaching the country, international aid organisations say. The blockade has been partially lifted under massive international pressure, namely over the closure of Hodeida port -- key to humanitarian and commercial deliveries. More than 9,000 people have been killed since the coalition's intervention in Yemen, according to the World Health Organization. The country is also now facing what the United Nations has described as the world's worst humanitarian crisis. Donald Trump will be the first US president to attend the World Economic Forum in Davos in nearly 20 years US President Donald Trump will take his populist message directly to the world's business and financial elite later this month, attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, the White House confirmed Tuesday. Trump -- who ran for president on a nationalist "America First" platform -- will mingle at the annual Alpine festival of globalism in Switzerland, and perhaps offer a few views of his own. "The president welcomes opportunities to advance his America First agenda with world leaders," White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said. "At this year's World Economic Forum, the president looks forward to promoting his policies to strengthen American businesses, American industries and American workers." A string of US presidents have avoided attending the annual upscale event, fearing a trip to a European ski resort would make them look out of touch. The last president to go was Bill Clinton, who attended in 2000. Trump, a real estate mogul-turned-president, has rarely shied away from the rich and famous. The Huawei Mate 10 high-end smartphone is shown at its unveiling in Germany on October 16, 2017 A deal between Chinese smartphone maker Huawei and AT&T to sell smartphones in the United States has fallen apart, US business media reported Tuesday. The partnership allowing Huawei to sell its Mate 10 phone through AT&T was expected to be unveiled during the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week. But the venture has fallen through, The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The companies did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Huawei still plans to sell a version of the Mate 10 not tied to a specific carrier. However, the failure to secure a contract with AT&T or fellow US giant Verizon has drastically limited the Chinese company's growth in the American market. Another Chinese manufacturer, Xiaomi, also has been in talks with major US telecom companies, according to reports. US lawmakers last month sent a letter to the Federal Communications Commission to review Huawei's smartphone business following concerns the equipment could be used for spying, the Journal reported. Lincoln police officers didn't fire any shots during an encounter Friday night that sent a man to the hospital, Police Chief Jeff Bliemeister said Monday. Two Lincoln police gang investigators in a marked cruiser and a deputy U.S. Marshal were serving a felony drug warrant for Thomas Sailors' arrest Friday at about 8 p.m. at 16th and Prospect streets. Sailors was sitting in the driver seat of a stolen GMC Yukon SUV at an apartment building parking lot, the chief said. As Sailors tried to flee the scene, he hit the marshal's vehicle, a police cruiser and two other vehicles as well as the apartment building, Bliemeister said. The deputy U.S. Marshal fired shots into the Yukon, wounding Sailors, the chief said. The number of shots fired by the marshal remains under investigation. An officer during the encounter sustained knee and shin scrapes while trying to avoid the fleeing SUV, the chief said Monday. The officers chased after the Yukon but ended their pursuit after seven minutes. Sailors arrived at Bryan West Campus in the SUV at 8:29 p.m., and he was treated for his gunshot wounds. He was recovering from the wounds at the hospital Monday. The Lincoln Police Department and Lancaster County Sheriff's Office will lead the investigation of the officer-involved shooting, police said in a news release. Additionally, internal reviews will be conducted by the police department and the U.S. Marshal's Service. Guatemala's embassy in Israel is located in Herzliya near Tel Aviv, by President Jimmy Morales wants to move it to Jerusalem A Guatemalan lawyer is challenging his country's controversial decision to move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, arguing it violates international law. Marco Vinicio Mejia lodged the complaint with the Constitutional Court on Monday, saying the December 24 announcement of the embassy move went against the principles, rules and practices of international law with regard to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Such a change of policy should have been put to a referendum, he argued. He also said President Jimmy Morales flouted government standards by making the announcement on his Facebook page rather than leaving it to the foreign ministry to make the announcement through official channels. The notice makes Guatemala the first -- and so far only -- country to follow US President Donald Trump's lead in saying its embassy will be relocated from Tel Aviv to the holy city. Israel has long insisted that all of Jerusalem is its capital. But the Palestinians view east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state. Multiple UN resolutions do not recognize the claim to Jerusalem, and the United Nations General Assembly on December 21 rejected any unilateral recognition of the city as Israel's capital before a peace settlement deciding its status. Only the United States and eight other countries -- Guatemala among them -- voted against the non-binding UN General Assembly decision. Morales, in his Facebook announcement, defended the decision to move the embassy by saying Israel is an "ally" and that Guatemala has "historically been pro-Israel." Guatemala's foreign minister, Sandra Jovel, has denied that her country bowed to US pressure in making its decision. She added that the date of the embassy move had not yet been defined. Israel's controversial separation barrier is seen dividing Jerusalem (background) from the West Bank town of Hizma (L), on October 26, 2017 Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Tuesday he will present for approval a plan to build 1,285 housing units this year in West Bank settlements. Israel's settlement project in the territories it has occupied or annexed since 1967 is illegal under international law and seen by the international community as a major obstacle to peace with the Palestinians. "The defence minister will on Wednesday present for approval by the Higher Planning Council an immediate construction plan for 2018 of 1,285 housing units in Judea and Samaria," his ministry said, using the biblical names Israeli authorities use for the West Bank. Lieberman would also seek to move forward projects for 2,500 additional housing units in more than 20 locations, it said. The Higher Planning Council meets several times a year to examine and approve settlement construction projects. According to Peace Now, an Israeli NGO that campaigns against the settlements, 6,742 housing projects were approved in the settlements last year, the highest figure since 2013. In 2016, 2,629 housing units were approved. In December, the central committee of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party unanimously adopted a resolution urging its own elected officials "to allow free construction and the application of (Israeli) legislation to all liberated Jewish settlement areas" in the territory. If such a text were adopted by the government, it would definitively end the "two-state solution" by making a Palestinian state impossible. Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas criticised the Likud resolution and the United States' refusal to condemn Israeli "crimes against the Palestinian people". Abbas said the vote would not have taken place without "total support" from Washington. About 400,000 Israelis live in illegal settlements in the West Bank, a Palestinian territory occupied by Israel for 50 years. A further 200,000 live in east Jerusalem, annexed by Israel in a move never recognised by the international community. President of the Commission Electorale Nationale Independante, Corneille Nangaa, pictured in 2017, said new voting machines would cut election costs DR Congo's electoral body trumpeted on Tuesday the arrival of the first voting machines from South Korea for long-delayed elections that the government has pledged to hold in December. The vote is supposed to bring about the belated departure of President Joseph Kabila, in power since 2001, who was supposed to step down last year but postponed the polls. But it remains unclear if the 45 million Congolese voters who registered in 2017 will finally get to choose a new president, deputies and elected representatives in the vote set for December 23, 2018. "The first lot of eight voting machines were received today for the purpose of civic and electoral education of the Congolese," said the National Electoral Commission (CENI), adding that the devices would help reduce election fraud. The machines "offer a lot of advantages, notably a reduction in the time it takes to vote and the waiting period for the results and they also reduce electoral fraud and cut election costs," the body said. The CENI head Corneille Nangaa told AFP each machine would be able to handle up to 700 voters, adding that the country would need at least 60,000 such machines. The machine will let the voter choose a candidate and then print out the ballot paper to be put in, CENI said. The Democratic Republic of Congo opposition fiercely opposed these machines during heated parliamentary debates in December on the grounds that they would pave the way for fraud. Tensions have been mounting after Kabila's refusal to step down at the scheduled time last year and his government's brutal repression of protests that have sparked concern from the UN and several nations. Displaced Syrians fleeing the fighting in an area of Idlib, which is one of the deescalation zones Turkey's foreign ministry on Tuesday summoned the Russian and Iranian ambassadors to Ankara after accusing the Syrian regime of stepping up its offensive on key rebel-held areas, according to Turkish diplomatic sources. The strikes targeted moderate opposition forces in Idlib province near the Turkish border, according to Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who warned it could torpedo talks aimed at ending the war. "Regime forces are striking moderate opposition with the pretext of fighting against Al-Nusra (Front)," Cavusoglu was quoted as saying by the official Anadolu news agency, referring to the former Al-Qaeda affiliate. Idlib province is almost entirely controlled by anti-government forces that are dominated by a jihadist outfit known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) consisting mostly of former Nusra fighters. "This attitude would scupper the political solution process," Cavusoglu said. "The parties that will come together in Sochi should refrain from" any action that could threaten the talks, he warned. Russia is hoping to hold a Syria peace congress in its Black Sea resort of Sochi on January 29-30. Ankara conveyed "uneasiness" to the Russian and Iranian ambassadors, stating it considered the strikes a "violation of the borders of the Idlib de-escalation zone" established by Turkey, Iran and Russia, according sources at the foreign ministry. The Russian ambassador was asked to speak to Moscow to tell the Syrian government in Damascus to end the assault, added the sources. Meanwhile, US-brokered talks based in Geneva between the regime and the opposition are also going forward, albeit at a stuttering pace. A previous attempt in November to convene talks in Sochi failed due to disagreements between the prospective participants. Turkey says it will oppose any talks involving the Kurdish militia of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), which Ankara views as a terror group. In 2016, Ankara and Moscow brokered a fragile ceasefire in certain areas -- which has been bolstered by the negotiations in the Kazakh capital of Astana. Both Damascus and the rebel factions regularly accuse each other of violating the ceasefire in the de-escalation zones, including in Idlib. A likely future sticking point between Russia and Turkey is the fate of Syrian President Bachar al-Assad, who Ankara has vehemently opposed throughout the conflict. Last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said it was impossible to advance with Assad in power, describing him as a "terrorist". Syrian regime forces on Monday pounded Idlib as well as the Eastern Ghouta enclave near Damascus, the two last rebel bastions in Syria. French President Emmanuel Macron shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping following a joint press briefing in Beijing. Paris has been working for years to promote the safety of French beef, following the "mad cow" scare of the 1990s French beef producers on Tuesday hailed a deal reached by President Emmanuel Macron and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to end China's 2001 embargo on French beef. The accord, which would allow French producers back into the huge Chinese market within six months, came as Macron made a three-day visit to the country, his first destination in Asia as France's leader. The ban was imposed over a decade ago as Beijing started closing off its markets to all European and later US beef imports in the wake of the "mad cow" disease scare. Paris has been working for years to promote the safety of its meat and open new markets for its ranchers, who were hit hard by the "mad cow" scare of the 1990s. "Our beef currently has no access (to China) for sanitary reasons. But with French beef consumption falling five percent a year, we have to find new markets," said economy minister Bruno Le Maire, who is travelling with Macron. "It will allow for higher prices that will better compensate cattle ranchers," he said. - 'It will take time' - Beef is rapidly becoming more common on Chinese tables as the middle class expands, with imported meat particularly prized. "Excellent news for France's beef producers, who consider the potential of the Chinese market a strategic opportunity," the Interbev producers' association said in a statement. Its president, Dominique Langlois, is part of the delegation of about 50 business leaders who joined Macron for his trip. Interbev said China is the second-largest importer of beef, at nearly 1.1 million tons a year. The average inhabitant eats four kilogrammes (8.8 pounds) each year, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Ninety percent of China's imports currently come from Brazil, Uruguay, Australia and New Zealand. Several countries have dropped their import bans against French beef in recent years, including the United States, which again opened its market last year after imposing a ban in 1998. French producers could nonetheless find China a tough market to crack. "There is market share for France to take in China," said Jean-Marc Chaumet, an economist who specialises in China at the French Livestock Institute in Paris. "But it won't be an Eldorado. It will be hard and take time, because France will be entering a very competitive market already open to the US, Uruguay, Canada and Australia," he said. "And they'll need to invest, because the Chinese don't know about French beef," Chaumet added. Beyond beef, French officials said talks were continuing about China's ban on French poultry, imposed in 2015 after an outbreak of bird flu. Tunisian police track down rioters in Ettadhamen on the outskirts of Tunis late on January 8, 2018 after price hikes ignited protests in the North African country Fresh scuffles broke out on Tuesday night between Tunisian protesters and police, a day after the death of a man in violent demonstrations over rising costs and government austerity. Hundreds of young people took to the streets of Tebourba, west of Tunis, pelting stones at security forces who responded by firing tear gas at them, an AFP journalist said. Similar clashes were seen in the impoverished inland regions of Kasserine and Jelma, near Sidi Bouzid, the cradle of the protests that sparked the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings. Clashes also erupted in the central town of Gafsa, AFP reporters said. An autopsy was carried out Tuesday to determine how a man in his 40s died during demonstrations the previous night in Tebourba, but the results were not made public as controversy continued over his death. The police insisted they did not kill him, and said he suffered from "respiratory problems". Prime Minister Youssef Chahed decried Monday night's unrest, telling a radio station that "we didn't see protests, but instead people breaking things, stealing and attacking Tunisians". Tunisians shout slogans during a demonstration against the government and price hikes on January 9, 2018 in Tunis "The government is ready to listen, but every person wanting to demonstrate must do so peacefully," he said. Tunisia has seen several days of protests after activists and politicians denounced hikes in value-added tax and social contributions introduced at the start of the year as a tough new budget was implemented. On Tuesday a peaceful rally of around a hundred people was held in the centre of Tunis calling for the end of austerity measures that are expected to increase the cost of living. "Poverty and hunger have increased, oh oppressed citizen!" chanted the protesters, most of them young people. They listed their demands, including the suspension of the 2018 Finance Act and a return to earlier prices for commodities, said Hamza Nasri, of a campaign group leading the protests. Tunisian police stand guard during a demonstration against the government and price hikes on January 9, 2018 in Tunis Hundreds of people, many of them very young, also demonstrated in Regueb, in the deprived central part of the country, said an AFP correspondent. Finance Minister Ridha Chalghoum said the government intended to stick with its tax rises, but insisted the VAT hike did not impact "basic necessities". "Among the achievements of democracy is the opportunity to demonstrate, but we also have an obligation to work for a healthy Tunisian economy," he told AFP. - Public discontent - Protests are common in the North African state in the month of January, when Tunisians mark the anniversary of the 2011 revolt that unseated dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The country has been hailed for its relatively smooth democratic transition but seven years after the revolution tensions over economic grievances are high. Tunisians shout slogans during a demonstration against the government and price hikes on January 9, 2018 in Tunis Overnight Monday police fired tear gas at youths who torched tyres and threw stones in the impoverished city of Kasserine. Protesters also blocked roads in Sidi Bouzid. An interior ministry spokesman said at least 44 people had been arrested, including 16 in Kasserine and 18 in working-class areas near Tunis. A car pound in Kasserine was ransacked, Khalifa Chibani said, and buildings of the security forces damaged in the southern town of Hamma. The unrest "had nothing to do with democracy or social demands", he told the Shems FM radio station. National Security agency spokesman Walid Ben Hkima denounced "acts of violence and ransacking". Tunisia's economy has struggled since the revolution, with growth remaining slow. January 2016 saw the biggest wave of public discontent since the uprising as the death of an unemployed protester in Kasserine sparked days of unrest. In December, unemployed protesters and activists marched through the streets of Sidi Bouzid, angry over the lack of jobs and opportunities that continue to plague residents. The revolution in Tunisia began in the town in December 2010 after street vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire and later died in a protest over unemployment and police harassment that spiralled into Ben Ali's overthrow. US President Donald Trump meets with Republican and Democratic senators at the White House to discuss immigration President Donald Trump urged Congress on Tuesday to reach a compromise on the fate of millions of undocumented migrants who came to the US as children, but did not give ground to Democrats over his plans for a border wall. "It should be a bill of love," Trump said at the White House, where he hosted Republican and Democratic lawmakers for talks on the issue -- and allowed journalists rare access to nearly an hour of the meeting. "But it also has to be a bill where we're able to secure our border. Drugs are pouring into our country at a record pace. A lot of people are coming in that we can't have," Trump added, saying he hoped for a quick solution. Trump said he would "take the heat" politically if lawmakers were to look at broader action that would provide a pathway to citizenship for about 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States. "You are not that far away from comprehensive immigration reform," he told Senator Lindsey Graham, after the Republican senator floated the idea of more sweeping legislation. In September, Trump said he was scrapping the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, but then delayed enforcement to give Congress six months -- until March -- to craft a lasting solution. So-called "Dreamers" were protected from deportation under the policy enacted during Barack Obama's presidency. On Tuesday, Trump said he a "permanent" solution was needed for the Dreamers, but also insisted on the importance of border security, especially with Mexico. "We need a wall," Trump said, during the long exchange with lawmakers. He also called for an end to "chain migration" and to the green card lottery system. "I would like to add the word 'merit' into any bill submitted," Trump said. "I can tell you the American public very much wants that." After the meeting, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said the group had agreed to "negotiate legislation that accomplishes critically needed reforms in four high-priority areas." Those include "border security, chain migration, the visa lottery and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy," Sanders said. The Nigerian military has been fighting Boko Haram since 2009 Two teenage girls wearing explosive vests were shot dead by soldiers in a town in north eastern Nigeria just days after a blast killed 14 worshippers, militia sources told AFP on Tuesday. Soldiers patrolling the town of Gamboru opened fire after the two girls, strapped with explosives, refused to remove the vests in the early hours of the morning. A third girl was arrested. "Three teenage suicide bombers were found by soldiers and two of them were killed while the third was arrested with her explosive belt," said Umar Kachalla, a civilian militiaman in the town close to the Cameroon border. "Two of the girls who were walking together were asked to remove their vests but they refused and were shot dead by troops," he added. Soldiers spotted the third girl after she abandoned her explosive vest in a nearby empty building, said another militiaman Shehu Mada. The attempted bombing comes as Nigeria has launched a major offensive against Boko Haram following an escalation in attacks by the jihadist group over the festive season. Last Wednesday, 14 worshippers were killed when a suicide bomber attacked a mosque in Gamboru during morning prayers, according to vigilantes and residents. Boko Haram had previously controlled the town, a trading hub, for over a year after seizing it in August 2014, along with the neighbouring Ngala. Nigerian troops retook both towns in September 2015 with the help of Chadian forces. Despite the recapture of the area, Boko Haram fighters continue to launch offensives, ambushing troops and vehicles, and attacking farmers and loggers. Last week, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau released a video message claiming a series of attacks in the northeast, including those in Gamboru. Boko Haram's eight-year insurgency against the government of Nigeria has spilled into neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, killing around 20,000 people and displacing more than 2.6 million. United Nations political affairs chief Jeffrey Feltman traveled to Libya on a new UN push to unite the country's factions The United Nations' political affairs chief traveled to Libya on Tuesday seeking progress in a new UN push to unite the country and end years of chaos. Jeffrey Feltman, the UN under-secretary of state for political affairs, will also travel to neighboring Tunisia during his visit until Friday, said a UN statement. The United Nations has launched a plan to bring stability to Libya through elections and changes to a 2015 political deal that set up a government of national accord led by Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj. After two meetings were held in Tunis last year, there appears to have been little progress. "The United Nations urges all Libyan actors to engage in earnest in an inclusive political process leading to credible and fair elections," said Feltman. There is a "window of opportunity" to focus efforts on building unified state institutions, he added. Feltman's itinerary was not released for security reasons, but sources said he planned to meet with Khalifa Haftar, the powerful leader whose Libyan National Army dominates the country's east. He is also expected to hold talks with Sarraj and Aguila Saleh Issa, the parliament speaker based in the eastern town of Tobruk who opposes the UN-backed administration. Despite the 2015 accord, Libya remains divided between the UN-backed government in Tripoli and a rival administration in the east that enjoys support from Egypt, Russia and the United Arab Emirates. One of the main stumbling blocks is inclusion in Haftar's new government. Former senior Trump aide Steve Bannon is leaving Breitbart News, which he called a "world-class news platform" Donald Trump's former White House strategist Steve Bannon has stepped down from Breitbart News, the conservative news outlet announced Tuesday, still roiled in controversy over incendiary remarks about the president quoted in a new book. The announcement comes just days after the 64-year-old news executive at the provocative right-wing site publicly split with Trump over explosive comments he made about the president's fitness for office and members of his family. "Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House" -- which paints the president as disengaged, ill-informed and unstable -- has seen Bannon abandoned by financial patrons, condemned by erstwhile allies and ridiculed by Trump himself. His departure from Breitbart threatens to further isolate the self-proclaimed champion of anti-Washington populism that swept Trump to power and whom Bloomberg once called "the most dangerous political operative in America." "Steve is a valued part of our legacy, and we will always be grateful for his contributions, and what he has helped us to accomplish," Breitbart CEO Larry Solov said in a statement from the company. Bannon said he was "proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplished in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform." The New York Times said Bannon's departure was forced by onetime financial patron, Rebekah Mercer. Breitbart said Bannon and the company will "work together on a smooth and orderly transition," but provided no other immediate details. Bannon emerged from relative obscurity when Trump picked him as campaign chief in August 2016, just three months out from the presidential election that he was then widely expected to loose against Democrat Hillary Clinton. - 'Sloppy Steve' - He was running Breitbart at the time, a website providing boisterous coverage of the Republican tycoon's rise, where he had served as executive chairman since 2012. He quickly presided over the brand of economic populism promoted by Trump and was hired as chief strategist for the White House. For months, Trump allowed Bannon to conduct open war from inside the White House against established party leaders, incumbent lawmakers and other heavyweights Bannon believed were undermining Trump's populist revolution. After Bannon left the White House in August, he remained on good terms with Trump. But if he was damaged by the electoral defeat of his preferred candidate, Roy Moore, in Alabama, his fall from grace was cemented by "Fire and Fury." In the book, Bannon is quoted as saying a pre-election meeting involving Trump's eldest son Donald Jr. and a Kremlin-linked Russian lawyer was "treasonous." Trump said Bannon had "lost his mind" and through Twitter branded him "Sloppy Steve." He has trashed the book as "fake" and its author, Michael Wolff, as "totally discredited author" and has sought to defend himself as a "very stable genius." Bannon attempted to walk back from the remarks, telling the Axios news website that "Donald Trump Jr. is both a patriot and a good man," but the closest he came to an apology was regretting the timing of his response. Gov. Pete Ricketts announced late Monday that he will propose state budget adjustments that would prevent distribution of federal health care funding to health clinics that provide abortion services. The governor will reveal his revised 2017-2019 budget recommendations during his annual State of the State address to the Legislature on Wednesday. "With this change, no health clinics can receive funding unless they are truly separate and independent of any entity that performs abortions," the governor's office announced. "Nebraska is a pro-life state and the state's budget should reflect those values," Ricketts said. "Thanks to action by Congress, Nebraska can now take new steps to protect unborn life by ensuring that these dollars are not used to fund abortion (or) subsidize abortion," he said. Currently, health care providers that also perform abortions are receiving federal funding passed through the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, the governor's office said. Last year, he said, President Donald Trump signed a resolution giving states far greater latitude in the distribution of that Title X federal funding. Lt. Gov. Mike Foley hailed the proposed change. "By prioritizing federal funds to clinics that do not provide abortion services, Nebraska is sending the message that we are a state that respects unborn life," Foley said. Cuban-American lawmaker Senator Marco Rubio summoned State Department officials for an update on the probe into the mystery "attacks" on US diplomats in Cuba More than a year since the first of 24 US diplomats and family members fell victim to a mystery attack in Havana, the United States is still at a loss to explain what happened. Only one thing is clear. The US government holds Cuba responsible, arguing that Raul Castro's authoritarian state must have either carried out the assaults or at least know who did. The issue has poisoned any attempt to move forward with the fragile detente achieved between the former Cold War foes, who re-opened their embassies and exchanged ambassadors in 2015 for the first time since 1961. But, as Washington continues to press Havana for action, there is one extremely important plank in their case missing: US officials simply do not know who or what caused their diplomats to fall ill with injuries resembling brain trauma. On Tuesday, in a hearing for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, State Department officials said they would open a review board into their own handling of the issue, but could offered frustrated lawmakers little in the way of answers. - Acoustic weapon? - Initially officials suspected the Americans had been targeted by some sort of acoustic weapon, although in public senior officials were more cautious, speaking of "health attacks." Now, US press reports suggest that FBI agents dispatched to Havana have been able to find no evidence to support the acoustic or sonic weapon theory. Some in Washington have begun to wonder if now is the time to start sending non-essential staff back to the Havana embassy, since there's no proof of what happened. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, however, rejects that idea, as long as the those behind the "health attacks" have not been identified and dealt with. "We're not much ahead of where we were in finding out what occurred and we need to find that out," assistant secretary of state for public affairs Steve Goldstein told reporters. "We believe that the Cuban government knows what occurred, so what we'd like them to do is to tell us what occurred, so that this doesn't happen again. "We're not considering restoring staff," he added. The chairman of the Senate committee that summoned the officials, Senator Marco Rubio, did not hide his frustration. "Maybe it wasn't acoustic, maybe they used microwaves, but that is irrelevant," he told reporters on Capitol Hill. "At the end of the day we know that there was an attack, that 24 Americans were hurt when they were working and living in Havana as part of the embassy." Earlier, addressing the committee and the official witnesses, Rubio had dismissed the idea that anyone other than a government could have been behind the incident. "Whatever happened to these people happened as a result of some sophisticated technology that quite frankly is so sophisticated that we don't understand it," he said. The State Department officials agreed that Cuba, with its powerful surveillance state, must have either been behind the attacks itself or at least know who was. - Microwave transmitters - Havana has fiercely denied this, accusing the Americans of withholding information about the victims of the incidents that would allow it to fully investigate. On Tuesday, after the hearing, Cuba again denied having anything to do with the affair. "I reiterate categorically that the Cuban government has no responsibility whatsoever in the health issues reported by US diplomats," said Josefina Vidal, head of the US affairs section at the foreign ministry. The first suspected attack was traced back to November 2016, and the last two took place in mid-August 2017, after Washington had protested to Havana and withdrawn some staff. Charles Rosenfarb, a doctor and director of the State Department bureau of medical services, told senators the symptoms were mixed but consistent with brain trauma. The victims -- at least 24 Americans, a mix of US embassy personnel and their dependents -- suffered headaches, hearing loss, disorientation and some loss of cognitive ability. Some recovered from the most acute symptoms, Rosenfarb said, but the severity, range and recovery time was mixed and it's not yet clear whether any have suffered permanent injury. "They associated the onset of these symptoms with unusual sounds or auditory sensations," Rosenfarb said. "Various descriptions were given; a high-pitched sound, an incapacitating sound, a buffeting sensation akin to driving with one window open or just an intense pressure in one ear." - Cold War Moscow - Medical experts and FBI agents launched investigations and high-frequency recording devices were installed in diplomatic residences, allowing a mystery sound sample to be captured. But US scientists have no idea what kind of weapon or agent could cause the symptoms, or whether the sounds heard were a by-product of the attack or its means of delivery. Rosenfarb said the only similar case he was aware of involved suspicions during the Cold War before 1976 that US diplomats in Moscow were hurt by Russian microwave transmitters. But acting assistant sectary of state Francisco Palmieri refused to say in an unclassified hearing whether Washington has approached the Russians over the Cuba incident. "There is a long history and pattern of Cuban harassment of diplomats in Havana," Palmieri said, declining to speculate on why or if Raul Castro's regime had chosen to escalate. "In whatever case they are responsible for the safety and security of US diplomats stationed in Havana ... and they have failed to live up to that responsibility," he said. Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Tuesday: 1. MUELLER INTERESTED IN INTERVIEWING TRUMP, SOURCE TELLS AP The issue of an interview with the president has come up in recent discussions between the special counsel's team and Trump lawyers. Rev. Sharon Stanley-Rea holds up hand-made signs as she joins CASA de Maryland, an immigration advocacy and assistance organization, during rally in Lafayette Park, across from the White House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 8, 2018, in reaction to the announcement regarding Temporary Protective Status for people from El Salvador. The Trump administration is ending special protections for Salvadoran immigrants, forcing nearly 200,000 to leave the U.S. by September 2019 or face deportation. El Salvador is the fourth country whose citizens have lost Temporary Protected Status under President Donald Trump, and they have been, by far, the largest beneficiaries of the program, which provides humanitarian relief for foreigners whose countries are hit with natural disasters or other strife. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) 2. WHY US COULD FORCE OUT 200,000 SALVADORAN REFUGEES President Trump ends Temporary Protected Status for the immigrants, driven from their country by deadly earthquakes. 3. POLICE DISAGREE ON RESALE OF SEIZED GUNS A yearlong AP review shows that some firearms make it back into the hands of criminals when law enforcement departments sell them instead of destroying them. 4. WHAT NATURAL DISASTERS COST US LAST YEAR Hit by three major hurricanes, widespread wildfires, floods and drought, the U.S. spent a record-high $306 billion in 2017. 5. HOW RETAIL HOPES TO SURVIVE E-COMMERCE ONSLAUGHT As more consumers abandon stores and buy online, retailers want to stay afloat by offering personal shoppers and in-home product assistance. 6. DEMOCRATS GO ON HEALTH CARE OFFENSIVE With Republicans unable to agree on their vision, Democrats say their ultimate goal is a government guarantee of affordable coverage for all. 7. CONSUMER ELECTRONIC SHOW UNVEILS SLEW OF NEW TVs Samsung, LG and other television makers showcase super-high definition models at the CES gadget show in Las Vegas. 8. APPLE URGED TO CONFRONT TEEN SMARTPHONE ADDICTION Two major investors press the iPhone maker to help rein in the effects of electronic gadgets on youngsters. 9. WHERE PRISONERS ARE NOW FREE TO READ BOOK ABOUT PRISONS The ACLU successfully lobbies New Jersey corrections officials to drop a ban on "The New Jim Crow," a best-seller on mass incarceration. 10. 'A BRIGHTER MORNING EVEN IN OUR DARKEST NIGHTS' That quote and others from Oprah Winfrey's Golden Globes speech has some political activists buzzing about the media superstar and the 2020 presidential race - even if it's just a fantasy. This image released by NBC shows Oprah Winfrey accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the 75th Annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 7, 2018. (Paul Drinkwater/NBC via AP) MILWAUKEE (AP) - Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn announced his retirement Monday, describing himself as a "change agent" over his decade-long tenure and saying it was time to focus on his family. His retirement comes days before he was to have his annual evaluation and amid criticism from aldermen who wanted to change state law to be able to fire him and future chiefs. Flynn said the timing of his retirement had nothing to do with his evaluation or his combative relationship with the aldermen. Instead, he noted that his 10th anniversary at the department was Sunday and he was proud of his achievements. "It's a good benchmark and it's time. Time to say thank you. Time to say goodbye," Flynn said as Mayor Tom Barrett stood beside him the police headquarters. Flynn, 69, said he leaves the department with a declining crime rate, citing a drop in homicides from 142 in 2016 to 119 in 2017. Excessive force complaints against officers are down 25 percent since 2013, he said. And he said there were 2,941 robberies in 2017, which was 17 percent fewer that the 3,555 in 2007. "I'm grateful that he made the decision 10 years ago to be part of our community," Barrett said. Flynn's tenure was also marked by officer shootings that showed the tension between police and minorities in the city. Flynn steered the department through rioting that followed the 2016 shooting of a black man, Sylville Smith, by a black officer on the city's north side. In 2014, a white officer shot and killed a mentally ill black man, Dontre Hamilton, in a city park. Flynn later fired the officer, Christopher Manney. In 2015, the city paid $5 million to 74 people who accused a group of officers of illegal body cavity and strip searches. And the ACLU of Milwaukee has a pending lawsuit against the police department alleging stop-and-frisk searches targeting Latino and black residents. Flynn has denied those accusations, but he acknowledged on Monday that his time in office wasn't without controversy. "Certainly Milwaukee has been at the center of many of the social changes that we're seeing right now - the enhanced scrutiny of the police," he said. "Certainly we have had some conspicuous failures over the years where individual officers or small groups failed to adhere to our core values." Flynn said he will remain in his position until Feb. 16. He said he's been mulling retirement for some time. Asked about the recent tension with city aldermen, he said: "Quite honestly there were times I thought over the last year or so, 'Gosh I could save them so much heartache if they only knew that all their troubles would soon be over.'" AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) - American Steve Johnson struggled past Liam Caruana 7-5, 7-6 (4) to reach the second round of the ATP Tour's ASB Classic on Tuesday as the tournament's main draw was decimated by withdrawals. Caruana, who was making his debut in the main draw of an ATP tournament, was one of four lucky losers promoted into the first round to replace players forced to withdraw because of injuries or fatigue. Johnson was due to meet compatriot Ryan Harrison but Harrison withdrew after playing his way into the final of last week's Brisbane International, losing to Nick Kyrgios. Argentina's Guido Pello withdrew with a shoulder injury, conceding his place in the main draw to Taro Daniel of Japan who along with Caruana, American Tennys Sandgren and Slovakia's Lukas Lacko were losers in the last round of qualifying. Daniel was beaten 6-3, 6-2 by sixth-seeded Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay. Eighth-seeded Andrey Rublev of Russia pulled out with an arm injury after reaching the final at Doha last week and Britain's Kyle Edmund withdrew with a sprained ankle. Johnson, who struggled with his ball toss and couldn't always bring his big serve to bear, took time to make his way into the match but eventually gained a foothold. The second set was also tight and Carruana had set points in a pivotal 10th game on Johnson's serve which lasted 7-1/2 minutes before the American was able to hold. "Oh man, it's tough when you play someone you really don't know," Johnson said. "He swings hard and he hit it well." HARRISONBURG, La. (AP) - Louisiana State Police say two correctional officers are accused of battery on an inmate. Master Trooper Scott Moreau says in a news release that Catahoula Parish Deputies Charles Ray LeBlanc, of Sicily Island, and Ryan Shane Mayo, of Jonesville, were arrested Monday. Both were released Monday: LeBlanc on $20,000 bond and Mayo on a bond of $6,700. Moreau says both face charges of malfeasance in office. LeBlanc also faces charges of second-degree battery and Mayo of assault and simple battery. It was not immediately known if either has an attorney. Moreau says the sheriff's office asked state police in December to look into battery on an inmate. He would not comment on details such as the inmate's injuries. Moreau says the investigation is continuing. BRUSSELS (AP) - The European Union is to host a meeting with the foreign ministers of Iran, France, Germany and Britain to discuss the state of a landmark nuclear agreement with Iran. EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini convened Thursday's meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Jawad Zarif "to ensure a full and continued implementation" of the 2015 agreement. Under the accord, Iran curbed its nuclear program in exchange for an easing of international economic sanctions. The United States has said it would consider scrapping the deal. Mogherini, the European Union's top diplomat, says the United States stepping away from a landmark nuclear deal would be counterproductive and insists other disputes with Tehran should be tackled in other ways. WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Poland's new prime minister reshuffled his Cabinet on Tuesday, ousting the controversial ministers of foreign affairs, defense and the environment in a move aimed at mending relations with partners in the European Union. Mateusz Morawiecki, who became prime minister in December replacing Beata Szydlo, is seeking to improve Poland's deteriorating position in the EU and head off possible EU sanctions. Later in the day, the office of the European Commission's head, Jean-Claude Juncker, said the two had a "friendly" and "constructive" dinner in Brussels and would be seeking to make progress on better ties by the end of February. European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, right, greets Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki prior to a meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo) EU leaders have raised a series of concerns over Poland's changes to its justice system, government-approved logging in an old forest and refusal to take in migrants under an EU plan. They have opened a sanctioning procedure that could strip Poland of its EU voting rights. Morawiecki said at a news conference sought to explain to Juncker the goal of the changes in the justice system and that they are long-awaited and necessary. "I said that our intentions are aimed at making the system more efficient, more just and more objective" as well as transparent and cost-efficient, he said. Other themes included energy and climate policy as well as the approximately 1 million Ukrainians fleeing the conflict with Russia who have been given refuge in Poland. In making his government reshuffle, Morawiecki seemed to have persuaded Poland's most powerful politician, ruling party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, that the Cabinet ministers most criticized by EU leaders and by the opposition should go. "We are not and we don't want to be a dogmatic, doctrinal government, or a government of socialist or neo-liberal extremities," Morawiecki said during a swearing-in ceremony for the new ministers at the Presidential Palace. He said he wants Poland to have an important role in a strong Europe. The composition of the new government suggests Poland is attempting a more conciliatory approach to the EU. "I see it as a continuation of the drive to calm the situation and the emotions in areas where conflict was not needed" including the environment and the defense sectors, said Malgorzata Bonikowska, head of the Centre for International Relations think tank. The removals of Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski and Environment Minister Jan Szyszko, whose decision to cut trees in the pristine Bialowieza Forest has led to a procedure against Poland at the European Court of Justice, shows a will to mend fences within the EU. They were respectively replaced by Jacek Czaputowicz, the deputy foreign minister, and by a government economic expert, Henryk Kowalczyk. The new defense minister is Mariusz Blaszczak, the former interior minister, replacing a minister blamed for abruptly cancelling a deal to buy French-made helicopters. Morawiecki kept Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro, the author of the sweeping reform of the justice system, in a sign that he backs the changes. New finance and development ministers were also appointed as the jobs were vacated by Morawiecki when he became prime minister. ___ Associated Press writer Raf Casert in Brussels contributed to this report. European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, right, gestures as a journalist asks a question while he stands with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki prior to a meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo) European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, right, greets Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki prior to a meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo) European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, right, gestures as a journalist asks a question while he stands with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki prior to a meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo) Poland's President Andrzej Duda, left, takes the oath from new Foreign Minister Jacek Czaputowicz in the government of Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki at the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, just hours before Morawiecki heads off to Brussels for talks with top European Union officials. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) New Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Blaszczak, second right, attends a government swearing-in ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, just hours before Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki heads off to Brussels for talks with top European Union officials. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) New Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Jacek Czaputowicz, left, attends a government swearing-in ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, just hours before Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki heads off to Brussels for talks with top European Union officials. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, left, along with the new Ministers of his cabinet speaks during the swearing-in ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, just hours before Morawiecki heads off to Brussels for talks with top European Union officials. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) New Minister of the Interior and Administration Joachim Brudzinski attends a government swearing-in ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, just hours before Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki heads off to Brussels for talks with top European Union officials. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) FILE - A Thursday, Dec. 14, 2017 file photo showing Polish Prime Minister, Mateusz Morawiecki, arriving for an EU summit at the Europa building in Brussels. Poland's new prime minister is looking to improve strained relations with partners in the European Union when he arrives in Brussels on Tuesday, Jan. 9. 2017. The Polish government's stance on justice reform and immigration has prompted so much unease within the EU that a procedure to strip the country of voting rights in the 28-nation bloc has been started. (AP Photo/Olivier Matthys, File) New Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Jacek Czaputowicz attends a government swearing-in ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, just hours before Prime Minister Masteusz Morawiecki heads off to Brussels for talks with top European Union officials. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) BERLIN (AP) - The German government has protested to the Iranian ambassador following the conviction of an Iranian agent for spying on targets including a former German lawmaker who headed a German-Israeli friendship group. The Pakistani man was convicted in Berlin last year of espionage and sentenced to more than four years in prison. His targets included Reinhold Robbe, who headed the German-Israeli Association. Iranian ambassador Ali Majedi was summoned to the Foreign Ministry just before Christmas. After German media reported on the meeting, the ministry said Tuesday he was told that "spying on people and institutions with a particular relationship to the state of Israel on German soil is a blatant violation of German law." The ambassador was told that such activities would not be tolerated. MIAMI (AP) - A pilot who once flew tons of drugs for Colombian cartels during Miami's "cocaine cowboys" era went on trial Tuesday in an auto fraud case, with his attorney insisting prosecutors can't prove he knew anything illegal was going on. Attorney Rick Yabor told jurors in an opening statement there's little evidence that Mickey Munday created or dealt with the fraudulent paperwork used in the scheme to essentially steal more than 150 cars between 2008 and 2015. "All he was doing was transporting cars," Yabor said. "What they're going to feed you is a ghost story. And just like those ghost stories, it's going to be full of holes." In this Aug. 11, 2016 photo, Mickey Munday talks to a reporter in Love Park in North Miami, Fla. Federal prosecutors want to use the past of Munday, a pilot from Miami's "cocaine cowboys" era against him during an upcoming trial on charges of participating in an auto fraud ring. Court documents filed ahead of a Friday, Jan. 5, 2018, hearing claim Munday has openly bragged about his past in interviews, social media posts and in the documentary "Cocaine Cowboys." (AP Photo/Alan Diaz) Munday, 72, spent most of the 1990s in prison after pleading guilty to drug smuggling charges involving tons of cocaine from Pablo Escobar's Medellin cartel and also the Cali cartel during the 1980s. He frequently brags about his exploits in media interviews, social media posts and in a starring role in the 2006 documentary "Cocaine Cowboys." "If it flies, rolls or floats, I can drive it," Munday has often said. This time he's looking at up to 20 years in prison if convicted on each of six counts of mail fraud and conspiracy. Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne McNamara told jurors Munday was deeply involved in the scheme and was brought aboard in part because of his well-known past as a smuggler. "He brags about his ability to take advantage of law enforcement's weaknesses," she said. Prosecution evidence includes a videotaped interview between Munday and a police detective that McNamara said he gave voluntarily so he could find out what investigators knew about the scheme. In it, she said, he appears to admit knowing about the fraud. In addition, several other people who have already pleaded guilty are listed as prosecution witnesses. According to an indictment, the scheme involved obtaining cars that were about to be repossessed by a bank or other financial institution or through purchases at dealerships by straw buyers. Using tow truck businesses as fronts, the group created a trail of paper that ended with them having clear ownership of the vehicles, which they then sold at a profit. "It was a scheme to basically steal cars," said Detective Michael Goldsworthy of the Fort Lauderdale Police Department, who was the first prosecution witness. "They can do anything they want with it." Banks and other financial institutions lost more than $1.7 million, Goldsworthy said. In some cases, financially strapped people who sold the group their cars at discounts without paying off their loans had their credit ruined. Munday's main role was transporting the cars from all over the country to South Florida, and then hiding them either at his own Miami-area house or at warehouses operated by the other conspirators, prosecutors say. Some of his past as a cocaine smuggler will come up in this trial because of the similarities in the work, they say. The trial is expected to wrap up next week. _____ Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Miamicurt PARIS (AP) - A fire broke out Tuesday at a kosher market south of Paris that was vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti last week, French officials said. No one was reported injured but the fire damaged much of the Promo & Stock store. Authorities believe the fire in the suburb of Creteil was a criminal act because the store's protective shutters had been forced open, Antoine Besme of the regional prosecutor's office told The Associated Press. The back of a kosher market is pictured after a fire broke out in Creteil, south of Paris, Tuesday, Jan.9, 2018. French officials say the fire broke out at the kosher market south of Paris that was vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti last week. (AP Photo/Michel Euler) He said a preliminary investigation was opened and authorities were checking to see if the fire is linked to last week's vandalism. Albert Elharrar, president of the Creteil Jewish community, told the AP the manager of the shop is Muslim. "That shows the spirit of the city of Creteil where the Jewish community lives," he said. The fire also raised concerns because it broke out three years after a deadly Islamic extremist attack on a kosher market in Paris. On Jan. 9, 2015, Islamic extremist Amedy Coulibaly killed four people during a hostage-taking at a kosher supermarket in Paris. That took place one day after he killed a policewoman in a southern suburb of the capital and two days after his associates, brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi, killed 11 people at a newspaper office in Paris and a policeman on a nearby street. ___ AP reporter Nicolas Garriga contributed from Creteil This domain was recently registered at Namecheap.com. Please check back later! PARIS (AP) - French authorities have opened an investigation into Apple over revelations it secretly slowed down older versions of its handsets, the Paris prosecutor's office said Tuesday. The preliminary probe was opened last week over alleged "deception and planned obsolescence" of some Apple products, the office said. It is led by the French body in charge of fraud control, which is part of the finance ministry. It follows a legal complaint filed in December by a French consumer rights group whose aim is to stop the intentional obsolescence of goods by companies. FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2013 file photo, Parisians and tourists wander in front of an Apple store in Paris. A French prosecutor office said Tuesday Jan.9, 2018 an investigation into Apple over alleged planned obsolescence of some of its smartphones has been opened. It follows a legal complaint filed in December by pro-consumer group Halte a l'obsolescence programmee (Stop Planned Obsolescence). Under a 2015 law, it is banned to intentionally shorten lifespan of a product in order to incite customers replace it. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere, File) In France it is illegal to intentionally shorten the lifespan of a product in order to encourage customers replace it. A 2015 law makes that a crime, with penalties of up to two years in prison and fines of up to 5 percent of the company's annual turnover. Apple apologized in December for secretly slowing down older iPhones, a move it said was necessary to avoid unexpected shutdowns related to battery fatigue. The company said on its website "we have never - and would never - do anything to intentionally shorten the life of any Apple product, or degrade the user experience to drive customer upgrades." Apple France didn't respond to email and phone requests for comment on the latest legal developments in France from The Associated Press. Lawsuits against the company have also been filed in the U.S. and Israel. The French consumer rights group, called HOP, filed a lawsuit on Dec. 27. It claims Apple slowed down older smartphones in order to make clients buy the new iPhone 8, which was launched on the market around the same time, according to HOP's statement. Benchmark tests have suggested the slowdown isn't huge, but noticeable. Although Apple has said that's done to prevent iPhones from unexpectedly shutting down because of weak batteries, lawsuits filed against Apple say that its failure to disclose that right away could have led some people to wrongly conclude they needed a newer, faster phone rather than just a new battery. Laetitia Vasseur, the director of HOP, said studies have showed that peaks in speed reductions match the releases of new phones on the market. "We can see that there is an intention to have people buy new phones because of the speed reduction," she told the AP. Vasseur said her group launched a survey following its complaint so that users can report problems they have faced. In 10 days, HOP has received more than 3,000 reports that will be handed over to the DGCCRF, the government fraud watchdog in charge of the investigation, she said. Vasseur said she hopes that the consequences globally could be to go toward more sustainable and durable products "for all manufacturers that won't want to face the same kind of scandal." A similar investigation targeting Japanese printer-maker Epson was opened in November, also following a complaint by HOP. The Epson probe, was launched by another prosecutor's office, in Nanterre outside Paris, is related to some of its ink cartridges and printers' spare parts. It was the first legal action ever for planned obsolescence and deception in France, HOP said in a statement. Epson has denied any wrongdoing, saying that planned obsolescence is not part of the company's policy. In the French legal system, preliminary investigations are launched and led by prosecutors' offices. Such probes can last weeks or months. When they're over, prosecutors can either decide to drop the cases or to send them to investigating judges for full investigations. Judges, in turn, can also dismiss the cases, due to lack of evidence for instance, or send them to courts for trial. In these cases, the whole process may last months or even years. Since Epson and Apple cases are the first legal actions for planned obsolescence in France, there hasn't been case law yet on possible penalties, fines or damages awarded by courts under this particular offense. ___ Alex Turnbull in Paris contributed to the report RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak met with Saudi King Salman in a visit to the kingdom on Tuesday that highlights their close and at times controversial ties. Najib, who faces elections later this year, has clung to power despite a corruption scandal that involved nearly $700 million. Malaysia's attorney general cleared Najib of wrongdoing, saying the millions transferred to his personal bank account were a donation from the Saudi royal family and that most of it was returned. Meanwhile, the state investment fund he established and once ran, 1MDB, is under investigation in the U.S. and several other countries amid allegations of a global money-laundering scheme and embezzlement. The U.S. Justice Department says people close to Najib stole billions of dollars, and the U.S. government is working to seize $1.7 billion it says were taken from the fund to buy assets in the U.S. The state-run Saudi Press Agency said the two leaders discussed areas of cooperation during their meeting, which was attended by Saudi royal court advisers as well as Malaysia's minister of Islamic affairs. King Salman's four-day visit to Malaysia last year was followed by an announcement that the King Salman Center for International Peace would be built on a 40-acre (16-hecatre) plot of land in Malaysia's administrative capital of Putrajaya. The center aims to draw scholars of Islam to combat extremist views and promote tolerance. There have been concerns in recent years that under Najib, Saudi Arabia's ultraconservative interpretation of Islam has gained an expanded foothold in Malaysia. The kingdom has built mosques and schools across the region and offers scholarships to Malaysians and other Southeast Asian Muslims who want to study in Saudi Arabia. The U.N. Special Rapporteur for cultural rights, Karima Bennoune, said after a fact-finding visit to Malaysia in September there are "warning signs that the country's culture of tolerance is under threat." She expressed concern for the banning of specific traditional performing arts in parts of Malaysia, as well as the banning of books, including those about moderate and progressive Islam. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Former Florida Congresswoman Corrine Brown's longtime chief of staff has begun a four-year federal prison sentence in Maryland. The Florida Times-Union reports that 52-year-old Elias "Ronnie" Simmons arrived Monday as scheduled at a medium-security federal prison in Cumberland, Maryland. Once a powerful Democrat, Brown was found guilty last year of taking money from a charity that purported to award scholarships to poor students. Key to the government's conviction was testimony from Simmons and the charity's president, Carla Wiley. Both pleaded guilty after their federal indictments for misusing the charity's funds. Brown, 71, received a five-year prison sentence. A federal judge denied her request to remain free while she appeals the sentence. Wiley received a one-year, nine-month sentence followed by three years of probation. Both women have been ordered to report for prison Jan. 29. ___ Information from: The (Jacksonville) Florida Times-Union, http://www.jacksonville.com ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Lawmakers in Greece voted Tuesday to limit the powers of Islamic courts operating in a border region that is home to a 100,000-strong Muslim minority, scrapping procedures dating back more than 90 years. The proposed law passed easily, with backing from parliament's largest political parties. It eliminates rules that referred many civil cases involving members of the Muslim community to Sharia law courts. Greek courts now will have priority in all cases. The changes - considered long overdue by many Greek legal experts - follow a complaint a Muslim woman who lives in the northeastern Greek city of Komotini made to the Council of Europe's Court of Human Rights over an inheritance dispute. In this Friday, Dec. 8, 2017 file photo, pilgrims walk outside Kirmahalle Cammi mosque in the northeastern Greek town of Komotini. Lawmakers in Greece are set to limit powers of Islamic courts which operate in a border region of the town of Komotini that is home to a 100,000-strong Muslim minority, following a European court challenge. (AP Photo/Giannis Papanikos, File) Legislation concerning minority rights was based on international treaties following wars in the aftermath of the Ottoman empire's collapse. The Muslim minority in Greece is largely Turkish-speaking. Minority areas were visited last month by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said in a statement that the new law respects the "special characteristics" of Greece's Muslim minority, while redressing past injustices against community members "who were excluded from the legal guarantees and freedoms that all Greek citizens must enjoy." Greek governments in the past have been reluctant to amend minority rights, as many disputes between Greece and Turkey remain unresolved. Currently, Islamic court hearings are presided over by a single official, a state-appointed Muslim cleric. In parliament Tuesday, Constantine Gavroglou, minister of education and religious affairs, praised opposition party support for the bill. He said the current rules stemmed "from policies that were hostile toward the minority and sought to create second-class citizens." "This is not just a technical adjustment, it's a very important day for parliament ... because of the broad support that is key when addressing issues of democracy and people's rights," Gavroglou told lawmakers. The extreme-right Golden Dawn party rejected the bill, arguing that it failed to adequately outline what powers would be retained by Islamic courts and did not address the issue of locally elected clerics who operate in an unofficial, but influential capacity. ___ Nicholas Paphitis contributed to this story. Kantouris reported from Thessaloniki, Greece. Follow Gatopoulos at http://www.twitter.com/dgatopoulos and Kantouris at http://twitter.com/CostasKantouris MOSCOW (AP) - Yevgeny Avrorin, a renowned nuclear physicist who played an important role in developing Russia's atomic weapons, has died. He was 85. The Russian Federal Nuclear Center-VNIITF, one of the country's two main nuclear weapons centers, announced Avrorin's death Tuesday, adding that it followed a long illness. After graduating from university in 1954, Avrorin worked alongside Andrei Sakharov to help build the first Soviet megaton-range hydrogen bomb. In 1955 he joined the VNIITF nuclear center located in Chelyabinsk-70, or Snezhinsk, a closed city in the Ural Mountains. Avrorin, who served as the center's scientific director in 1985-2007, played a leading role in designing a range of nuclear weapons. BANJA LUKA, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Bosnian Serbs are celebrating a banned "statehood" holiday in stubborn defiance of the west and their non-Serb compatriots. A handful of international guests attended the celebration on Tuesday in Banja Luka, the largest city in the Serb-run part of Bosnia. They included Anatoly Bibilov, president of Georgia's breakaway province of South Ossetia. The January 9 holiday commemorates the date in 1992 when Bosnian Serbs declared the creation of an exclusively Serb state in multi-ethnic Bosnia. The act ignited the country's fratricidal 1992-95 war, which claimed 100,000 lives. After the war, Republika Srpska became a semi-autonomous region of Bosnia. Non-Serbs who returned to their homes there view the holiday as a celebration of the expulsions they suffered. Bosnia's constitutional court banned the holiday in 2015, but Bosnian Serbs have refused to accept the ruling. JUBA, South Sudan (AP) - South Sudan's armed opposition says four government soldiers have been killed in new clashes just outside the capital, Juba. The opposition says soldiers in two vehicles attacked their position Tuesday morning in Wunu'Lyet, less than 10 kilometers (6 miles) from Juba. It's the latest violation of a cease-fire that began Dec. 24 with the hope of calming a civil war that has entered its fifth year. Opposition spokesman Lam Paul Gabriel calls the fighting "a clear demonstration that (President) Salva Kiir has no intention whatsoever to respect the signed cessation of hostilities." He says two rebels were wounded. Army spokesman Lual Ruai Koang says he isn't aware of any new fighting. South Sudan's civil war has killed tens of thousands. Another round of high-level peace talks is scheduled for February. BERLIN (AP) - A man has been sentenced to 3 years in prison for throwing a bottle at police officers during the riots that accompanied last year's Group of 20 summit in Hamburg - the highest sentence yet over the disturbances. German news agency dpa reported Tuesday that the Hamburg district court convicted the 28-year-old German, whose name wasn't released, of bodily harm, attacking officers and breaching the peace. The court found that the man, who had a significant previous criminal record, broke a beer bottle and threw it at police, hitting one officer and lightly injuring his hand. Hamburg saw three nights of violence during the anti-globalization protests as leaders of the world's biggest industrial and developing countries met in the northern port city in early July. NEW YORK (AP) - A union representing New York City police officers sued the department Tuesday, saying its release of body camera footage without a court order violates a state law that makes officer disciplinary records confidential. The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, which represents about 24,000 uniformed officers, said the public release of footage, which began last summer on a limited basis, also violates the privacy of everyday citizens caught on camera. "This conduct disregards not only the clear prohibitions, but also the very serious safety, privacy, due process, and other interests" of everyone seen in such videos, said the lawsuit, filed in a state court in Manhattan. FILE - In this April 27, 2017, file photo, a police officer wears a newly issued body camera at the 34th precinct in New York. A union representing New York City police officers sued the department Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, saying its release of body camera footage without a court order violates a state law that makes officer disciplinary records confidential. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File) The city's law department said it is reviewing the complaint. "The mayor and the police commissioner have spoken to the need for increasing transparency into the way our city is policed. The release of body camera footage, when possible, is an important extension of that commitment," said Austin Finan, a spokesman for the mayor. In its lawsuit, the union cited New York Civil Rights Law 50-a, which bars the public release of all police "personnel records used to evaluate performance toward continued employment or promotion," unless a judge has signed off on the disclosure. The law is silent on what, exactly, constitutes a personnel record, but in practice the department has not interpreted that to mean video footage of officers interacting with the public. It has routinely released video footage showing officers doing their jobs, including recordings made by security cameras or by department personnel, and began selectively disclosing body camera footage in September. Use of body cameras in police departments has exploded in the past five years, in part as a way to address transparency concerns amid tensions over killings of unarmed black men by officers. The public has largely been in favor of using cameras and departments have advertised them as a way to protect police from false accusations. But their use has been met with resistance. Chicago's police union is fighting body cameras on the grounds that their implementation wasn't properly negotiated with the union and violated the labor contract. Seattle's police union filed a complaint over the summer. Decisions about whether to release or withhold footage have also been contentious. In Chicago, city officials initially fought the release of video showing a white officer shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times in October 2014, and protests erupted when the footage was eventually released. In some cities, the decision to release such video is made by mayors or prosecutors. In San Diego, the district attorney has said videos would not be released until her office has completed a review and only sections relevant to the investigation would be released. In Washington, D.C., the mayor's office decides with input from police and prosecutors. NYPD officials released the first footage of a fatal police shooting caught on a body camera in September 2017. In a note to officers, Police Commissioner James O'Neill said the department was releasing the footage because it was committed to being transparent. The Bronx district attorney objected to the release, because she had not yet finished her investigation of the fatal shooting of Miguel Richards. Footage from other shootings has since been released; department officials have said they are taking it on a case-by-case basis. That includes decisions about how much footage to release, whether to edit excerpts or whether to make it public at all. Patrick Lynch, head of the union, said the mayor and police commissioner, also named in the suit, are "selectively releasing portions of videos to suit their own interests." "Nobody with a stake in these issues should be comfortable with this politicized, secret and unchecked process: not the district attorneys, not good government advocates, not the public, and certainly not police officers and their families whose personal safety is being placed at risk." CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - Venezuela has extended its ban on air and maritime ties with three nearby Dutch Caribbean islands, blaming out of control smuggling, officials said Tuesday. Venezuela is pressing for high-level talks with leaders of Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire before trading can resume, officials said of the move, which drew criticism from Venezuela's struggling business community. Vice President Tareck El Aissami said leaders of the three islands must step up to control criminal groups that he says are smuggling Venezuelan goods, harming citizens of his country. "We are not going to allow anymore aggression from these criminal organizations," El Aissami said on Twitter, urging leaders of the islands to take action. President Nicolas Maduro on Friday first ordered the 72-hour ban, accusing island leaders of being complicit in illegal trafficking. That followed threats he made in mid-December to close the routes. Venezuelan authorities allege the smuggling of products out of Venezuela to neighboring countries is one of the causes of the severe shortage of food and other basic products that the South American country has been facing for several years. The islands popular with tourists lie a short distance from Venezuela's coast and host oil refineries run by Venezuela's state oil giant and its U.S. subsidiary, Citgo. The Netherlands' ministry of foreign affairs issued a statement saying it recognizes that smuggling is a problem, but adding that constructive discussions between the two countries are underway to reach a solution with a meeting set for Friday. "We assume that, if a joint approach to smuggling has been agreed, Venezuela will reverse the measures," the statement said. Curacao Prime Minister Eugene Rhuggenaath said in a statement that Venezuela's action was disappointing and "does not fit in with the desire for a good neighbor relationship" or "contribute to finding a solution." Maria Carolina Uzcategui, president of Venezuela's largest chamber of commerce, said the ban will increase shortages at home because merchants buy goods from the Caribbean islands that are scarce in Venezuela. Uzcategui said government security forces control ports and airports so they should be held responsible for illegal activities. Cutting off flights prevents Venezuelans and other tourists making international connections, especially in Aruba, she said. "Venezuela is increasingly isolated from the world," Uzcategui told The Associated Press. Venezuelans fleeing the nation's economic collapse have sometimes gone to the islands by boat. In 2015 and 2016, Maduro took a similar measure to combat smuggling by temporarily closing the border crossings with Colombia. MOSCOW (AP) - The Latest on the conflict in Syria (all times local): 9:15 p.m. A Turkish government official says Turkey has summoned the ambassadors of Russia and Iran to complain about recent Syrian government advances. In this photo taken from the Russian Defence Ministry Press Service Facebook page on Tuesday, Jan. 9 2018, one of the drones that was forced to land after an unsuccessful attack attempt sits at a table at Hemeimeem air base in Syria. Russia's Defence Ministry said its forces repelled a series of drone attacks on the Hemeimeem air base and a naval facility in Tartus, adding that such attacks would have required assistance from a country possessing satellite navigation technology - a statement that appeared to be aimed at the United States. (Russian Defence Ministry Press Service photo via AP) The official said Turkey conveyed its concerns Tuesday over the advances in northern Syria, which it says are in violation of a "de-escalation" agreement in Idlib province reached by Ankara, Moscow and Tehran. The ambassadors were asked to relay to Syria's government that the violation must end immediately. The official provided the information on condition of anonymity in line with government protocol. Earlier, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu accused Syrian government forces of attacking moderate opposition fighters under the guise of fighting extremists and said the move threatened peace talks scheduled in Russia later this month. Turkey, Russia and Iran have taken the lead in Syria peace efforts over the past year. But while Turkey backs the opposition, Russia and Iran support Syrian President Bashar Assad. - Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey 6:15 p.m. Russia's Defense Ministry says a recent series of drone attacks on its military bases in Syria would have required assistance from a country possessing satellite navigation technology. The ministry said its forces repelled a series of drone attacks Saturday on the Hemeimeem air base and a naval facility in Tartus. It said that out of the 13 drones involved, seven were shot down and six were forced to land without inflicting any damage. Without blaming any specific country, the ministry claimed data for the attacks could only have been obtained "from one of the countries that possesses know-how in satellite navigation." In Tuesday's statement, it noted a "strange coincidence" of a U.S. military intelligence plane flying over the Mediterranean near the two Russian bases at the moment of the attack. ___ 6 p.m. Syria's state news agency SANA says rebel shelling of the capital has killed five people and wounded 30. Tuesday's shelling came as opposition activists reported airstrikes and shelling of rebel-held Damascus suburbs that killed and wounded dozens. SANA said 15 shells struck the central, predominantly Christian neighborhood of Bab Touma. The capital has been shelled on a near-daily basis in recent weeks. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said warplanes attacked several suburbs of Damascus, including Saqba, where a man and a child were killed and 13 others were wounded. The Observatory and the Syrian Civil Defense, first responders known as the White Helmets, reported airstrikes on other suburbs including Harasta and Douma ___ 12:30 p.m. The Kremlin says the number of Russian troops left in Syria is sufficient for fending off any attacks by militants. Russia's Defense Ministry said late on Monday that its forces have repelled a series of drone attacks on its bases in Syria - the Hemeimeem air base and a naval facility in Tartus. It said that out of the 13 drones involved, seven were shot down and six were forced to land. The ministry said there was no damage. Russian President Vladimir Putin declared victory in Syria last month and ordered a partial troops pullout. Asked Tuesday whether the withdrawal could have been premature in view of the drone attack, Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Russian forces in Syria have "all the necessary means" to counter any challenge. In this photo taken from the Russian Defence Ministry Press Service Facebook page on Tuesday, Jan. 9 2018, mortar shells are lined up next to one of the drones that was forced to land after an unsuccessful attack attempt at Hemeimeem air base in Syria. Russia's Defence Ministry said its forces repelled a series of drone attacks on the Hemeimeem air base and a naval facility in Tartus, adding that such attacks would have required assistance from a country possessing satellite navigation technology - a statement that appeared to be aimed at the United States. (Russian Defence Ministry Press Service photo via AP) WASHINGTON (AP) - Employers posted fewer open jobs in November, the second straight month of decline after openings reached a record high in September. The Labor Department said Tuesday that the number of available jobs slipped 0.8 percent to 5.88 million, down from 5.93 million in October. September's peak was 6.18 million. Job openings are still 4.4 percent higher than a year ago. With the economy expanding at a solid pace and businesses confident about future demand, hiring is likely to remain solid going forward. FILE - In this Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017, file photo, Job seeker Alejandra Bastidas fills out an application at a job fair, at Dolphin Mall in Sweetwater, Fla. Employers posted fewer open jobs in November, the second straight month of decline after openings reached a record high in September. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz, File) Still, the drop off echoes last Friday's monthly jobs report, which saw employers add 148,000 jobs in December. That is a decent total but lower than October and November job gains, which topped 200,000. The unemployment rate remained 4.1 percent for a third month, the government said Friday. Economists forecast that hiring may slow this year as businesses struggle to find enough qualified workers. Here are some other key takeaways from the report: __ Job openings fell in November in manufacturing; professional and business services, which includes engineers, architects and other high-paying jobs; and government. __ Openings rose in construction, retail, and hotels and restaurants. __ The number of Americans quitting their jobs fell slightly in November from October, but is still up 3 percent from a year ago. More quitting is a good sign because people typically quit for a better job, often at higher pay. __ Total hiring also fell, to 5.49 million from 5.59 million in October. That figure represents all hiring, while job gains reported last week reflect a net figure after layoffs, quits and retirements are subtracted. LONDON (AP) - Hundreds of people have lined the streets of London's vibrant Brixton neighborhood to welcome Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to a youth radio station. The prince and his fiancee visited community station Reprezent FM, which provides media training and experience to young people. Onlookers cheered as the couple arrived at the station, housed inside shipping containers in the diverse south London district, a hub for Britain's African and Caribbean communities. Britain's Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle arrive for their visit to the Reprezent 107.3 FM radio station in Brixton, south London, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. The royal couple visited Tuesday to see the station's work supporting young people through creative training in radio and broadcasting, and to learn more about their model of using music, radio and media for social impact. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein) Station founder Shane Carey said news of the visit had caused "massive excitement." Prince Harry and his brother Prince William support youth projects through their charitable foundation. Tuesday's visit was the couple's second official visit since the couple announced their engagement in November. The U.S. actress and the queen's grandson are due to marry May 19 at Windsor Castle. Royal fans await the arrival of Britain's Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle for their visit to the Reprezent 107.3 FM radio station in Brixton, south London, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. The royal couple will visit Tuesday to see the station's work supporting young people through creative training in radio and broadcasting, and to learn more about their model of using music, radio and media for social impact. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein) Royal fans await the arrival of Britain's Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle for their visit to the Reprezent 107.3 FM radio station in Brixton, south London, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. The royal couple will visit Tuesday to see the station's work supporting young people through creative training in radio and broadcasting, and to learn more about their model of using music, radio and media for social impact. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein) Britain's Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle waves through bamboo as they arrive for their visit to the Reprezent 107.3 FM radio station in Brixton, south London, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. The royal couple visited Tuesday to see the station's work supporting young people through creative training in radio and broadcasting, and to learn more about their model of using music, radio and media for social impact. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein) Britain's Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle looks through bamboo as they arrive for their visit to the Reprezent 107.3 FM radio station in Brixton, south London, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018. The royal couple visited Tuesday to see the station's work supporting young people through creative training in radio and broadcasting, and to learn more about their model of using music, radio and media for social impact. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein) CROUSEVILLE, Maine (AP) - A group of concerned citizens in Maine saved a young moose trapped in the snow. WLBT-TV reports that the group dug the calf out of 40 inches (101.6 centimeters) of snow in Crouseville on Monday. Lauren Allen's husband was among the small crowd of helpers. Allen says Maine game wardens responded to help load the distressed animal onto a flat sled and move her to stable ground. Allen says the moose got stranded last week too and needed help. Community members think the calf lost its mother. But a Warden Service spokesman said there's no happy ending. Cpl. John MacDonald said the baby moose's labored breathing pointed toward an illness called lungworm. In consultation with wildlife biologists, Wardens determined the moose had to be put down. ___ Information from: WLBZ-TV, http://www.wlbz2.com PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - CBS "Face the Nation" host John Dickerson is leaving Washington to take over as the third host of the "CBS This Morning," pairing with Gayle King and Norah O'Donnell as the replacement for the fired Charlie Rose. It's a return to the general news roots for Dickerson, a former Time magazine correspondent, but opens a new job on CBS' Sunday lineup. Dickerson starts at "CBS This Morning" on Wednesday. "I feel like it's the kind of program that fits in with the journalism I've been doing all my life," Dickerson said on Tuesday. FILE - In this Aug. 10, 2015 file photo, Political Director for CBS News, John Dickerson, participates in the CBS News panel at the CBS Summer TCA Tour in Beverly Hills, Calif. CBS News has selected Dickerson as Charlie Rose's replacement on the "CBS This Morning" program, pairing him with current anchors Gayle King and Norah O'Donnell. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, File) Unlike ABC's George Stephanopoulos, who continues to host ABC's "This Week" on Sunday along with "Good Morning America" during the week, Dickerson said keeping both jobs wasn't an option. The preparation for the morning show would take up too much time. "There's just no way I'd be able to do both," Dickerson said. The move illustrates the importance of morning programs to network news divisions, where they are the most reliable profit centers. CBS is third behind NBC's "Today" and "Good Morning America" in viewership but has made steady progress in ratings and reputation since it was launched with Rose, O'Donnell and King six years ago. CBS News President David Rhodes said that he hoped Dickerson's appointment "underscores to the audience that we're the serious choice in the morning." Rose was fired in late November following allegations of sexual misconduct. Dickerson is one of a handful of personalities that CBS has been trying out as substitute hosts since Rose's exit. The appointment comes a week after NBC's announcement that Hoda Kotb has replaced Matt Lauer on the competing "Today" show - another job that opened because of a firing due to sexual misconduct charges. That move has paid dividends for NBC, which has passed "Good Morning America" in the ratings since Kotb began filling in for Lauer the day his firing was announced. Similarly, Rhodes said CBS has been able to keep its morning momentum despite the sudden loss of Rose. He said that he'll be in Washington later this week to begin the process of finding Dickerson's replacement there. Dickerson is relocating to New York for his new job. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A federal judge on Tuesday likened the nation's opioid epidemic to the deadly 1918 flu pandemic while noting the drug crisis is "100 percent manmade." Judge Dan Polster urged participants on all sides of lawsuits against drugmakers and distributors to work toward a common goal of reducing overdose deaths. He said the issue has come to courts because "other branches of government have punted" it. The judge is overseeing more than 180 lawsuits against drug companies brought by local communities across the country, including those in California, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia. Municipalities include San Joaquin County in California; Portsmouth, Ohio; and Huntington, West Virginia. Polster said the goal must be reining in the amount of painkillers available. "What we've got to do is dramatically reduce the number of pills that are out there, and make sure that the pills that are out there are being used properly," Polster said during a hearing in his Cleveland courtroom. "Because we all know that a whole lot of them have gone walking, with devastating results." The judge said he believes everyone from drugmakers to doctors to individuals bear some responsibility for the crisis and haven't done enough to stop it. The government tallied 63,600 overdose drug deaths in 2016, another record. Most of the deaths involved prescription opioids such as OxyContin or Vicodin or related illicit drugs such as heroin and fentanyl. The epidemic is the most widespread and deadly drug crisis in the nation's history. Hundreds of lawsuits filed by municipal and county governments could end up as part of the consolidated federal case overseen by Polster, but others are not likely to. Some government bodies, including Ohio and at least nine other states, are suing the industry in state courts. Additionally, most states have joined a multistate investigation of the industry that could end up sparking a settlement or yet more litigation against the industry. Targets of the lawsuits include drugmakers such as Allergan, Johnson & Johnson, and Purdue Pharma, and the three large drug distribution companies, Amerisource Bergen, Ohio-based Cardinal Health and McKesson. Drug distributors and manufacturers named in these and other lawsuits have said they don't believe litigation is the answer but have pledged to help solve the crisis. Polster said the nation is running the risk of seeing average U.S. life expectancy diminish three years consecutively thanks to the epidemic, something that hasn't happened since the 1918 flu killed thousands. "This is 100 percent manmade," Polster said. "I'm pretty ashamed that this has occurred while I've been around." __ Associated Press Writer Geoff Mulvihill in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and AP Medical Writer Carla Johnson in Chicago contributed to this report. BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - Former Catalan president Artur Mas announced Tuesday he is resigning as head of his regional pro-independence party, saying he wants to clear the way for a new generation of leaders pushing for secession from Spain. Pro-independence parties including Mas' PdeCat won the most seats - 70 out of 135 - in the Catalan parliamentary election in December. Mas said that result was "very good" and brought a new phase in the secession drive. "(We need to ) clear the way for new people to lead a project for the future" in Catalonia, Mas, 61, told a news conference. FILE- In this Monday, May 8, 2017 file photo, former Catalan president Artur Mas, left, waves to the crowd next to the then Catalan regional President Carles Puigdemont at the main entrance of the court in Barcelona, Spain. Mas announced Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, he is resigning as head of his regional pro-independence party, saying he wants to clear the way for a new generation of leaders pushing for secession from Spain. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File) Mas was Catalan president between 2010 and 2016 before stepping aside, handpicking Carles Puigdemont as his successor. Puigdemont became the independence movement's leader but is currently a fugitive in Belgium. Differences between the two have grown since Puigdemont led separatist lawmakers in unilaterally declaring Catalan independence from Spain on Oct. 27. Spain responded by sacking Puigdemont and his government, dissolved the local parliament and called a new election Dec. 21. Puigdemont fled to Brussels to avoid a judicial investigation into suspicions of rebellion by him and his Catalan government for pressing ahead with the independence bid. However, Puigdemont is demanding to be re-instated as Catalan president and continuing with his independence drive after his strong election showing. Mas has argued that the secessionists need to win broader support before moving on with the secession effort. Mas also cited legal reasons for his decision to quit. Mas was last year banned from holding public office for two years after being found guilty of disobeying Spain's Constitutional Court by holding a mock Catalan independence referendum in 2014. His party and its members are also bracing for court rulings later this month into corruption allegations. QUITO, Ecuador (AP) - Ecuador's foreign minister says the country is seeking possible mediation to resolve the case of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has been in asylum at its London embassy for more than five years. Maria Fernanda Espinosa said at a news conference on Tuesday that notable asylum cases in recent years have sometimes required mediation by a third country. Assange has been at the embassy since June 2012 to avoid a Swedish extradition request on a case of alleged rape. While Sweden has at least temporarily dropped that investigation, British officials say they'd still arrest him on charges of bail jumping. Assange also fears a possible U.S. extradition request stemming from the leaking of classified U.S. documents. Espinosa says her country is seeking solutions, saying the situation "is not sustainable." MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) - An attorney for a popular Chinese comedian facing weapon and drug charges in suburban New York says his client is confident he eventually will be exonerated. Zhou Libo, a former judge on "China's Got Talent," pleaded not guilty Tuesday to a five-count indictment. He is charged with illegal possession of a handgun, possession of a controlled substance identified as crystal methamphetamine and driving while using a cellphone. The comedian was arrested about a year ago in the exclusive village of Lattingtown, east of New York City on what is known as Long Island's "gold coast." Attorney Stephen Scaring says the comedian denies owning the gun or the drugs. He says Libo was driving the car, but doesn't know how the items got there. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Former federal consumer watchdog Richard Cordray will join forces with former congresswoman and Obama-era official Betty Sutton on Wednesday in the race for Ohio governor, a Democrat close to the campaign told The Associated Press. The move comes as Democrats position to win back control of the key battleground state in November. The new team is expected to draw big-name Democratic support that could include former President Barack Obama, former Vice President Joe Biden and Massachusetts U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren. The decision by Cordray's gubernatorial campaign to go with Sutton as his running mate follows a similar move by two key Republicans: Attorney General Mike DeWine and Secretary of State Jon Husted consolidated their campaigns on Nov. 30, to unite campaign and grassroots resources and to minimize negative attacks that could hurt their party in the general election. FILE - In this Dec. 5, 2017, file photo, Richard Cordray, the former director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, announces that he is a Democratic candidate for Ohio governor at "Lilly's Kitchen Table" Restaurant in Grove City, Ohio. Cordray is joining forces with former congresswoman and Obama-era official Betty Sutton in the Ohio governor's race as Democrats position to win back the key battleground state in November. (Brooke LaValley/The Columbus Dispatch via AP, File) Meanwhile, Republican Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor was ready to announce a veteran Procter & Gamble Co. executive as her running mate. A Republican close to the campaign said she will on Wednesday name Nathan Estruth, CEO of a plastics technology company. The person requested anonymity pending the official announcement. Republican governor candidate U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci has as his running mate Amy Murray, a Cincinnati councilwoman and former Asian business division executive for consumer products maker Procter & Gamble. The Cordray-Sutton ticket still faces a crowded Democratic field. Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, ex-state Rep. Connie Pillich, state Sen. Joe Schiavoni and Supreme Court Justice William O'Neill are seeking the party's nomination, and former Cleveland mayor and congressman Dennis Kucinich has filed paperwork for a likely run. O'Neill announced his running mate, educator Chantelle E. Lewis, of East Cleveland, on Tuesday, adding age and race diversity that O'Neill said will distinguish him with Democratic voters. O'Neill, who's 70 years old, is white, as are the other gubernatorial candidates; Lewis, who's 42, is black. A Kucinich spokesman said Tuesday the former congressman will provide more details on whether he plans to make a run "over the next several days." He is said to be considering Nina Turner, a fiery former state senator who was a leading national mouthpiece for Vermont U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders' Democratic presidential bid, as a running mate. Many political observers view Cordray as Democrats' strongest contender to seize a critical swing state from Republicans. Cordray served until November as head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, one of the last major Obama-era holdouts in President Donald Trump's administration. He is the only Democrat in the race who has run an Ohio statewide office, having been state treasurer and state attorney general. Cordray hired Democratic fundraiser Antonia Koch after she helped Democrat Doug Jones raise $10 million in the final months of his Alabama campaign for U.S. Senate. Jones beat Republican Roy Moore, a former judge who was accused of sexual misconduct with teenage girls decades ago, when he was a county prosecutor in his 30s, in the high-profile contest. Moore, who was backed by Trump, largely denied the misconduct accusations. Sutton, who's from Copley, brings strong labor support and a pro-consumer record to the Cordray team. In Congress, she sponsored the law that created Cash for Clunkers, a program that provided financial incentives to car owners to trade in old vehicles for more fuel-efficient models. More than 60,000 jobs were saved or created in the second half of 2009 under the program, according to federal figures. Sutton's decision to put her own gubernatorial hopes behind Cordray's is sure to face pushback from some women. An active contingent of Democrats had been working to make 2018, a year that follows Hillary Clinton's presidential race defeat and a national anti-sexual harassment wave, the first year Ohio elects a female governor. ___ Associated Press reporter Dan Sewell contributed in Cincinnati. FILE - In this July 19, 2011, file photo, Rep. Betty Sutton, D-Ohio takes part in a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington to discuss their support for a bill. Former federal consumer watchdog Richard Cordray is joining forces with former congresswoman and Obama-era official Sutton in the Ohio governor's race as Democrats position to win back the key battleground state in November. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File) DETROIT (AP) - Toyota is recalling 601,000 more vehicles in the U.S. to replace defective and potentially deadly Takata air bag inflators. The company says the recall covers the Toyota Corolla and Matrix, Scion xB, Lexus IS250 and 350, and the Lexus IS-F from 2009, 2010 and 2013. Also covered are the 2010 and 2013 Toyota 4-Runner, Lexus IS250C and 350C and Lexus GX460, as well as the 2009 and 2010 Toyota Yaris and Lexus ES350, and the 2013 Toyota Sienna. The recalls come after Takata revealed that another 3.3 million inflators are defective. Its inflators can explode with too much force and hurl shrapnel. At least 20 people have died worldwide and more than 280 have been hurt. Owners will be notified by March and dealers will replace front passenger inflators or air bag assemblies. BOISE, Idaho (AP) - An Idaho Republican state lawmaker who was under investigation for possible sexual abuse, died in an apparent suicide, according to authorities on Tuesday. Canyon County Coroner Vicki DeGeus-Morris said Brandon Hixon was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head in his Caldwell home early Tuesday morning. A family member discovered his remains. Hixon, 36, was elected to the Idaho Legislature in 2012. At the time, Hixon was one of the youngest lawmakers elected to the Idaho House of Representatives. He flew relatively under the radar during his time in the Statehouse until October, when he abruptly resigned from office after reports broke he was the subject of a criminal investigation for possible sexual abuse. The Attorney General's office was overseeing the investigation, but declined to comment Tuesday when contacted by The Associated Press. "I hope that my efforts have helped improve the lives of my constituents in District 10, as well as all Idahoans," Hixon wrote in his resignation letter. "I will never forget all of my colleagues that I very much enjoyed working side by side with to make Idaho a better place for all." Records obtained by The Associated Press also show that Hixon was previously the focus of a separate police investigation in 2014 after he was accused of inappropriate touching. At the time, Hixon denied the accusations and told police he was worried the allegations would harm his political career. It's unknown if the new investigation - which had been ongoing since Oct. 5 - was connected to the prior case. After resigning from office, Hixon was arrested twice for drunken driving and was charged with misdemeanor resisting arrest last month. Hixon is survived by his four children, aged 6 to 17. House Speaker Scott Bedke announced Hixon's apparent suicide to House members during Tuesday's floor session. The House chaplain then led a prayer. "We should support those who are close to us when they are struggling," Bedke said. "Please remember Brandon's family in your prayers." Bedke later said the House will likely organize some sort of financial relief for Hixon's family, but said it was too early to say what exactly was planned. Other lawmakers also offered condolences. "Very saddened by the about news Rep. Hixon. I wish I had followed the promptings I received and called with words of kindness and encouragement," said Rep. Bryan Zollinger, R-Idaho Falls, in a tweet. "Reminder to us all to love one another despite differences of opinion." Others wished for peace for Hixon and his family. "Still stunned and shocked. I didn't always agree with Rep. Hixon, but I could work with and talk to him," said Rep. John McCrostie, D-Boise, in a tweet. "That's seriously a big deal. Hope you find some peace, Brandon. Condolences and prayers to his family including his children." ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - New York state is stepping in to help thousands of Salvadorans facing deportation following a decision by the Trump administration. Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo says Tuesday some 16,000 people from El Salvador will be forced to return to that country after U.S. Homeland Security officials announced the end of a policy that had granted them temporary residency after a devastating 2001 earthquake. Now, those Salvadorans have until Sept. 9, 2019 to leave the country or face deportation. Cuomo says employees at two state agencies that work with immigrants will begin an outreach and assistance campaign to ensure the Salvadorans understand their options and legal rights. Cuomo says the decision to deport families who fled disaster to rebuild their lives in America is disgraceful and unjust. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Kansas City's airport is getting its first regularly scheduled nonstop transatlantic flight. Airport officials announced Tuesday that Icelandair will fly a seasonal nonstop flight from Kansas City to Iceland's capitol, Reykjavik, beginning May 25. The flights will be three times a week from May to the end of September. The airport says travelers will be able to connect to more than 25 popular destinations in continental Europe from Reyvjavik. The flights from Kansas City will be on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, with return flights to Kansas City on Sundays, Tuesdays and Fridays. The Kansas City Star reports airport officials are pursuing other transatlantic routes, possibly to the United Kingdom or Germany. Icelandair will use a 183-seat airliner that includes economy and business class sections for the flights. SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) - Discovery Communications, the company that operates the Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, TLC and other popular cable channels, announced Tuesday that it will relocate its global headquarters from Maryland to New York City. The company, which employs about 1,300 people in the Silver Spring area, said it plans to sell its current headquarters and move into a new building in New York in 2019. David Zaslav, Discovery's president and chief executive officer, told employees the decision was prompted by rapid changes in the media industry. He said many of the company's advertising partners, investors, analysts and content partners are based in New York. FILE - In this Monday, July 31, 2017, file photo, the Discovery Communications logo sits atop its headquarters in Silver Spring, Md. Discovery Communications, the company that operates the Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, TLC and other popular cable channels, announced Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, that it plans to relocate its global headquarters from Maryland to New York City, in 2019. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File) Zaslav said Discovery will keep some of its operations, including network and support functions, and government relations, in Maryland. It also plans to expand its media distribution facility in Sterling, Virginia. Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said he has had ongoing discussions with the company but was told it didn't matter what incentives the state could offer because nothing would change the decision to move to New York. "It had nothing to do with the state of Maryland," Hogan told reporters during a news conference on an unrelated subject. "They were very happy here. We convinced them to keep about half of their operation here." Discovery said it also plans to establish a national operations headquarters at Scripps Networks Interactive's campus in Knoxville, Tennessee, once it closes on its previously announced acquisition of Scripps. Discovery was founded in Landover, Maryland, in 1985. The company moved its headquarters to Bethesda in 1991 and then to its current building in Silver Spring in 2003. Discovery said in a news release that the company will evaluate duplication and functions in cities around the world after the acquisition of Scripps is completed to determine the most efficient plan for housing its combined employee base. It said decisions on individual job status and relocation will be made after the close of the Scripps deal. WASHINGTON (AP) - Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon is stepping down as chairman of Breitbart News Network after a public break with President Donald Trump. Breitbart announced Tuesday that Bannon would step down as executive chairman of the conservative news site, less than a week after Bannon's explosive criticisms of Trump and his family were published in a new book. A report on the Breitbart website quotes Bannon saying, "I'm proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplished in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform." FILE - In this Nov. 9, 2017, file photo, Steve Bannon, speaks during an event in Manchester, N.H. Breitbart News Network announced Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, that Bannon is stepping down as chairman of the conservative news site. (AP Photo/Mary Schwalm, File) Trump lashed out at Bannon for comments made in Michael Wolff's "Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House," which questions the president's fitness for office. As Trump aides called him disloyal and disgraceful, the president branded his former chief strategist on Twitter as "Sloppy Steve," an apparent reference to Bannon's often unkempt appearance, and declared that "he lost his mind" when he was pushed out of the White House last August. The president was livid about Bannon's remarks - not just at the insults about his family, but also at his former strategist's apparent intent to take credit for Trump's election victory and political movement, according to a White House official and two outside advisers not authorized to speak publicly about internal conversations. After days of silence amid withering criticism from his former colleagues and his largest benefactor, Bannon tried to make amends. He issued a statement Sunday praising the president's eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., whom he was quoted accusing of treasonous behavior in the book. Bannon did not apologize for his criticism of the president's daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, with whom he had squabbled inside the West Wing. Bannon's departure from Breitbart came as a shock to some of his allies. One said Bannon was telling people as recently as Monday that he expected to stay on. Bannon's breakup with Breitbart is also costing him his daily show on the conservative talk station on satellite radio network SiriusXM. The company announced it is ending its relationship with Bannon, stating its programing agreement is with Breitbart. Inside the White House, Bannon was viewed as the keeper of Trump's nationalistic flame, charting the progress on the president's promises to his base on dry erase boards in his office. But Bannon was marginalized in the months before his ouster over Trump's concerns that the top aide was being viewed as an Oval Office puppeteer. Trump had stayed in touch with the Breitbart head after he left the White House in August, including consulting him on last month's Alabama Senate race. But since Bannon's quotes in the Wolff book emerged, the White House began sending Republicans and conservative figures a clear message: Trump or Bannon. The chief strategist had lost many allies in the West Wing after Chief of Staff John Kelly's staff shakeup and was blamed for some of the infighting that had paralyzed the White House. Some West Wing aides in recent days had made little effort to hide their happiness that Bannon had suffered such a public rebuke. The White House did not immediately respond to the news of Bannon's ouster, but press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders last week called on the conservative site - which has been a steadfast backer of the president - to "look at and consider" parting ways with Bannon. Despite the setback, Bannon has told confidants that he believes Trump, after a cooling-off period, will again seek his counsel, noting that the president often maintains contact with aides he has fired. But some Trump allies hope the president will permanently cut off his former strategist, and the fate of Bannon's insurgency against the Republican establishment is now in doubt. On Monday, deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley said Bannon's apology did not alter his standing with the president. "I don't believe there's any way back for Mr. Bannon at this point," Gidley said. __ AP Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace and AP writer Catherine Lucey contributed to this report. Lemire reported from New York. NEW YORK (AP) - Detectives said Tuesday they have cracked a 1994 rape case that an acclaimed newspaper columnist infamously claimed was a hoax. Police recently informed the victim that DNA collected after the attack on her had been matched to a serial rapist already in prison for other crimes. It's unclear whether he can be charged now because of the statute of limitations, but the breakthrough was vindication for the woman. She told police she was walking home with groceries through Brooklyn's Prospect Park on April 26, 1994, when she was dragged into the bushes and raped. Her detailed description of her attacker allowed police to release a sketch, and DNA evidence was recovered, but no arrests were made. This Sept. 29, 2016 photo provided by the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision shows James Edward Webb, a serial rapist serving 75 years to life in prison. Police say they have new DNA tests linking Webb with the 1994 rape of a 21-year old woman in Brooklyn's Prospect Park in New York. (New York State Department of Corrections via AP) Daily News columnist Mike McAlary wrote at the time that he heard from unnamed police sources that the woman invented her story because she wanted to bolster a speech she was to give at a rally about violence against lesbians. "The woman, who will probably end up being arrested herself, invented the crime, they said, to promote her rally," McAlary wrote in a column called "Rape hoax the real crime." He persisted even after DNA was discovered, writing three columns. The last column's headline was: "I'm right, but that's no reason to cheer." The woman sued McAlary for libel, but a judge dismissed the case in part because McAlary had been relying on information from police. An attorney who represented the Daily News and McAlary said then McAlary's reporting had been "vindicated" and it was police who "got some stuff wrong." McAlary died in 1998 at age 41. The woman's attorney, Martin Garbus, said Tuesday she's owed apologies from the Daily News and the police department. "This is a woman who had to live for 23 years with a false accusation of lying, with threats to the newspaper that she was about to be arrested," Garbus said. "It's horrific." The Daily News didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said the woman wept when detectives recently told her they'd found a DNA match in her rape case. "You can imagine how emotional she was," Boyce said. "I think my detectives cried with her." He said cold-case detectives have been going through unsolved stranger rapes. He said the DNA recovered in 1994 was mixed with the victim's DNA and there was no way at the time to subtract it. But police asked her for a sample and were able to isolate hers using modern methods, leaving them with a hit. Boyce said detectives matched the DNA to serial rapist James Edward Webb, who's serving 75 years to life in prison. Webb had been charged with 10 other rapes over several decades. He was arrested in 1995 on a separate rape. He told police he denied raping the woman in the 1994 case. It's unclear whether he was considered a suspect back then. Boyce said he wasn't involved in the 1994 case and couldn't comment on how it was handled by police, other than to say the woman had been treated badly. William Bratton, who was police commissioner at the time, apologized to the woman for the leak in the days after the McAlary column was published. The case was mentioned in "Lucky Guy," a 2013 Broadway play about McAlary by the late writer Nora Ephron. The play starred Tom Hanks as McAlary, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his columns on white police officers who assaulted a black Haitian immigrant, Abner Louima, in a Brooklyn police station in 1997. The controversy over McAlary's rape hoax columns also involved John Miller, then the police department's main spokesman and now its head of counterterrorism and intelligence, who was rumored to be one of McAlary's sources. During sworn questioning in the woman's libel lawsuit, Miller said he told McAlary and other reporters that detectives had doubts about her case because of inconsistences in her story and a lack of physical evidence, according to a New York Times article at the time. Miller said McAlary also had other police sources telling him they had doubts. Miller had no comment Tuesday other than to refer to the deposition. ___ Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report. ___ This story has been corrected to show the sentence is 75 years, not 25 years. ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Maryland lawmakers want to create an individual health care mandate at the state level - in response to Washington gutting it at the federal level - and turn it into a down payment for people to pay for health insurance. Supporters outlined the proposal Tuesday, a day before the Maryland legislative session begins, adding it could also work in other states to help keep insurance premiums from skyrocketing. The Maryland General Assembly is controlled by Democrats. The federal tax overhaul approved last month removed the federal penalty that was charged to people without health insurance. Under Maryland legislation, the state would offer people without insurance a choice: pay a tax penalty or use the money as a down payment on insurance. Delegate Joseline Pena-Melnyk, D-Md., discusses plans for legislation to create an individual mandate for health care at the state level and turn it into a down payment for people to get health insurance in the state during a news conference Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, in Annapolis, Md. State Sen. Jim Rosapepe is standing left and Sen. Brian Feldman is standing right. (AP Photo/Brian Witte) "We're saying instead of just paying the penalty and being off the rolls, we're going to take those dollars and deploy them in such a way as to use it as a down payment to allow you to make a decision to actually purchase health insurance," said state Sen. Brian Feldman, a Democrat representing a district in Maryland's most populous county. Feldman co-chaired a state commission created last year to monitor federal changes to the health care law. He said the legislation is an innovative approach to help stabilize Maryland's individual insurance market, after actions at the federal level threaten to disrupt it. Supporters say more than 200,000 uninsured Maryland residents could be affected. They also say the measure would help hold down rates to help those who buy insurance directly. State Sen. Jim Rosapepe, a Democrat, said the plan would affect everyone who buys their insurance directly instead of through their employer in Maryland, because insurance rates will go through the roof once the federal changes take effect. "If we don't pass this bill, hundreds of thousands of working people who already have insurance will see their insurance premiums skyrocket," Rosapepe said. But state Sen. Michael Hough, a Republican, said the proposal is a terrible idea and that he's surprised to hear his colleagues propose it. "It penalizes people who can't afford health insurance," Hough said. Stan Dorn, a senior policy adviser with the national health consumer advocacy group called Families USA, said nine other states and the District of Columbia, which have an income tax and a health care exchange, could consider adopting the idea. He said those states are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Massachusetts had an individual mandate before and during the Affordable Care Act provision. The state individual mandate was essentially superseded when the federal one went into effect, but it will go back into full effect when the federal mandate comes off the books. In Washington state, lawmakers are considering a measure requiring residents to ensure that they and any of their dependents maintain minimum essential health care coverage each month, unless they are exempted. Dorn also said about 10 other states could consider the proposal, but would likely require additional steps because they have a hybrid state health exchange. Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican who opposed the GOP effort in Washington to repeal the health care law entirely, said he hadn't seen the new plan pitched by Democratic lawmakers in the state and would keep an open mind. "If the legislature has some good ideas about what the state can do to make up for problems where Washington has failed or made mistakes that are going to hurt people in Maryland we're all ears," Hogan said. "We look forward to sitting down with them and listening to what they have to say." ___ Associated Press Writers Bob Salsberg in Boston and Rachel La Corte in Olympia, Washington, contributed to this report. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - A Northern California jury awarded more than $4 million in punitive damages to a former leader of the Black Panthers who was injured after an Oakland councilwoman punched and pushed her during an argument over housing. The jury found Oakland councilwoman Desley Brooks should pay $550,000 to Elaine Brown, who was injured after Brooks pushed her during a 2015 confrontation at a restaurant. The same jury last month found that Brooks was acting as a city employee and decided Oakland should pay Brown $3.8 million in damages, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Tuesday. FILE- In this Oct. 8, 2016 file photo, former Black Panther Party leader Elaine Brown answers questions outside a museum in Oakland, Calif. A Northern California jury has awarded more than $4 million in punitive damages to Brown, who was injured after Oakland councilwoman Desley Brooks pushed her during an argument over housing in 2015. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File) Jurors found that Brooks pushed Brown, who tumbled over a stack of chairs and suffered bruises and had to have surgery for a torn rotator cuff. "I feel grateful to the jury for understanding that this wasn't an issue of two black women fighting in a bar," Brown said Monday. "This was someone who was an elected official who abused her power." Brooks, who has been a member of Oakland's City Council for five years, said the verdict was "disappointing but not unexpected." The jury said the former Black Panther leader, who was 72-year-old at the time of the assault, was the victim of elder abuse and battery. Brown joined the Black Panther Party in 1968, helped it to organize community breakfasts and became its leader in 1974 after Huey Newton fled to Cuba to avoid murder charges. Brown, the only woman to lead the radical organization, stepped down in 1977 and later wrote that the movement had been male-dominated. The clash between the women stemmed from Brown's venture to build affordable housing for formerly incarcerated people in West Oakland. Brooks has opposed the project. Brown testified that, during a confrontation at Everett & Jones Barbeque in October 2015, the councilwoman told her the project was "of no benefit to black people," and after an exchange of angry words, physically attacked her. ___ Information from: San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com WASHINGTON (AP) - The Trump administration has approved a $130 million missile defense sale to Japan to meet the escalating threat from North Korea. The State Department says Congress was notified Tuesday of the proposed sale of four missiles for the SM-3 Block IIA interceptor. The system was jointly developed by Japan and the U.S. The missiles can be used at sea with Japan's current Aegis-equipped destroyers and with the land-based Aegis system its Cabinet approved for purchase last month. That's intended to bolster Japan's current missile defense and perhaps curry favor with President Donald Trump who is eager for U.S. allies to buy more American military hardware. The department says the sale will support the American defense industry and underscores Trump's commitment to improve the defense of allies threatened by North Korea. Singing helps women overcome postnatal depression, new research reveals. New mothers who struggle with moderate-to-severe symptoms of the condition recover significantly faster if they sing in a group, a study found. Although the study did not say why this likely occurs, previous research shows singing benefits depression sufferers by allowing them to express their emotions and aiding relaxation. Lead researcher Dr Rosie Perkins from the Centre for Performance Science in London, said: Postnatal depression is debilitating for mothers and their families, yet our research indicates that for some women something as accessible as singing with their baby could help to speed up recovery at one of the most vulnerable times of their lives. Postnatal depression affects more than one in 10 women within a year of giving birth in the UK. Singing helps women overcome postnatal depression, new research reveals (stock) PLAYING AN INSTRUMENT MAKES PEOPLE BETTER LISTENERS Playing an instrument makes people better listeners by altering their brain waves, research revealed in June last year. In the first study of its kind, researchers demonstrated making music significantly alters activity in the areas of the brain associated with hearing. Study author Dr Bernhard Ross from Baycrest Health Sciences hospital in Toronto, said: 'Music has been known to have beneficial effects on the brain, but there has been limited understanding into what about music makes a difference. 'This is the first study demonstrating that learning the fine movement needed to reproduce a sound on an instrument changes the brain's perception of sound in a way that is not seen when listening to music. 'We saw direct changes in the brain after one session, demonstrating that the action of creating music leads to a strong change in brain activity.' Advertisement How the research was carried out The researchers analysed 134 mothers during the first 40 weeks of motherhood. The women were divided to receive either 10 weeks of a singing workshop, a creative play workshop or postnatal depression standard-of-care. In the singing workshops, the studys participants listened to, and learned, new songs, as well as creating songs about motherhood. Singing could speed up recovery Results also found no difference in the recovery of women who take part in creative play workshops or receive standard-of-care. Dr Perkins said: Postnatal depression is debilitating for mothers and their families, yet our research indicates that for some women something as accessible as singing with their baby could help to speed up recovery at one of the most vulnerable times of their lives. The chairwoman of the Royal College of Psychiatrists' Perinatal Faculty, Dr Trudi Seneviratne, welcomed the exciting findings. The findings were published in the British Journal of Psychiatry. A 16-year-old boy has been charged with the murder of a shop assistant who was attacked in a row over cigarette papers in Mill Hill, north London. The suspect, who has not been named by police, was arrested on Monday following the death of Vijay Patel, 49. A 16-year-old boy has been charged with the murder of Vijay Patel in Mill Hill - he is due to appear at #Willesden Magistrates' Court on Wed 10 Jan https://t.co/NSZNbPNORh pic.twitter.com/wN6Kmyocav Metropolitan Police (@metpoliceuk) January 9, 2018 The boy is due to appear at Willesden Magistrates Court on Wednesday. Rescuers have found a body believed to be that of a sailor from an Iranian oil tanker which caught fire after a collision in the East China Sea, with 31 other people still missing. Chinas transportation ministry said the body recovered on Monday has yet to be identified but was wearing a protective suit designed to withstand cold seawater. There is no further word about the other missing sailors since the Panamanian-registered Sanchi collided with a freighter late on Saturday. (PA Graphics) Chinese media said the tanker is still on fire, and is at risk of exploding. The tanker was carrying 136,000 metric tonnes (nearly one million barrels) of condensate, a type of gassy, ultra-light oil, when it collided with the Hong Kong-registered freighter CF Crystal. All 21 crew members of the Crystal, which was carrying grain from the United States to China, were rescued. The crew of the Crystal were all Chinese nationals. It is not immediately clear what caused the collision, which happened in open seas rather than in a narrow channel where such accidents are more common. Ships of such size generally come with sophisticated radar and other technologies aimed at preventing collisions. (CCTV via AP Video) The Sanchi was sailing from Iran to South Korea when the collision occurred 160 miles off the coast of Shanghai. Ships and aircraft from South Korea and the US are assisting rescue efforts, which have been hampered by fierce fires and poisonous gases which engulfed the tanker and surrounding waters. The collision has triggered concerns of a potential environmental disaster, although condensate is more likely to evaporate or burn off immediately than thick, heavy crude oil. However, the Sanchis own fuel which leaked during the collision will be more difficult to clean, especially if the tanker explodes and sinks. The tanker has operated under five different names since it was built in 2008, according the UN-run International Maritime Organisation (IMO). (CCTV via AP Video) The IMO listed its registered owner as Hong Kong-based Bright Shipping, on behalf of the National Iranian Tanker Company, a publicly traded firm based in Tehran. The National Iranian Tanker Co describes itself as operating the largest tanker fleet in the Middle East. An official in Irans Oil Ministry said the tanker was owned by the National Iranian Tanker Co and confirmed that 30 of the tankers 32 crew members were Iranians. The others are Bangladeshi. It is the second collision for a ship from the National Iranian Tanker Co in less than a year and a half. In August 2016, one of its tankers collided with a Swiss container ship in crowded waters near Singapore, damaging both ships but causing no injuries or oil spills. Ecuador is seeking possible mediation to resolve the case of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has been in asylum at its London embassy for more than five years. Foreign minister Maria Fernanda Espinosa said at a news conference on Tuesday that notable asylum cases in recent years have sometimes required mediation by a third country. Mr Assange has been at the embassy since June 2012 to avoid a Swedish extradition request on a case of alleged rape. Julian Assange also fears a possible US extradition request stemming from the leaking of classified US documents (Lauren Hurley/PA) While Sweden has at least temporarily dropped that investigation, British officials say they would still arrest him on charges of bail jumping. Mr Assange also fears a possible US extradition request stemming from the leaking of classified US documents. Ms Espinosa says her country is seeking solutions, saying the situation is not sustainable. A senior US politician has released a transcript from an interview with the co-founder of the firm that commissioned a dossier of allegations about President Donald Trumps ties to Russia. The top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, California Senator Dianne Feinstein released the transcript from an August closed-door committee interview with Glenn Simpson after the Republican chairman of the committee, Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, declined to. Mr Simpsons firm Fusion GPS commissioned the dossier, which was initially paid for by a conservative website and later by Democrats. Donald Trump has derided the dossier as politically motivated (Matt Cardy/PA) The American people deserve the opportunity to see the transcript of the Judiciary Committees interview with Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson. Read it for yourself: https://t.co/yEaJLHpGdG Senator Dianne Feinstein (@SenFeinstein) January 9, 2018 The dossier was written by former British MI6 agent Christopher Steele. Mr Trump has derided the dossier as politically motivated, and several Republican-led committees are investigating whether it formed the basis for the FBIs initial investigation into Russian election interference. Democrats say those investigations are a distraction. Mr Simpson said Mr Steele took it to the FBI in July 2016, and that his concern was whether or not there was blackmail going on, whether a political candidate was being blackmailed or had been compromised. Mr Simpson has denied that the dossier prompted the FBIs initial investigations. According to the transcript, he told investigators that the FBI informed Mr Steele that the government had intelligence from an internal Trump campaign source. Mr Simpson would not name the source. The dossier is a compilation of memos written by Mr Steele during the 2016 campaign that contained allegations of connections between Mr Trump and Russia, including that Mr Trump had been compromised by the Kremlin. By Mathieu Rosemain and Anjali Athavaley PARIS/NEW YORK, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Altice founder Patrick Drahi is reshaping his telecoms and cable group for the second time in as many months by splitting its U.S. and European operations, hoping to end a drastic downward share-price spiral. Heavily indebted Altice said it would spin off its U.S. arm, which owns the country's fourth-biggest cable operator, to existing investors, and would prioritise efforts to turn around its European operations including French telecoms operator SFR. Altice USA will pay a parting dividend of $1.5 billion to the European arm, to be named Altice Europe. Divestments of non-core assets, some of which are already under way, should also help to pay down debt, Altice said on Tuesday. Analysts at brokerage Raymond James said that Altice's European arm as a whole could eventually become an acquisition target for rival French telecoms companies. "A separate listing of Altice Europe makes a sale of this asset easier, to Bouygues or Iliad for instance, which could both consider market consolidation synergies in France, in our view," they wrote. Altice Chief Executive Dexter Goei, however, said that was not on the horizon. "We're very focused on the operating story, specifically in France and Portugal," Goei told reporters during a call. "Over the medium and longer term, I'm certain this question will be asked again and maybe we'll have a different response." Altice's shares in Europe closed 10.5 percent higher, partially offsetting their fall of about 50 percent in the past 12 months. Altice USA had jumped by more than 15 percent by 1708 GMT. The group's leveraged loans also rebounded strongly in Europe's secondary loan market. The two companies will be led by separate management teams with Franco-Israeli billionaire Drahi retaining control of both and garnering a large share of the dividend as well as of a $2 billion share buyback planned by Altice USA. Dennis Okhuijsen, Altice's current chief financial officer, will become CEO of Altice Europe and Dexter Goei will continue to serve as chief executive of Altice USA. No new executive recruitment was announced, however, with Altice remaining managed by the same close team that has seen it transform from a small France-based company into a global group. Several analysts said that this light and centralised top management may hamper Altice's capacity to define an efficient and clear marketing strategy in each of its markets. Altice, whose operations stretch from Israel to the Dominican Republic, saw its shares plummet after a financial report signalled it would fail to grow in France in 2017, despite large investments in mobile and fixed networks. This led to the ousting of Altice's chief executive, a rare apology by Drahi to investors at a conference last year and the promise that Altice, whose debt equals more than twice its yearly revenues, would shift focus from large acquisitions to sales growth and debt management. ACQUISITION SPREE Altice has grown rapidly through acquisitions in the United States and Europe, helped by cheap debt that has risen to around $60 billion -- more than five times its annual core operating profit. In the United States, Drahi spent $28 billion in 2015 to buy cable companies Suddenlink and Cablevision, and even flirted with a $185 billion bid for cable giant Charter . The company largely fulfilled its promise to cut costs aggressively at the businesses it bought but often failed to achieve the operational turnarounds and growth it targeted. Altice NV, which is based in the Netherlands, aims to complete the spinoff of its 67.2 percent interest in Altice USA by the end of the second quarter, following regulatory and shareholder approvals. The listed U.S. business, no longer owned by Altice NV, will then be shielded from concerns about the European operations, while its liquidity will quadruple to 42 percent of total shares outstanding. "With U.S. activities clearly split, the contagion effect will not be felt," said Thomas Coudry, an analyst at Bryan, Garnier & Co. Drahi will own 52 percent of Altice Europe and 43 percent of Altice USA. Altice's managers had in the past said that potential risks associated with the company's consolidated debt were alleviated by the so-called "silo structure" of the group, under which each entity would have to make its own repayments. Drahi has recently shifted gears, saying there was a path to further strengthen the European balance sheet over the long term through non-core asset disposals, such as telecom towers. Altice is also hoping to raise as much as 3 billion euros from the sale of its Dominican Republic business, sources told Reuters in November. ($1 = 0.8388 euros) (Additional reporting by Sonam Rai and Supantha Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Leigh Thomas in Paris; Editing by Georgina Prodhan, Keith Weir and Susan Fenton) MANILA, Jan 9 (Reuters) - The Philippines will make a diplomatic protest to China, which it described as reneging on a promise not to militarise artificial islands in the busy South China Sea waterway, the southeast Asian nation's defence minister said on Monday. The United States has criticized China's build-up of military facilities on the artificial islands and is concerned they could be used to restrict free movement through the key trade route. Philippine Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana's comment followed a Dec. 30 broadcast of aerial footage by the official China Central Television (CCTV) showing Fiery Cross Reef, which appeared to have been transformed into an airbase. "The Chinese government said some time ago that they were not going to militarise those reclaimed islands," Lorenzana told reporters, adding that the protest would be made through the foreign ministry. "If it is true and we can prove that they have been putting soldiers and even weapons systems, that will be a violation of what they said." There was no immediate comment from Chinese officials. China and the Philippines have long sparred over the South China Sea, but relations have improved considerably under President Rodrigo Duterte, who has been courting Beijing in hopes of winning business and investment. China has assured the Philippines it will not occupy new features or territory in the South China Sea, under a new "status quo" brokered by Manila as both sides try to strengthen their relations. Reports about China militarising reclaimed islands were not new, presidential spokesman Harry Roque told a regular news briefing. "We have always been against the militarization of the area," he added. "It is certainly not OK, because it constitutes a further threat to peace and security in area." China is holding to a commitment not to reclaim more islands, Roque added, however. "There is still no breach of the good faith obligation for as long as China has not embarked on new reclamation," he said, when asked about the situation on the reef. China has denied U.S. charges that it is militarising the South China Sea, which also is claimed by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam. The reef has a hospital with more than 50 doctors, high-speed mobile connections and an airport with a runway of 3,160 meters (3,456 yards) to serve what Beijing calls a "weather station" equipped with radar, Chinese state media say. In the last 27 years, China's navy has sent more than 1,000 soldiers to guard the reef, state media have said. (Reporting by Karen Lema; Additional reporting by Christian Shepherd in BEIJING; Editing by Clarence Fernandez) SOFIA, Jan 9 (Reuters) - These are some of the main stories in Bulgarian newspapers on Tuesday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy. 24 CHASA - Bulgarian Foreign Minister Ekaterina Zaharieva said that a meeting between the European Union and Turkey may took place during the Bulgarian EU presidency. (24 Chasa) -- Bulgarian prosecutors said they have prepared an indictment against 21 Afghan men behind the riot at the Harmanli refugee camp in 2016. (24 Chasa, Trud) -- Sales of new cars have increased by 25 percent in 2017, data showed. (24 Chasa, Monitor) By John Revill ZURICH, Jan 9 (Reuters) - The Swiss National Bank expects an annual profit of 54 billion Swiss francs ($55.25 billion) for 2017, the central bank said on Tuesday, the biggest profit in its 110-year history. The SNB anticipates an annual profit of 49 billion francs from its foreign currency positions, which have swelled to 784 billion francs by November as it sought to weaken the Swiss franc and have increased in value as the Swiss currency depreciated last year. The bank, which will give its full earning figures on March 5, said it also expects a valuation gain of 3 billion francs on its gold holdings. The forecast profit would be more than double the 24.5 billion francs the SNB made in 2016, and exceed its previous highest annual profit of 38.3 billion francs in 2014. The profit is good news for the SNB in its battle against the strength of the franc, whose high value hurts Switzerland's export-reliant economy. The strategy is paying off, with the currency losing nearly 9 percent versus the euro last year. The central bank's profit was also boosted by buoyant global stock markets. Around 20 percent of its investments are in shares of companies including big stakes in Amazon, Starbucks and Facebook. Making a profit is not part of the SNB's mandate, which aims to ensure price stability in Switzerland while paying attention to the country's economic development. The record profit does not mean a bigger payout for the bank's 2,200 shareholders. The SNB stuck to a proposed payout of 15 francs per share - the maximum allowed under Swiss law. The SNB is unusual among central banks in having private shareholders, although most of its shares are held by cantonal banks and the country's cantons. Its stock price more than doubled last year. "The SNB's dividend may seem quite low when compared to its profits, but the bank was not created to make a profit. It is just a nice side effect," said Alessandro Bee, an economist at UBS. But the Swiss federal government and the country's 26 cantons will get more cash than usual. In addition to the normal 1 billion francs payout they get, they will share an extra 1 billion francs after the SNB's distribution reserve exceeded 20 billion francs. Credit Suisse said the result would help the SNB to defend its expansive monetary policy, which has featured regular currency market interventions to weaken the franc. "A large profit makes it easier for the SNB to explain why it has built up all these foreign currency reserves than if they reported a loss," said economist Maxime Botteron. ($1 = 0.9773 Swiss francs) (Editing by Michael Shields) By Tarek Amara and Ulf Laessing TUNIS, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Tunisian police clashed with anti-government protesters in the capital Tunis and several other towns on Tuesday, residents said, as fresh demonstrations against austerity measures broke out a day after one person was killed in unrest. Protests erupted in at least 12 towns across Tunisia on Monday, among them the tourist towns of Sousse and Hammamet, against price and tax rises imposed by the government to reduce its ballooning deficit and satisfy international lenders. In Tunis on Tuesday police fired tear gas in two districts and also fired gas at a crowd storming a supermarket of France's Carrefour, a witness said. No casualties were reported. Fresh clashes also broke out in Tebourba, a town 40 km (25 miles) west of Tunis where one protester was killed on Monday, witnesses said, and soldiers could be seen there and in Jelma, a central town where clashes were also reported. The main opposition party had hours earlier called for protests to continue until the government scrapped what it called an unjust 2018 budget including price and tax hikes. While Tunisia is widely seen as the only democratic success story among the nations where Arab Spring revolts took place in 2011, it has had nine governments since then and none of them have been able to tackle growing economic problems. Europe is concerned about stability in Tunisia, partly because unemployment there has forced many young Tunisians to go abroad: The number of boats smuggling migrants to Italy has been rising and Tunisia has also produced the largest number of jihadists heading for battlefields in Iraq, Syria and Libya. Public anger has been building since Jan. 1, when the government raised the prices of petrol and other items and hiked taxes on cars, phone calls, internet usage and hotel accommodation as part of those economic reforms. A year ago, the government agreed to a four-year loan programme with the International Monetary Fund worth about $2.8 billion in return for economic reforms. "Today we have a meeting with the opposition parties to coordinate our movements, but we will stay on the street and we will increase the pace of the protests until the unjust financial law is dropped," opposition Popular Front leader Hamma Hammami told reporters. Adding to pressure on the government, Nourredine Taboubi, head of the labour union UGTT, demanded the minimum wage and aid for the poor be raised within a week, state news agency TAP said. Prime Minister Youssef Chahed called for calm, saying the economy would improve this year. Chahed, who heads a coalition of Islamist and secular parties, has been under constant pressure from labour unions over the faltering economy. "People have to understand that the situation is extraordinary and their country is having difficulties, but we believe that 2018 will be the last difficult year for the Tunisians," Chahed said. The 2011 uprising and two major militant attacks in Tunisia in 2015 damaged foreign investment and tourism, which accounts for eight percent of its economic activity. 'SACRIFICING THE POOR' The demonstrations have so far been much smaller than previous protests since the overthrow of autocrat ruler Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011. But those confrontations between the government, labour unions, Islamists and secular forces also started on a small scale before escalating. Analysts say Chahed could amend some of his reforms. Under pressure from unions, officials have already agreed to increase public sector salaries this year and to avoid compulsory lay-offs which could provoke protests. The government says it wants to cut the public sector wage bill to 12.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2020 from about 15 percent now by offering voluntary redundancies. But it is also trying to impose higher petrol prices and contributions to social security, which are tough for many people to swallow after years of hardship. "At the time of Ben Ali, which we did not like, I filled my stand with vegetables, fruits and other items with 10 dinars, and now 50 dinars do not fill this gap. The situation has worsened dramatically," said Fatma, a market woman in a Tunis. "The government is sacrificing the poor and the middle class by raising prices and ignoring tax evaders and businessmen," she said. Separately, a judge ordered the arrest of a finance ministry official on suspicion of graft, another judge said, the first such move against a senior official since Chahed announced a crackdown last year. The country's anti-corruption committee says graft is widespread. It has presented cases against 50 state officials accused of corruption. (Reporting by Tarek Amara and Ulf Laessing; Writing by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky, Hugh Lawson, William Maclean) By Ed Stoddard JOHANNESBURG, Jan 9 (Reuters) - A South African tribal leader has agreed to a more transparent structure for a 175 million rand ($14 million) community trust funded by Anglo American Platinum (Amplats), a move that aims to curb unrest around the firm's most profitable mine. The changes relate to the Mapela Trust, which was set up to fund development projects in communities around Amplats' Mogalakwena operation, the world's largest open-pit platinum mine and the Anglo American unit's main cash spinner. The structure of the fund has proved a flashpoint, with local communities saying the way cash was spent has not transparent and too much authority was given to the local chief, known as Kgoshi, to determine where money was invested. Protests over two years ago temporarily closed the mine and community leaders had threatened more action to demand changes. Lawyers representing local communities told Reuters a deal between Amplats and the tribal chief had been reached. "There is a significant dilution of the chief's power across the board," Johan Lorenzen, one of the lawyers, said. Amplats confirmed this. "We have signed the agreement. The issues have been resolved," spokeswoman Mpumi Sithole said. Under the new structure, four of the Mapela Trust's nine trustees will be elected directly by local communities instead of just two that were picked by the chief to represent them. The other trustees include an independent chairperson, the Kgoshi, a member of a traditional council, a member elected by village chiefs and a senior Amplats representative. Amplats' Sithole said the community would elect their representatives before any cash was allocated to local projects. Protests over the fund that erupted more than two years ago prompted the temporary closure of the Mogalakwena mine, leading to the loss of 8,600 ounces of its annual 200,000-plus ounces of production. Local communities had hired prominent South African human rights lawyer Richard Spoor to spearhead their case. Other South African mining companies have also been cutting deals with tribal leaders who have royal titles and feudal-style control over their former homelands, often islands of rural poverty where most blacks were confined under apartheid. The bulk of the platinum reserves in South Africa, the world's top producer of the precious metal, lie in or near these tribal areas. Impala Platinum and Lonmin have also had operations disrupted by community protests linked to deals with tribal chiefs. Social and labour violence, alongside soaring costs and depressed world platinum prices, have made two-thirds of South Africa's platinum operations unprofitable at current prices, according to the country's Chamber of Mines. ($1 = 12.3896 rand) (Editing by Edmund Blair) By Ellen Francis BEIRUT, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Syrian rebels under siege near Damascus have resorted to talks with the government's ally Russia, sometimes meeting in no-man's land, as they seek to hang on to their enclave. The meetings on eastern Ghouta - the only major rebel bastion around the capital - underline Moscow's deepening role in trying to shape Syria's future after the conflict, which broke out in 2011. The rebels have won almost nothing from the negotiations so far, but they say they have little choice. They believe the Russians, whose air force all but won the war for the government, will have the final say on Syria's fate. The two main rebel forces in the suburbs signed ceasefires with Russia in the summer, but fighting has carried on. Both said they have been talking to Russian officials regularly for several months. "It's better to negotiate with the one calling the shots, which is Russia, than with the regime," said Wael Olwan, spokesman for the Failaq al-Rahman insurgents. "So the factions are forced to sit down with them. This is the reality." The Russian defence and foreign ministries did not respond to requests for comment on the talks. Moscow says the reconciliation centre at its air base in Syria routinely holds peace talks with armed factions across the country. The Syrian government's minister for national reconciliation has said the state intends to get all militants out of eastern Ghouta and restore its full control. But the insurgents want their enemies to observe the truce, which they say includes lifting the siege, opening crossings, and letting dying patients out. It would also involve evacuating the few hundred fighters of al Qaeda's former Syria branch. Both factions accuse Moscow of not honouring the deals, or turning a blind eye to Syrian army violations. Damascus and Moscow say they only target militants. "We send them documentation of how the aircraft drops missiles on residential areas," said Hamza Birqdar, a military spokesman for the Jaish al-Islam rebels. "Either there is silence ... or baseless excuses," he said. "They say government authorities denied bombing. Then these planes flying over the Ghouta, who do they belong to?" TRUCE PROCESS The conflict has killed hundreds of thousands of people and created the world's worst refugee crisis. Monitors and opposition activists blame Russian bombing for thousands of civilian deaths and much of the destruction - allegations Moscow denies. After turning the war in favour of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Russia has seized the reins of international diplomacy in the past year. It has sought to build a political process outside of failed U.N. peace talks in Geneva. Other countries including the United States, meanwhile, have wound down support for the array of mostly Sunni rebels. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who first sent warplanes to help Assad in 2015, is pushing for a congress of national dialogue between Syria's many combatants. With the map of Syria's conflict redrawn, Russia wants to convert military gains into a settlement that stabilises the shattered nation and secures its interests in the region. To this end, Moscow has been negotiating behind the scenes with armed factions across Syria. "We communicate exclusively with them," said Birqdar. "Because in reality, when it comes to Assad and his government, they have become toys in the hands of the Russians. They make no decisions ... except under Russian orders." With official and secret talks, Russia has built ties to local groups partly to gain influence on the ground, said Yury Barmin, an expert with the Russian International Affairs Council, a think-tank close to the foreign ministry. "There's one goal. Their inclusion in the truce process," he said. "All this is done with the aim of populating these Russian processes, ones led by Russia, with such opposition groups." NO MAN'S LAND Since 2013, Syrian government forces and their allies have blockaded eastern Ghouta, a densely populated pocket of satellite towns and farms. The military has suppressed opposition enclaves across western Syria, with the help of Russian air power and Iran-backed Shi'ite militias. Nearly seven years into the war, Assad has repeatedly vowed to take back every inch of Syria. The Ghouta remains the only big rebel enclave near the heavily fortified capital. "Our communications with the Russian side are through (their) official in Damascus in charge of this file, by phone and in meetings," said Yasser Delwan, a local Jaish al-Islam political official. They meet Russian forces in no-man's land, the abandoned farmland between rebel and government territory, at the edge of the nearby Wafideen camp. "We talk about the deal we signed ... implementing it from paper into something practical," he said. Both rebel forces said Russia instigated the talks. They said Russian officials sometimes blame Iran-backed forces for breaking the truce or use jihadists as a pretext for attacks against the Ghouta. Failaq al-Rahman only negotiates with Russian officials outside Syria, said Olwan, their spokesman. "In reality, Russia has never been honest in its support of the political track," he said. "But with the failure of the international community ... the factions were forced to negotiate with the enemy." DE-ESCALATION DEALS Eastern Ghouta falls under ceasefire plans for rebel territory that Russia has brokered across Syria in the past year, with help from Turkey and Iran. When the insurgents signed the "de-escalation" deal with Russia last summer, residents and aid workers hoped food would flow into the suburbs, home to around 400,000 people. But they say it has brought no relief. Despite lulls in air strikes, the siege got harsher. In some frontline districts, fierce battles rage on. Food, fuel, and medicine have dwindled, especially after the shutdown of smuggling tunnels. A Syrian official in Damascus said the army has only retaliated to militants in the suburbs shelling districts of the capital. "As for the Russian allies, every action takes place on Syrian land in full and total coordination with the Syrian government," the official said. "They have a big role." The Ghouta's rebel factions, which have long been at odds, say they have no direct contacts with Assad's government. "In its communications, Russia has always tried to present itself as the solution," Olwan said. "We don't see them as mediators. We see them as the final commander in the regime's ranks." The Damascus government mostly does not play a role in the talks, said Barmin, the Russia analyst. "Damascus is presented with a fait accompli and must either accept it or not." (Additional reporting by Moscow bureau; Editing by Giles Elgood and Anna Willard) By Babak Dehghanpisheh BEIRUT, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Iran has foiled attempts by its foreign enemies to turn legitimate protests into an insurgency to overthrow the Islamic Republic, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Tuesday. Comments on his Twitter feed and in Iranian media underscored the establishment's confidence that it has extinguished the unrest that spread to more than 80 cities in which at least 22 people died since late December. "Once again, the nation tells the U.S., Britain, and those who seek to overthrow the Islamic Republic of Iran from abroad that 'you've failed, and you will fail in the future, too'," Khamenei tweeted. The Revolutionary Guards, the military force loyal to Khamenei, said on Sunday security forces had put an end to the unrest that it also said had been whipped up by foreign enemies. At least 1,000 people have been arrested in the biggest anti-government protests for nearly a decade, with the judiciary saying ringleaders could face the death penalty. A judiciary official said on Tuesday that a detainee in Arak, a town about 200 km (124 miles) south of Tehran, committed suicide, according to Mizan, the website of the Iranian judiciary. On Monday, a separate judiciary official announced that a detainee had committed suicide in Tehran's Evin prison. The reports have raised concerns among human rights activists and some Iranian politicians that detainees may have been killed by security forces while in custody. "I warn the president and security and judiciary officials to prevent the occurrence of a second Kahrizak," Mahmoud Sadeghi, a parliamentarian, tweeted on Monday. The Kahrizak prison gained notoriety when a handful of detainees were tortured and killed at the site after unrest in 2009. GRANDSTANDING Khamenei said U.S. President Donald Trump was grandstanding when he tweeted that protesters were trying "to take back their corrupt government", promising "great support from the United States at the appropriate time!" The Iranian leader tweeted: "... this man who sits at the head of the White House - although, he seems to be a very unstable man - he must realize that these extreme and psychotic episodes won't be left without a response." The U.S. House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly, by 415-2, on Wednesday for a resolution supporting the peaceful protests in Iran, criticizing the Iranian government's response and urging targeted sanctions in response to what lawmakers termed Tehran's crackdown. As well as Washington and London, Khamenei blamed the violence on Israel, exiled dissident group People's Mujahedin of Iran and "a wealthy government" in the Gulf, a probable reference to Iran's regional rival, Saudi Arabia. In a rare public appearance, the head of Israeli intelligence agency Mossad said the protests were due to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's failure to improve people's economic or social circumstances, but he said they were unlikely to overthrow the establishment. "In Iran too, we have eyes and ears," Yossi Cohen told a Finance Ministry conference in Jerusalem. "One shouldn't develop high hopes, though I would be happy to see a meaningful revolution," he added. Khamenei has called the protests - which were initially about the economy but soon turned political - "playing with fireworks", but he said citizens had a right to air legitimate concerns, a rare concession by a leader who usually voices clear support for security crackdowns. "These concerns must be addressed. We must listen, we must hear. We must provide answers within our means," Khamenei was quoted as saying, hinting that not only the government of Rouhani, but his own clerical leadership must also respond. "I am also responsible. All of us must follow up," Khamenei said. (Reporting by Babak Dehghanpisheh and additional reporting by Maayan Lubell and Patricia Zengerle in Washington; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Susan Thomas) BAGHDAD, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Kuwait will host an international conference in February on reconstruction in parts of Iraq devastated by the war against Islamic State, the state-run Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) said on Tuesday. Donor countries and organisations are expected to announce financial contributions at the meeting from Feb. 12 to Feb. 14, it reported. Kuwaiti Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Khaled al-Jarallah made the announcement at a joint news conference in Kuwait City with the secretary general of the Iraqi cabinet, Mahdi al-Allaq. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi last month declared victory in the war against the militants, who controlled as much as a third of Iraq's territory three years ago. Iraq needs at least $100 billion in assistance to rebuild homes, businesses and infrastructure including oil and telecommunications facilities, KUNA quoted Allaq as saying. (Reporting by Maher Chmaytelli; editing by Andrew Roche) BRATISLAVA, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Slovakia criticised Austrian plans to cut benefit payments for children living abroad on Tuesday, saying the step may discriminate against Slovaks working in Austria. Austria's ruling coalition of conservatives and the far right last week unveiled plans to cut the benefits, which start at around 114 euros ($136) a month for a child. Austria borders eight countries, including the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary and Slovenia, where wages are significantly lower. Eastern Europeans make up a large part of its workforce in sectors including healthcare and construction but they often live and work away from their families and children. Speaking at a news conference in Bratislava after a meeting Austria's Foreign Affairs Minister Karin Kneissl, Slovakia's acting Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok called on Austria to honour the principle of non-discrimination. "Our citizens who work in Austria, and work there legally, pay contributions to Austrian funds, therefore we expect they would receive appropriate benefits from these funds," Korcok said. Kneissl said Austria would seek a change on a European level so that children benefits reflect the standard of living, welfare, and purchasing power in each country. "We diplomats agreed we should open the door for (social affairs) ministers to discuss the issue," she added. In 2016, Austria transferred 273 million euros ($325 million) abroad to EU and European Economic Area countries in benefit payments for 132,000 children. The European Commission criticised Germany last year for a similar plan to cut child benefits, which was later abandoned. Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said last week the Austrian proposal was legally possible. ($1 = 0.8389 euros) (Reporting by Tatiana Jancarikova; Editing by Alison Williams) LJUBLJANA, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Slovenia plans to reduce its public debt to a little more than 70 percent of gross domestic product this year, the Ministry of Finance told Reuters on Tuesday. The government wants to cut debt to 32.5 billion euros ($38.78 billion), or 71.7 percent of GDP. Last year, debt fell to 75.2 percent of GDP from 78.5 percent in 2016, according to the October finance ministry estimate. Slovenia's economy returned to growth in 2014 after avoiding an international bailout of its banks. Its goal is to reduce debt by 2030 to 60 percent of GDP, the ceiling set by the European Union. The finance ministry also rejected local media reports that the government is considering raising value-added tax to 24 percent from 22 percent to cover demands for higher public-sector wages. "We are not preparing any such decrees. The finance ministry would not support an increase of VAT to cover trade unions' demands," the ministry said in a statement sent to Reuters. A number of public-sector unions are threatening strikes later in January or in February unless their wages are increased significantly, among them teachers' trade union SVIZ. The government, which is preparing for a parliamentary election that is expected in June, is in talks with unions regarding wage hikes but has said wage increases have to remain limited. ($1 = 0.8382 euros) (Reporting By Marja Novak) WARSAW, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Poland's ruling conservatives announced a major government reshuffle on Tuesday, in an apparent effort to mend relations with the European Union and moderate voters at home. Following are details of new appointments. Incoming ministers: Teresa Czerwinska, finance A former deputy finance minister responsible for the budget and a loyalist to Morawiecki. Her main task will be to secure money for the government's broad welfare spending agenda, maintaining efforts to improve tax collection, and to negotiate Poland's chunk of the EU's next seven-year budget. Jacek Czaputowicz, foreign affairs A political scientist with little hands-on diplomatic experience, who headed the ministry's legal department, Czaputowicz will oversee Poland's efforts to maintain close ties with allies in Washington. Joachim Brudzinski, interior A confidante of PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski who goes with him on fishing trips and is responsible for maintaining party loyalty among local officials. He will oversee migration policy, a major source of disagreement between PiS and Brussels. Mariusz Blaszczak, defence Previously interior minister, Blaszczak was a leading voice within the PiS government opposing EU migration quotas and arguing that Poland's security would be at risk if it let Muslim migrants in. Poland's NATO allies are likely to watch closely his efforts to modernise the army, which had faced delays under the outgoing defence chief, Antoni Macierewicz. Blaszczak will have to complete talks on a multi-billion-dollar contract with the U.S. firm Raytheon on the purchase of eight missile defence systems as well as a deal to buy submarines equipped with long-range missiles that the defence ministry said recently would be announced in January. Henryk Kowalczyk, environment A long-time PiS lawmaker, Kowalczyk will oversee Poland's disputed coal policy. The country's reliance on coal has put it on collision course with EU policies on reducing carbon emissions. Jerzy Kwiecinski, investment An engineer by training, Kwiecinski is a former deputy economic development minister. Jadwiga Emilewicz, entrepreneurship Will oversee technology policy. Lukasz Szumowski, health A cardiologist with limited political experience. Outgoing ministers: Antoni Macierewicz, defence The PiS' investigator into the 2010 plane crash over Russia that killed President Lech Kaczynski, a founder of the party, army top brass and dozens of other officials, Macierewicz once said it was caused by a thermobaric bomb. He has repeatedly asserted that the plane disintegrated in mid-air and accused Russian air traffic controllers of willingly misdirecting it, although an official investigation by Poland's centrist government at the time blamed the crash on pilot error due to thick fog. A vocal anti-Russian hawk, Macierewicz had promised to double defence spending and add 100,000 personnel. But critics said his plans lacked financial details and followed "outdated" military thinking. Witold Waszczykowski, foreign affairs Seen by many observers as having had little impact on Polish foreign policy, Waszczykowski is best known for his many gaffes. Last year he mistakenly told reporters at the United Nations that he had met with representatives of the made-up nation of San Escobar. He also told a German newspaper that the previous centrist government wanted a world full of "bike riding vegetarians who only use renewable energy and fight all forms of religion". Konstanty Radziwill, health Widely criticised by the opposition in Poland over his handling of a protest by young doctors over work conditions, as well as a decision to eliminate maternity ward standards and comments disparaging concerns over air pollution. Jan Szyszko, environment An avid hunter, Szyszko had angered many in Poland for easing limits on hunting and felling of trees on private property. He approved tripling of the quota of wood that can be harvested in an ancient forest, a UNESCO World Heritage site, triggering EU court action. (Reporting by Marcin Goclowski; Editing by Catherine Evans) An Iranian oil tanker ablaze off the Chinese coast is at risk of exploding or sinking, authorities said Monday, as they reported there was no sign of survivors 36 hours after the vessel erupted in flames. A huge fire was still raging around the stricken ship, which had been carrying 136,000 tonnes of light oil, with fierce heat and thick black smoke billowing from the vessel and the surrounding sea. Rescuers attempting to reach the crew of 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis were beaten back by toxic clouds, Chinas transportation ministry said. The Panamanian-flagged 274-metre (899-foot) tanker Sanchi is in danger of exploding or sinking, the ministry said. The accident occurred on Saturday evening 160 nautical miles east of Shanghai. The tanker, was heading to South Korea when it collided with a Hong Kong-flagged cargo ship. Ten government vessels and many fishing ships were helping with the ongoing rescue and clean up effort, the transportation ministry said. (Daily Mail) This mode of electioneering suited neither my taste nor my principles. I thought it equally unsuitable to my personal character and to the station in which I am placed. - John Quincy Adams Now that the local government elections are on the cards, at long last the entire society is about to be exposed to the perilous elements of electioneering ,the way it is done in Sri Lanka. Despite the delight and relief that the right of the citizen to express his voice through ballet has been secured, one feels the need to brace oneself for the offensive, repugnant and foul election culture that ensues once an election is declared until a few days or even weeks after it has ended. With the Elections Commission invigorated by the 19th Amendment to the Constitution in regulating affairs related to elections and certainly talking tough, one may be justified in expecting some positives at this local government election. Yet the fact remains that the political culture, of which electioneering is just a manifestation in a concentrated and nude form, is more corrupt, violent and degraded than ever. In fact it militates against anything that is decent, moral or ethical about our society. Nothing short of a frontal attack on the norms of moral and just society. That is what election times and electioneering culture amounts to in reality. A Mockery of Sovereignty Upon reflection on the mode of governance that we have, i.e. a representative democracy where people decide who governs them, it is clear that the three arms of governance, namely the legislative, the executive and judicial wings, which are part of sovereignty vested in the people by the constitution. By voting, people exercise their sovereign power of governance, appointing their delegates who would exercise their sovereignty for them. The sacrosanctness of the vote and subsequently of elections emanates from this constitutionally entrenched right of the people for their sovereignty. Going on that classical definition one would expect the entire exercise of casting that precious vote to be done in the most dignified, respectful and pristine manner; the candidates who aspire for it to be worthy of being delegated with that sovereignty. That may be the case in western democracies, friends. But it cuts an entirely different picture in our context. A downward spiral The election culture from 1977 onwards in particular has been deteriorating drastically and still is in a downward spiral; from tearing down opponents campaign posters to serious violations as those of grabbing ballot boxes and stuffing them with votes. Murder, assault, threats, arson, bribery occur regularly and sometimes on a mass scale. Images of thugs roaming around polling centres at the notorious Wayamba election during the Chandrika regime still haunts the public mind. When the former Commissioner of Elections lamented in a strenuous tone that the tension (aathathiya) he felt was unbearable, he was not alluding to the administrative strain of conducting a nationwide poll; it was more of a deliberate pressure put on the premier officer dealing with elections by the incumbent rulers. Terms such as computer jilmarts definitely do not inspire confidence in the whole process of elections and leave serious doubts in the mind of the public as to whether the end result is a sure reflection of the will of the people in appointing their delegates. Leaving the malpractices and violations aside, the very culture and environment of electioneering is highly questionable and disturbing to the law abiding mind. Not only does it militate against the notion of the people electing their delegates to exercise their inalienable sovereignty, it raises its ugly head like a subterranean monster-reptile to bite the civilized and civic society; threatening, bribing, cheating and intimidating the citizenry. The faces that adorn the lamp posts and walls every inch of the way reek with corruption, black money, underworld connections and immorality, repulsive to the decent mind and offensive to all norms of moral and societal values. Disillusionment of the Voter Then again, can you expect an edible fruit from a venomous plant? Certainly not. How do you expect an election atmosphere, which is merely an extension of a political culture that is foul, nauseating and reeking, to be turned into one which is pristine and dignified? It is replete with law-breaking, rights violations, intimidation, character assassination, etc; but what else is to be expected from criminals, thugs, black money businessmen, cattle thieves, womanizers and dealers of murky origins? No amount of regulations, directives, media guidelines, oaths or any cosmetic flourishes of the hand would improve the whole process of electioneering in this country until the politicians who aspire for our vote at these polls are worthy of being reposed with the sovereignty that is ours. The citizen who went to the polls on January 8, 2015 did so not just to replace an incumbent President with a challenger and see a noticeable change nor were they interested in the victory of a single party. They wanted a paradigm shift in the manner that politics was done in this country; their sovereignty reposed in delegates who were accountable to them on that account; a dignified, solemn and pristine exercise of their power by those who were elected by their vote. Yet three years later they are startled, shocked, dumbstruck by the faces that appear on the walls asking their mandate; the types of faces that they thought would never be seen on election campaigns after January 8 and the August 2015 elections which they thought would usher in a new politicial culture, elections included. With these individuals roaming the streets, threatening, bribing, insulting the populace, representing all the retrogressive, repulsive and anti democratic strands that lie underneath civilisation, be warned for an assault on your sense of perception. They do not merely aspire for your mandate to represent you at the sub tiers of governance -- at municipal, urban council and pradesheeya sabha level; they demand it from you, try to steal it, grab it by force and bribe you for it. If some of them are not rogues and scoundrels themselves, then they are surrounded, flanked, backed and financed by them tantamount to the same. No government, in the current scenario, be it termed good or bad, is going to resist the temptation of being aided by filthy money, rowdy manpower and foul tactics in reaching their goal of consolidating their power at the grassroots level of governance and taking the psychological advantage of going for national polls in 2020. Those who are outside the ruling coalition, barring the JVP, is no cause for confidence either; the pantheon of faces tells the story. The Antidote I know the pang of pain that chills the civilized, law abiding citizen when he sees what direction the local government election is taking with the campaigning heating up; having to yield our homes, streets and squares to these zombie armies of muck in the coming days as they carry on merrily and shamelessly of cheating the citizen out of his sovereignty by hook or by crook. It is election time folks. It is an invasion by the unclean hordes of our homes, villages and towns. It is a frontal attack on all that is civilized, moral and ethical by sub humans. But remember my friends, you still have the antidote in your pocket; Do not surrender it unwisely. A man was arrested by the Jaffna Police in connection with assaulting former LTTE media spokesman Daya Master in Jaffna yesterday. Daya Master who is also the Media Director of DAN TV, a private media institution was assaulted in his office at the Hospital Road in Jaffna. The Jaffna Police who had initiated an inquiry following a complaint had arrested the suspect, Moses Sathgunadas (53) a resident of Jaffna. Police said the motive of the assault has not been revealed. Suspect to be produced before the Jaffna Magistrate Court.(Romesh Madusanka) Former navy spokesman D.K.P. Dassanayake and five others, held in remand custody, were granted bail by the High Court today. Commodore Dassanayake and the others were arrested and remanded on charges of aiding and abetting in the abduction of 11 youths in 2008 and 2009. High Court Judge Manilal Waidyaratne released each of the six accused on a cash bail of Rs.100,000 with three sureties of Rs.1 million each. (Farook Thajudeen and Yoshitha Perera) A leading henchman of a former powerful political leader who has gone into a panic following a tip-off that he was to be arrested soon has begun delegating the functions and responsibilities of his position to his loyalists, they say. He has also reportedly asked that he be relieved of his present position and that it be offered to the youngest son of the former political leader. He is said to have amassed much wealth from the government contracts he had been executing over years. He is also frequenting various shrines these days praying for divine intervention for his deliverance, they say. Central Banks former governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal said yesterday he would gladly go before a presidential commission if such a commission was set up to probe alleged bond irregularities from 2008 to 2014. If there is commission that the Prime Minister wants to set up, please tell me I will go before it. I will be at my home, the address of which is known. Im not from Singapore but from Colombo, he said. Mr. Cabraal said he hoped there would be commissions to probe the Australian issue, the alleged central expressway frauds and the fertilizer crisis. He told a news briefing said if there was a single fraud during the time he was the CB governor, the Prime Minister would have taken action. If there were such issues during my time, I should have been in jail now. The issue is who should take responsibility for this bond scam? Can anyone find Arjuna Mahendran today? Is he even in Sri Lanka, he asked. Mr. Cabraal rejected allegations that large scale frauds relating to Bond transactions had taken place during his tenure saying the allegations were baseless. On August 19, 2016 the then finance minister Ravi Karunanayake requested the President for a report of Bond transactions from 2008 to 2014. The report was given on January 16, 2017. The report clearly states there was nothing wrong. I request the President to go through this document, he said. Video by Susantha UNP MP Ravi Karunanayake yesterday denied the claims made by Tamil Progressive Alliance (TPA) leader Minister Mano Ganesan that underworld figures had been nominated for the upcoming local government (LG) elections to represent the Colombo North. Responding to a question raised by a journalist when MP Karunanayake visiting the grave site of slain newspaper editor Lasantha Wickrematunge, on his 9th death anniversary at the Borella Cemetery in Colombo, said, if 'members of underworld' can stay in the government what would be the problem. I cordially invite all media personnel to visit Colombo North and to investigate over the claims made by Minister Mano Ganesan. We are walking freely but that minister is walking with special security, he said. Earlier Minister Mano Ganesan requested President Maithripala Sirisena to provide him with Special Task Force (STF) security with a backup vehicle with five STF personnel to protect him from underworld threats. Mano Ganesan earlier said in a statement that he faced with serious security threats and sought the intervention of President, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and had also written to the IGP in September last year. MP Karunanayaka said people cannot do politics like Re Daniel Dawal Migel or by engaging in religious extremism or highlighting racial issues". UNP is the only political party which promotes the religious diversity in the country without any discrimination. We always maintain a common policy whether we were in government or in an election period, he said. We urge Minister Mano Ganesan to name the underworld figures if we have nominated such people for the LG election.We do politics in clean manner. The people who cannot obtain votes during the election making such claims and it was a habit to make such claims during the election period against UNP, he added. We can easily figure out the person who tried to protect the underworld figures even after we named them earlier. The politicians who behave like underworld figures talks more about underworld. Colombo North is free zone for any one and the previous underworld figures were removed by me, MP Karunanayaka said. (Chaturanga Pradeep Samarawickrama and Indika Sri Aravinda) Yesterday, January 8, was an important day in Sri Lankas history. It was on January 2015, that in a dramatic and unexpected peoples revolution, President Maithripala Sirisena and his rainbow coalition came to office promising what was described as a Maithri Yahapalanaya. Three years later most analysts agree that while much has been done to restore the rule of law and good governance much more needs to be done to fulfil the expectations of the people. The opinions may differ. What was done not done or half done will go before the court of the sovereign people on February 10 when elections are held to 341 Municipal, Urban Councils and Pradeshiya Sabhas. Led by President Sirisena and Premier Wickremesinghe, the Yahapalanaya government has done much more than most people talk about but these have not been publicised effectively. For the first time since independence in 1948, the two major parties, the United National Party (UNP) and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) are working together despite divisions or disputes and are likely to continue till at least 2020 if not 2025 to work out the sustainable, eco-friendly development strategy described as vision 2025. For instance, we also have the 19th Amendment to the Constitution. It was perhaps for the first time in modern world history that a President in office worked out an amendment that drastically reduced his own powers. An all party Constitutional Council was set up to make appointments to high posts while Independent Commissions were appointed to monitor important issues in the public service, police, election, bribery and corruption and human rights. As promised in the election manifesto, parliament was also given more powers and the President does not have the authority to dissolve it within one year as provided for before the 19th Amendment was enacted. Though not many people know how effectively it is working, one of the other important laws enacted was the Right to Information Act which came into effect on February 3, 2016, bringing with it a promise of open government, citizens active participation in governance and accountability to the people. Hundreds of appeals have been made by citizens to designated officers in public sector institutions. They have asked for full details regarding various projects or contracts, how the money was spent and other issues. In cases where these appeals are not complied with, the citizens could appeal to the Right to Information Commission which looks into the issues and has mandatory power to order that the information be given. The print and electronic media have carried several reports based on information obtained under the RTI Act which has been acclaimed as one of the best relating to the peoples fundamental right to information. One of the latest cases involves a multi-million rupee contract awarded by Sri Lanka Telecom to a private television channel. A satellite pay TV service provider has protested against this and made an appeal under the RTI Act. In education, the consensus government has provided health and life insurance policy for 4.5 million students in public, private and international schools. In addition every student will have 13 years of education and even those who fail the GCE ordinary level examination will be given access to vocational training in a multitude of fields including high technology. The main issue on the negative side is the bond scam. The Presidential Commission which probed the bond issues from February 2015 to March 2016 has revealed that up to Rs. 11.1 billion had been plundered through an alleged illegal process in the bond issues. The Commission has made strong charges against the Central Banks former governor Arjuna Mahendran and his son-in-law Arjun Aloysius whose company Perpetual Treasuries Ltd is alleged to be the main bank robber. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe speaking at the UNP Convention on Sunday charged that a staggering US$ 4,000 million had been plundered in bond scam from 2008 to 2014 when the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime was in power. If vision 2025 and the hopes of making Sri Lanka the hub of Asia are to be achieved, this plunder must be stopped and any politicians or official found guilty must be in jail and not in high office. This female is in the running for a seat in a local body in the Wayamba province and she has made it a point to attend every funeral in the area and weep for a long spell as if she has lost someone whom she had loved most in her life. The weeping one, who was living with her husband and children in a Colombo suburb, has returned to her native village since receiving nomination from a main political party has now begun carrying out her propaganda activity from her parental home. Taking extra care not to violate the laws relating to electioneering now being strictly enforced, the fair one is ever on the lookout for innocuous ways and means of winning the hearts and minds of her constituents, they say. She attends whatever social function taking place in the area and would not fail to say hello! to everyone she meets. The ladys winning ways assumed obviously with an eye on votes has become a source of amusement to the villagers. The deal is expected to close this month for around Rs 2,400 crore. New Delhi: Essar group is in talks with global investment firm Brookfield to sell its 1.25 million sq ft Equinox Business Park at Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC) in Mumbai for about Rs 2,400 crore, according to sources. The group had announced in 2016 that it would sell the property to realty firm RMZ Corp, but the deal could not be concluded. It is now in the advanced stage of talks with Canada- based Brookfield Asset Management to sell Equinox Business Park, which has four buildings, the sources said. The deal is expected to close this month for around Rs 2,400 crore, they said, adding that Essar would utilise the entire sale proceeds to repay loans. The group is reducing its debt by monetising non-core assets. Once the Equinox deal is completed, the total debt reduction will amount to Rs 77,500 crore in the current fiscal, sources said. The group has already reduced its debt by Rs 72,600 crore following the completion of the Essar Oil sale to Rosneft and a consortium of Trafigura and UCP. In April last year, Ruias-led Essar Group also announced the sale of its BPO company Aegis Ltd to Singapore-based private equity fund manager Capital Square Partners for an estimated USD 300 million. The agreement with the Bengaluru-based RMZ lapsed because the two parties were unable to agree on final terms even after 23 months from the signing of the agreement. Unlike the housing sector, the commercial real estate, especially the office segment, is performing fairly well and has been attracting huge investment from domestic and foreign investors. Recently, realty major DLF's promoters concluded the sale of their 40 per cent stake in rental arm DLF Cyber City for nearly Rs 12,000 crore. Digital credit will be available on the basis of a real-time credit assessment algorithm created by the bank. New Delhi: Taxi aggregator Ola on Tuesday announced signing of an MoU along with ICICI Bank to bring forth a range of integrated offers to their customers and driver-partners. Through this alliance, two of India's most popular and trusted brands will bring together their respective technology platforms to offer the following facilities: Ola booking facility on ICICI Bank's mobile banking platforms: It will enable ICICI Bank customers to seamlessly book an Ola and pay the fare by using the bank's mobile banking applications; 'iMobile' and 'Pockets'. Access to instant small ticket digital credit: The facility will help Ola customers to get small ticket digital credit instantaneously from ICICI Bank, on the Ola Platform. The digital credit will be available on the basis of a real-time credit assessment algorithm created by the bank. It is based on an intelligent combination of financial and digital behavior patterns like ride frequency and amount among others. The bank will instantly ascertain the creditworthiness of a customer and extend digital credit within a few seconds. The entire process will be completely digital, without requiring any paperwork. Enable digital payments to driver partners: ICICI Bank will offer a 'Pay Direct' card for Ola's driver partners. With this, Ola's auto and cab driver partners will be able to get their daily earnings directly into their 'Pay Direct' card accounts. Additionally, driver partners can also swipe this card at merchant outlets for their purchases. Co-branded credit card: ICICI Bank will launch a new co-branded credit card in association with Ola. With this card, customers will benefit from several exclusive offers such as cash-backs and accelerated reward points. "This alliance will provide increased convenience to customers on both the platforms, as well as hundreds of thousands of driver partners. From API integration, to launching new products and solutions tailored to suit our common pool of millions of customers, the two brands will capitalise on each other's strengths to deliver superior experience and enable smart, sustainable and inclusive mobility for India," said co-founder and CEO of Ola, Bhavish Aggarwal. "These new propositions will help Ola driver partners to manage their finances in a better way, while also enable Ola customers to get easy access to instant credit in a simple and secured manner. Furthermore, ICICI Bank customers will get the dual benefit of booking a cab and making payments directly through their 'iMobile' and 'Pockets' application. This new partnership resonates our effort of bringing in path breaking solutions, making mobility in banking simpler than ever before. We will continue the model of co-creating to deliver innovative products and services to our customers," said executive director ICICI Bank, Anup Bagchi. There are around 60 lakh pensioners out of which around 40 lakh are getting less than Rs 1,500 per month New Delhi: Pensioners under EPS-95 may get a minimum of Rs 5,000 a month as interim relief, and Rs 7,500 eventually, in view of the assurances by the labour ministry, the organisation pushing for the cause said today. The pension is Rs 1,000 a month at present, provided under the Employees' Pension Scheme 1995 (EPS-95) managed by the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO). The All India EPS-95 Pensioners Sangharsh Samiti said in a statement that the labour minister had assured its delegation, on December 6, 2017, of meeting its demands. It said the minister had assured the Samiti that their demands including minimum pension of Rs 7,500 would be taken up for discussion with the Prime Minister as well as the finance ministry. It had demanded that all the 60 lakh pensioners under the EPS-95 scheme should be provided a minimum monthly pension of Rs 7,500 and as an interim relief, all of them should be given Rs 5,000 per month. The Samiti said the Parliamentary Consultative Committee on Labour also discussed their demands in their meeting held on January 5. There are around 60 lakh pensioners out of which around 40 lakh are getting less than Rs 1,500 per month at a time when the government has about Rs 3 lakh crore of pension funds, the Samiti had said earlier. Markets regulator had said that it was in talks with the RBI to allow institutional investors like banks and FPIs to trade in the segment. Mumbai: Mutual funds will soon trade in the commodity derivatives, a move that will deepen this nascent market, a top official of industry body Amfi said. "We will soon see some participation from mutual funds in the commodity markets. There has been some discussion about mutual fund participation into commodity markets. We will see some progress this year," Association of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi) Chairman A Balasubramanian told PTI. Currently, there are 42 mutual fund players with assets under management of over Rs 22 lakh crore. Sebi, in February last year, had said that mutual funds' participation in commodities derivatives would be the first one to happen among institutional investors. Also, the markets regulator had said that it was in talks with the RBI to allow institutional investors like banks and FPIs to trade in the segment. Sebi, which started regulating commodity markets after the merger of Forward Markets Commission (FMC) with the regulator in September 2015, is working towards developing the commodities market by bringing in more products for participants like FPIs, insurance and mutual funds. Mumbai: From, will they, wont they, now everyones wondering when is D-Day as Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh returned from their rendezvous in Sri Lanka smiling ear-to-ear. According to sources, we have learnt that the families have also consented to Ranveer and Deepikas relationship. And while the engagement might be in the offing, the Bhavnanis dote on Prakash Padukones daughter and the Padukones too adore Ranveer, and consider him their son. A source is reported to have said, Deepika was gifted an expensive diamond set and a Sabyasachi sari by Ranveers family for her birthday. Her happiness knew no bounds. This was indeed a special occasion for the actress. Incidentally, Deepikas father Prakash Padukone had already given his consent to their relationship. It can be recalled that when Ranveer called Deepika marriage material on a chat show, the former badminton player had said, As a father, I have given Deepika the freedom to take her own decisions. Even in this case, she is free to decide whatever she wants to do. So, wedding bells are surely around the corner, the question is when? Mumbai: When you make enemies, you need friends to fight your enemies too. That is what is happening to Kangana Ranaut now. After being alienated by a section of the film industry close to Karan Johar and Hrithik Roshan, Kangana is now taking the advice of her only friend among the Khans - Aamir - and learning to battle on. Kangana had given statements earlier that she did not need the Khans to work with her because she was doing woman-oriented films. But then Tanu Weds Manu Returns was her only film in the Rs 150 crore bracket. Post that, none of her films went on to become a superhit. She had even refused a Salman Khan film when the going was good for her. But now she needs to mend fences, especially because her film Manikarnika is coming up. She needs to muster industry support for it, informs a trade source. Aamirs advice to the girl is being strictly followed, we are told. Sadly, talent alone does not help. New Delhi: A yogic symbol made popular by Rajinikanth may well be seen by the superstar's fans as his calling card, but has got a young startup all worked up. The hand position that the actor-and-would-be politician is known for is often likened to "apana mudra", a yoga finger and palm posture. And now, Mumbai's Voxweb, an 18-month-old social networking app, says that it is similar to its logo. "If another company or brand has a similar logo, it will not matter much. But social media and political parties have quite a few similar traits - they have mass adoption, they are really close to their user base and so on. This creates a conflict," Voxweb founder Yash Mishra said. The mudra is seen by Rajinikanth's legion of followers as his trademark gesture, ever since he raised two fingers and folded two in his 2002 film 'Baba'. The actor holds the two middle fingers down with his thumb and raises the little and index fingers in a broad vee. The symbol figured prominently on the stage at a series of meetings addressed by the mega star recently. Fans also carried placards with the hand symbol. Voxweb, Mishra said, has a similar brand logo, but with the thumb left free. "Social media platforms are being accused of favouring political parties during elections and using their algorithms to promote that kind of content. People are already asking us if we are favouring Rajnikanth's outfit or if we have any common investors," Mishra told PTI. The startup has written to the actor over the issue, but is yet to hear from him. There was no response to messages sent by PTI to the star's publicity team. Asked what measures he planned to take to save his logo from the Rajini juggernaut, Mishra said his moves would depend on the new political outfit's reactions. "We are open to suggestions and would ask them to make some alterations. All that we have to say is there is absolutely no relationship between the company and the party or its ideology," he said. Rajinikanth had said last month that he would soon launch a political party in Tamil Nadu. PETA's intervention application included health assessment reports by a team of two government veterinarians from the Maharashtra Animal Husbandry Department who examined the horses and found that they suffered from malnourishment. (Representational Image) Mumbai: During a hearing on 8 January, the Ld. Metropolitan Magistrate Court, Andheri, awarded to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India interim custody of five horses that were rescued by police after being used in an illegal race. The application of the accused asking for the custody of the horses was rejected by the court; however, they were allowed to take the carts. PETA's intervention application included health assessment reports by a team of two government veterinarians from the Maharashtra Animal Husbandry Department who examined the horses and found that they suffered from malnourishment, wounds all over their bodies, and inflamed tendons, ligaments, and joints, among other poor health conditions. The veterinarians stated that if the horses are put back to work, their painful conditions will likely worsen to the point of permanent disability. Now that PETA has obtained custody of the horses, it will secure housing for them at a sanctuary in Sangli where they can receive veterinary care and live free and untied. Speaking about the verdict, PETA Indian legal associate Bhumika Aggarwal said, From protruding ribs to wounds from beatings, whippings, falls on hard pavement and more, these horses' ravaged bodies reveal the extent of their mistreatment. She went on to add, PETA India looks forward to seeing them receiving proper care at a spacious sanctuary where they'll never be forced to pull carts or race again. The horses entered police custody on 26 December after the police officials intercepted the horse-drawn carts which were reportedly racing along the Western Express Highway at Vile Parle East, booking their handlers for rash and negligent driving on the highway and for treating the animals cruelly and endangering the lives of both motorists and animals. Police took the horses to the cattle pound managed by Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) in Malad, and the next day, one of the horses was found dead, and the post-mortem revealed that the animal had died of suffocation or asphyxia because the rope tied to the animal's neck was too tight. On 3 January, the court granted permission for PETA to step in to temporarily provide the horses with medical aid, food, and safe housing. PETA pointed out in its application that the suspects who were granted bail on 28 December, violated the High Court of Rajasthan at Jodhpur's 2016 ban on tonga races and the High Court of Bombay's 2015 judgment that having horses in Mumbai is illegal, as none of the stables are licensed by the BMC. PETA has called on the Commissioner of the BMC and the Police Commissioner of Mumbai to enforce the High Court of Bombay's 2015 judgment and has offered to accept and rehabilitate any horses that are seized as a result. PETA also urged the BMC to implement the rehabilitation scheme for horse carriage owners and drivers as approved by the Maharashtra State government. The study also found men are just as likely as women to identify as sapiosexual, and an IQ of 120 was found to be the ideal level of intelligence. (Photo: Pixabay) According to a new study, it seems that for some, looks and personality really do not matter. The study found that nearly one in ten people find intelligence to be the most attractive feature in a partner. This trait is known as sapiosexuality. The study also found men are just as likely as women to identify as sapiosexual, and an IQ of 120 was found to be the ideal level of intelligence. The research was carried out at the University of Western Australia (UWA) and looked at the romantic and sexual preferences of 383 people, aged between 18 and 35. While most people showed no significant sexual inkling towards intelligence, a small group of people responded strongly to the trait. According to study author Dr Gilles Gignac, from the school of Psychological Science at UWA, this suggests sapiosexualism is a genuine sexual orientation that exists in a small subset of the population. Gignac went on to add that the emergence of the popular culture notion of a sapiosexual, an individual who finds high levels of intelligence (IQ) the most sexually attractive characteristic in a person, suggests that a high IQ may be a genuinely sexually attractive trait, at least for some people. The term 'sapiosexual' has recently received widespread media attention and speculation as it grows in popularity with a dedicated dating app, called Sapio, which aims to help sapiosexuals meet one another. The study also suggests that intelligence is important to most people, as it implies an improved ability to find work and a greater competence in other areas of life with a majority of the population saying that intelligence was the second most sought after 'non-physical property'. Kindness and understand was the most desirable, with 'exciting' and 'easygoing' coming in as the third and fourth most attractive personality traits. The research was published in the journal Intelligence. Shocked bystanders rushed to help the stricken Halil Dag, but doctors declared him dead at a local hospital shortly after his 50-metre fall. (Facebook Screengrab) In a shocking incident a man plunged to his death after posing for a cliff side pic on his birthday. Shocked bystanders rushed to help the stricken Halil Dag, but doctors declared him dead at a local hospital shortly after his 50-metre fall. Halil lost his balance after jumping over a barbed wire fence to pose for a pic on top of the historic Urfa Castle in Southern Turkey. What is shocking is that horrified friends filmed Halil tumbling head-over-heels as he scrambled to grab on to something that could stop his deadly fall. However, despite his desperate efforts, he bounced off the sheer cliff in an avalance of crumbling rocks. Halil smashed into the ground near a Kurdish restaurant, and was rushed to the Balklgol State Hospital in a critical condition. His body was handed over to his grief-stricken family, before being interred at the local Abdurrahman Dede Cemetery. You can see the video here. Panangad police smashed open one side of the drum after local fishermen complained of foul smell emanating and oily substance leaking from the drum. Kochi: A skeleton of a middle-aged woman suspected to be murdered at least 10 months back was found inside a plastic drum filled with concrete on both sides on the bank of Vembanad lake at Kumbalam on the city outskirts on Monday. The cold-blooded murder, unheard before in the state, sent shock waves among local residents as another body, that of a male found in a sack dumped in backwaters near Nettoor, two kms from Kumbalam, was recovered only four months back. On Monday morning, the Panangad police smashed open one side of the drum after local fishermen complained of foul smell emanating and oily substance leaking from the drum. "The top portion of the drum was filled with concrete and bricks. We're shocked to find the skeleton when we smashed the concrete portion. The lower part was also filled with concrete and the body was sandwiched in between. The body had decomposed almost fully and only a few hairs remained," a senior police officer said. "We recovered a silver waist chain, Rs 1600 - three Rs 500 note and a Rs 100 note, in cash and also torn cloth piece. As per preliminary assessment, it seems to be that of a woman in her thirties," he said. According to local residents, the drum was lying on the river side of a vacant plot by the side of 'Santivanam' crematorium in Kumbalam for the last two months. "The drum was first found lying in a marshy portion of the river eight months back. While dredging a portion of the river two months back, the workers shifted it to the land using JCB. When they broke open small portion, they saw concrete and left it there," said Rahul, a local resident. A forensic team, including an expert from the Kalamassery Medical College, reached the site by noon and collected the evidence. The skeleton was sent to Kalamassery Medical College for further forensic test and autopsy. "As part of the probe, we'll first take out a list of missing persons. It might be a case of murder and probe is progressing on the line. We'll also probe whether it has any relation with the recovery of another body in a sack four months before," the police said. Besides the forensic team, senior police officers including commissioner M. P. Dinesh inspected the skeleton and the site. The probe in the Nettoor body recovery case had reached a dead-end with the cops even failing to identify the male body. Mr Narasimhan said that his visit was a routine one and no special significance should be attached to it. Hyderabad: Telangana and Andhra Pradesh Governor E.S.L. Narasimhan on Tuesday met Prime Minister Narendra Modi to brief him about political situation in the two states. According to Raj Bhavan sources, the Governor had briefed Mr Modi on various projects like Kaleswaram and Polavaram, including the Telangana governments demand for declaring Kaleswaram as a national project. The meeting assumes significance as it comes ahead of AP Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidus proposed meeting with the Prime Minister. Speaking to reporters in Delhi, Mr Narasimhan said that his visit was a routine one and no special significance should be attached to it. When scribes asked him about the recent duel between him and the state Congress leaders over his support for the TRS government, Mr Narasimhan said, It was all a family affair. Such things commonly happen in any family. It was just an affair between elders and children in a family. He, however, refused to comment on his further continuance in the office. Earlier in the day, the Governor met President Ram Nath Kovind at Rastrapathi Bhavan and submitted a report on how to make Raj Bhavans more closer to people and the leaders of various political parties besides bringing more clean and green programmes. With a history sheeter, Kanthan used to run a cable TV business shop. Cops used Kanthan to find out Logus whereabouts after he jumped bail. This is suspected to be the motive. Chennai: A 43-year-old real estate businessman was hacked to death in broad daylight by four persons, even as his college-going daughter watched helplessly at West Mambalam on Tuesday morning. The 19-year-old girl suffered injuries in the attack and is undergoing treatment. The victim, Kandhan, was murdered a few metres away from his residence on Naickar street in West Mambalam. He was on a motorbike to drop his daughter Keerthana at her college in Adyar when the incident happened around 7 am, police said. They were moving along Ellaiyamman Koil Street when an autorickshaw intercepted them. A four-member gang that got out of the vehicle started raining blows on Kandhan, pushing his daughter away. Keerthana suffered injuries when she attempted to come in between her father and the attackers. The morning crowd fled watching a gory murder unfold in a residential neighbourhood. Kumaran Nagar police rushed to the scene and moved Kandhan and Keerthana to a hospital where Kandhan was declared brought dead. Preliminary investigations suggested a gang enmity to be the reason behind the murder. Kandhan, a resident of Kannamapettai moved with his family to West Mambalam about four years ago. He was running a cable TV business with a history-sheeter, Logu until two years ago. Both of them were involved in the murder of one, Pallu Rajendran in 2010. After a fallout, Logu started his own business. It is said that police used Kandhan to find the whereabouts of Logu after he jumped bail in July last year. This, police suspect to be the reason behind the murder. Logu has been detained under the Goondas Act at least five times. Kumaran Nagar police are perusing the CCTV footages in the neighbourhood to ascertain the identity of the attackers. The DRI officials intercepted the woman when she was on a flight to Hong Kong on Monday. (Photo: NDTV screengrab) New Delhi: A woman flight attendant of Jet Airways has been arrested by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) for allegedly trying to smuggle out forex worth more than Rs 3 crore, with the agency on Tuesday saying that the accused was part of a major global hawala syndicate. The DRI officials intercepted the woman when she was on a flight to Hong Kong on Monday, the agency said in a statement. "During examination of her checked-in and hand baggage, USD 4,80,200 wrapped in aluminium foil with a market value of Rs 3.25 crore, has been recovered," it said. During interrogation, it came to light that the woman was a carrier for a major international hawala syndicate and has carried foreign currencies many times for a Delhi-based hawala operator, the statement said. The operator, identified as Amit Malhotra, is a resident of Vivek Vihar area in Delhi, a senior DRI official said. He said Malhotra would smuggle forex out and into the country with the help of airline crew members. "Amit Malhotra would collect money from some bullion dealers in Delhi and send it through some air hostess to select foreign destinations. The money was being used for purchasing gold abroad. The gold would then be sent to India illegally," the official said. The hawala operator had befriended the Jet Airways crew six months ago during a flight to India, he said. The DRI suspects some other crew members of Jet Airways may also be involved in smuggling out forex, the official said. "Amit Malhotra has been illegally smuggling forex for over one year. There are some other crew members involved in the case. We are also trying to find out the details of bullion dealers involved in this syndicate," he said. Both Malhotra and the Jet Airways crew member have been arrested, the official said. A Delhi court sent the two to two-day judicial custody. Read: Jet Airways air hostess sent to 2-day judicial custody for smuggling Rs 3.2 cr The DRI has recovered Rs 3.3 lakh in cash, and foreign currencies of different countries worth USD 2,500, besides several incriminating materials from Malhtora, he said. CHENNAI: C. Sai Praneeth Reddy, an IIT Madras student, is one among the 20 toppers in Common Admission Test (CAT) 2017 with 100 percentile marks in the test, which is the gateway to Indias top business schools. The results of CAT 2017 were declared on Monday. Totally 1,99,632 candidates had appeared for the exam from 140 cities from across the country. While the top 20 candidates in the previous CAT were male and engineers, this year two female candidates and three non-engineers feature in the list. Sai Praneeth Reddy, who is pursuing final year in electrical engineering at IIT Madras, said, I was hoping for 99.99 percentile. The 100 percentile was a pleasant surprise. He has scored 232.11 out of 300 marks in the test. Of 1.99 lakh students, 100% of them scored less than the 232.11 marks (A percentile represents how many students scored lesser than the candidate's marks). I want to join either IIA-Ahmedabad or IIM-Bangalore. But I have to clear another round to qualify for admissions, he said. In the next round, the shortlisted students have to appear for writing ability test, group discussion and personal interview. He is preparing for the exam for last one year. Though I got 100 percentile in Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning, the section was very difficult in CAT 2017. I scored little less In English (95.65 percentile). But, I am happy to get 100 percentile, he said. His father Surendra Reddy is the businessman in Anantapur and mother Sandhya a homemaker Based on CAT score, group discussion, writing ability test and personal interview the 20 IIMs will admit students for the two-year management courses. There around 4,000 seats in these management institutes. The students have performed exceedingly well in CAT compared to the last year. Apart from the Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning section which was difficult this year, the students got good scores in other two sections, said Arvind Mantry, centre director, TIME, Chennai. The shortlisted candidates will soon receive call letters from the IIMs. The admission will be based on the five parameters including the CAT exam, academic performance, group discussion, essay writing and personal interview. New Delhi: The Narendra Modi government poses a "threat" to the country's democracy and Constitution, Dalit leader Jignesh Mevani said today at a youth rally for which the Delhi Police had refused permission. The newly-elected MLA from Vadgam in Gujarat termed the refusal to grant permission to the 'Yuva Hunkar' rally in Parliament Street an example of the "Gujarat model" of politics. "The 125 crore people of this country are watching that someone is not being allowed to speak for merely demanding the release of Chandrashekhar Azad, effective implementation of the Constitution and two crore jobs to the youth. If an elected representative does not have the right to do so, then this is Gujarat model," Mevani said to loud cheers from a crowd comprising student activists from Delhi, Lucknow and Allahabad among other places. The rally -- held in Parliament Street in the heart of the national capital where prohibitory orders are in force through the year -- was demanding the release of Dalit outfit Bhim Army founder Chandrashekhar Azad. The gathering also sought to emphasise issues like educational rights, employment, livelihood and gender justice. Mevani said he will stand guard against the politics of hatred and stick to constitutional values and the "politics of love", along the lines of statements made by Congress President Rahul Gandhi after the Gujarat polls. "I believe in politics of unity. I believe in politics of love, not love jihad. Alpesh Thakore, Hardik Patel and I are being targeted because we demolished their (BJP) pride and arrogance in Gujarat..There's a looming threat to our democracy and Constitution today," he said. "We are not supporters of love jihad, we are 'pyaar ishq muhabbat' supporters, and therefore, we will celebrate Valentine's Day as well," Jignesh Mevani said. Although authorities had maintained till the last minute that Mevani and his supporters did not have permission to hold the event, it seems the rally organisers and Delhi Police reached a compromise later. The rally, which began around 1 pm, saw a modest turnout. Former and current JNU student leaders, including Kanhaiya Kumar, Shehla Rashid and Umar Khalid were present on the stage, metres away from the Parliament Street Police Station. Assam farmers leader Akhil Gogoi and senior Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan were also present, apart from students from JNU, Delhi University, Lucknow University and Allahabad University among others. Azad (30) was arrested in June last year from Himachal Pradesh as he is the main accused in Thakur-Dalit clashes in Uttar Pradesh's Saharanpur district. His supporters turned up with posters bearing his image. The Prime Minister said that the hopes and aspirations of people of India are at the highest level at this time and today the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) look at India in a positive way. (Photo: ANI/Twitter) New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday said that the focus on India is changing across the world and the reason for the change is that India is transforming. Delivering a keynote speech at the Pravasi Bharatiya Kendra at Delhi's Chanakyapuri the Prime Minister said: We are increasingly focusing on the world, our perception of the world is changing, its main reason is that India is transforming itself, it is being transformed. Reforms to transform is our guiding principle. Modi said that today the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) look at India in a positive way. He added, Whatever change has happened, it has happened in the past three years. This is because we are using the principle, reform to transform. The Prime Minister said the thoughts that, nothing will change... things will be how they used to be... nothing can be done about it, are a thing of the past. He added that Today's India, a young India, a new India, has come a long way from such thoughts. The Prime Minister said that the hopes and aspirations of people of India are at the highest level at this time. The result of an irreversible change in their mindset will result in an overall change in the system, across all sectors, Modi added. Lauding his government, Narendra Modi said: There is no sector that we haven't brought reform into. He added that the aim of his government is to end corruption. He said that along with societal transformation his government is bringing in economical changes as well. Modi said that he had spoken to France president on the matter of climate change and asked to work together with solar rich countries. He said: We are aiming to make a global platform. The Prime Minister said: We should be proud of holistic living. 171 countries sponsored our Yoga Diwas plan. He added that today India stands first in row when it comes to UN peacekeeping. Reaching out to the delegates the Prime Minister said India feels proud when there is news about how Indians living overseas are influencing the geo-politics of where they live and how they are making policies. The Prime Minister began his keynote speech by welcoming the delegates. He said: Welcome to India. Welcome home. I welcome you on behalf of 130 crore Indians. Narendra Modi was delivering keynote speech to over 100 parliamentarians of Indian-origin in the capital. As many as 124 members of parliament (MPs) and 17 mayors from 23 countries including UK, USA, South Africa, Canada, among others were present at the event. The biggest delegation was from Guyana with 20 members of parliament and three mayors. The US delegation was represented by only two mayors as the Senate is in session. January 9 is celebrated as Pravasi Bhartiya Divas (PBD), an annual celebratory day that marks the contribution of overseas Persons with Indian origin (PIO) towards their homeland. Supreme Court on Tuesday modified its order on National Anthem and said it is not mandatory in cinema halls. (Photo: File) New Delhi: Modifying its 2016 order, the Supreme Court has accepted the Centre's suggestion that the playing of National Anthem before the screening of movies should not be made compulsory. The apex court's decision comes a day after the government said a final call can be taken on the issue once a ministerial panel comes up with its guidelines on this. "Playing of National Anthem is not mandatory in cinema halls before screening of film," the apex court said. The Supreme court accepted the government's affidavit that says a 12-member committee should be set up to suggest changes in Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act. The court said that the committee should comprehensively look into all aspects. It also said that the exemption for the disabled from standing in cinema halls during National Anthem shall remain in force. In an affidavit submitted to the Supreme Court on Monday, the Centre said that it has formed an inter-ministerial committee to frame new guidelines on all aspects relating to the playing and singing of the National Anthem. The guidelines would require extensive consultations and would require six months time. It said once the recommendations are ready, the government would issue the requisite notification or circular. Till such time, the earlier order making National Anthem mandatory in cinema halls should be recalled. In October 2017, the Supreme Court had asked the Centre to take a call on regulating the playing of National Anthem in public places including cinema halls, within three months, and said till then its earlier order directing cinema halls to play the National Anthem at the commencement of films will continue. Justice DY Chandrachud who was part of the three-judge bench openly expressed displeasure at the interim order passed in 2017 observing that there could not be any moral policing. The initial order, issued in November 2016, said all those present in theatres must "stand up in respect" till the anthem ended. The practice would "instill a feeling within one, a sense of committed patriotism and nationalism," the bench, led by Justice Dipak Misra, who later became the Chief Justice of India, had ruled. After an appeal to recall the order, a different bench of the court - which also included Chief Justice Misra -- modified it October, 2017. "People do not need to stand up at a cinema hall to be perceived as patriotic," the court said, adding that it "cannot be assumed that if a person does not stand up for national anthem, then he is less patriotic". The court said the government should take a call on the issue, instead of "shooting from the court's shoulder". Criticising the government's inaction, Justice DY Chandrachud, who was part of the bench, asked what was stopping it from amending the Flag Code. "Nowadays, the anthem is played during matches, tournaments and even Olympics where half of the crowd does not understand its meaning... You can amend it and say where to play national anthem and where it can't be done," the judge said. Hyderabad: The Telangana state government will seek the help of the Centre and the Reserve Bank of India to arrange sufficient currency notes to disburse Rs 8,000 per acre per year cash incentive to farmers in the backdrop of state facing severe currency shortage in districts for the past three months. The government has decided to credit the first instalment of Rs 4,000 per acre for Kharif season in May and Rs 4,000 for Rabi in October. The government needs to credit the amount in the bank accounts of 71.75 lakh farmers. It requires over Rs 5,600 crore cash for disbursement in May alone. However, all the districts in TS have been facing severe cash crunch for the past three months due to which the disbursal of Aasara pensions came to a halt. The payments for farmers have also been halted. Though the government credited the amount in bank accounts for farmers after procuring paddy and other agriculture produce from them, the farmers could not withdraw the amount due to currency shortage. The state government is worried that when Aasara pension of Rs 1,000 could not be disbursed to 35 lakh beneficiaries due to cash crunch, how can it disburse Rs 8,000 per acre for over 71 lakh farmers. The issue was discussed at length in the Cabinet sub-committee meeting held at the Secretariat on Monday. It was decided to meet Union finance minister Arun Jaitely and RBI Governor seeking availability of sufficient cash in state for extending cash incentive to farmers. Farmers have to get Rs 5,600 crore by May-end Agriculture minister Pocharam Srinivas Reddy said, The currency shortage for the past few months is a matter of concern for the government. We need to arrange over Rs 5,600 crore in May alone for disbursement to farmers. If sufficient cash is not available in banks by then, the scheme will not serve the desired purpose. Farmers need cash for crop investment and other agri-related works. With the onset of monsoon, the kharif activity will begin in June itself and cash incentive should reach farmers by May-end. The government will send a team of senior officials to pursue the case with the Centre and RBI. We will meet Union finance ministry officials and the RBI soon seeking availability of adequate cash in all districts by May. We are hopeful of Centre extending helping hand to TS, which is giving cash incentives to farmers for the first time in the country, said C. Parthasarathi, agriculture secretary. In case, if cash problem still persists in May, the government is chalking out an alternative plan to extend the incentive through cheque to enable farmers to purchase seeds, fertilisers. Snowden had spoken on the same issue earlier this month, saying, 'It is the natural tendency of government to desire perfect records of private lives. History shows that no matter the laws, the result is abuse.' (Photo: File | AP) Mumbai: Amid continuous outrage over the Aadhaar data breach that was reported after an investigation by The Tribune earlier this month, and the consequent FIR filed by Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), US whistle-blower Edward Snowden spoke up again on Tuesday in defence of the concerned journalist. Directly calling out the UIDAI responsible for "destroying the privacy of a billion Indians," Snowden tweeted, "The journalists exposing the #Aadhaar breach deserve an award, not an investigation. If the government were truly concerned for justice, they would be reforming the policies." The journalists exposing the #Aadhaar breach deserve an award, not an investigation. If the government were truly concerned for justice, they would be reforming the policies that destroyed the privacy of a billion Indians. Want to arrest those responsible? They are called @UIDAI. https://t.co/xyewbK2WO2 Edward Snowden (@Snowden) January 8, 2018 Snowden had spoken on the same issue earlier this month, saying, "It is the natural tendency of government to desire perfect records of private lives. History shows that no matter the laws, the result is abuse." Also Read: No matter the laws, result is abuse: Edward Snowden on Aadhaar data leak Rachna Khaira, the journalist against whom UIDAI filed an FIR said on Monday that she has just revealed the "tip of the iceberg" in her report and there was "much more to come" based on her investigations. Also Read: Just revealed tip of iceberg, more to come: Journalist on Aadhaar breach Khaira also appreciated the support Chandigarh as well as Delhi media and even international media has shown to her cause. India Today journalist Rahul Kanwal tweeted, "Totally wrong for UIDAI to file an FIR against the journalist who exposed #AadharLeaks If a loophole is pointed out Govt should work on fixing the flaw rather than try to shoot the messenger. Dont intimidate journalists. Not on." The Tribune also released a statement saying Khair's investigation was a "legitimate journalistic exercise." "We regret very much that the authorities have misconceived an honest journalistic enterprise and have proceeded to institute criminal proceedings against the whistle-blower. We shall explore all legal options open to us to defend our freedom to undertake serious investigative journalism," said the statement released by The Tribune Chief Editor Harish Khare. The Union government, however, on Monday released a statement saying it was not against journalists or freedom of press in any way. Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad tweeted that the FIR was against unknown persons responsible for the leak of demographic details. Prasad also said that a suggestion has been made to UIDAI to request The Tribune and its journalists to assist the police in further investigation. Members of both the ruling and opposition benches listened to Dhinakaran's brief speech during the Zero Hour with rapt attention. (Photo: PTI/File) Chennai: Dissident AIADMK leader TTV Dhinakaran on Tuesday voiced support in the Tamil Nadu Assembly for the transport workers on strike, saying the K Palanisamy-led state government should prove that it was "Amma's regime" by fulfilling the demands of the employees. Subsequently, he also staged a walkout, after being denied permission by Speaker P Dhanapal to raise an issue. In his maiden speech in the Assembly, Dhinakaran sought Chief Minister Palanisamy's intervention in putting an end to the strike, which entered the sixth day on Tuesday. "By acting in the right way, finding the right solution and fulfilling the demands of the transport workers, it should be proved that this is Amma's (former chief minister late J Jayalalithaa) regime," he said during a debate on the transport workers' issue. "This regime claims to be Amma's regime...they should prove it," Dhinakaran said. Members of both the ruling and opposition benches listened to his brief speech during the Zero Hour with rapt attention. Stating that the people of the state were suffering due to the strike, Dhinakaran urged the government to put an end to it by acting in the right manner. Palanisamy, Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, state ministers and Leader of Opposition M K Stalin were present during Dhinakaran's speech. Dhinakaran, who fought an unsuccessful battle in the Election Commission (EC) to get the AIADMK's "two leaves" symbol, contested as an Independent in the December 21 RK Nagar Assembly bypoll and emerged victorious, defeating the AIADMK and DMK candidates. As many as 17 trade unions, including those affiliated to the DMK and Left parties, are on an indefinite strike after rejecting the government's proposal to hike the wages of the transport workers by 2.44 times. Dhinakaran staged a walkout when he was denied permission by the Chair to raise an issue. The Independent member was seen repeatedly insisting that Dhanapal allow him to make some remarks, even as the DMK's J Anbazhagan was speaking on the motion to thank the governor for his address to the House on Monday. Dhanapal, however, did not allow Dhinakaran to speak as Anbazhagan sat down for a moment -- an apparent indication that the main opposition party was keen to see what the sidelined AIADMK leader had to say. However, the speaker was firm and did not allow Dhinakaran to raise any issue, following which the latter walked out of the House. Congress president Rahul Gandhi said the government is manipulating a division based on caste and religion, to make up for its failure at creating jobs. (Photo: ANI) Manama: Rahul Gandhi on Monday met with Crown Prince of Bahrain Shaikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa in Manama and discussed a variety of bilateral issues of interest during his first foreign trip after becoming the Congress president. "Had a good meeting with Crown Prince of Bahrain, HRH Shaikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa. We discussed a variety of issues of interest to India and Bahrain," Gandhi said in a tweet. Gandhi, who is in Manama as a state guest of Bahrain, is also expected to meet King Hamas bin Isa Al Khalifa. He also addressed a convention of NRIs and met the Gulf country's Prime Minister Prince Salman bin Hamas Al-Khalifa. Gandhi was also the chief guest at valedictory session of a function organised by Global Organisation of People of India Origin (GOPIO), Bahrain, where delegates of 50 countries were present. Addressing the GOPIO, Gandhi sharply attacked the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, saying, "I am here to tell you what you mean to our country, that you're important, to tell you there is a serious problem at home, to tell you that you're part of the solution and that I am here to build a bridge between wherever you are in the world and home." He also stressed the problems of the youth and accused the BJP-led government of trying to benefit from it. Gandhi said that the government is manipulating a division based on caste and religion, to make up for its failure at creating jobs. The insecurities of the jobless youth is then being fed to create "hatred between communities." Rahul Gandhi was also the chief guest at valedictory session of a function organised by Global Organisation of People of India Origin (GOPIO), Bahrain, where delegates of 50 countries were present. (Photo: ANI) The Congress president also met with Bahrain foreign minister Shaikh Khalid bin Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, Gulf Daily News reported. "Thank you, Your Excellency, Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, honourable Foreign Minister of Kingdom of Bahrain for being a gracious host at lunch today," Gandhi tweeted after the luncheon meeting. He will also have an interactive session with business leaders of Indian-origin on Tuesday. "NRIs are the true representatives of our soft power and the brand ambassadors of our nation across the globe. Looking forward to meeting and addressing fellow countrymen in Bahrain tomorrow," Gandhi tweeted ahead of his trip on Sunday. Gandhi is expected to return to India later on January 9. Lucknow: The Yogi Adityanath government will release about 500 turtles, once again, into the Ganga River in a renewed attempt to clean the river. The turtles are likely to be released into the river next week when the temperatures begin to rise. A senior forest official said that carnivorous species of turtles prey on half burnt bodies and carcasses and help in organic cleaning of the river. The state government has been receiving flak from devotees who are unable to take a holy dip in the river due to the highly polluted waters. In Allahabad, a group of saints refused to take the holy dip on the first day of the ongoing Magh Mela because the water had turned black. The official said, Since the 1980s, we have been releasing carnivorous turtles into the Ganga as a cleanup operation. Uttar Pradesh has the largest catchment area of turtles and the specimens are poached in huge numbers. The families used wooden planks to cross the drain, which is filled with sewage. BENGALURU: A two-and-a-half-year old girl drowned after accidentally falling into a storm water drain near Doddabommasandra in Vidyaranyapura police limits on Tuesday morning. The girl, Tanushree, was the daughter of Sabbanna and Lakshmi. The family, which hails from Kalaburagi, lives in a shed next to the storm water drain, which does not have any barrier, in Doddabommasandra for the last four to five years. Her parents work as daily wage workers in the same area. On Tuesday morning, her parents were away at work, and the girl was alone inside the shed. While playing near the shed, she accidentally fell into the drain, which is nearly 10 feet deep. After nearly an hour, Lakshmis brother came home and did not see the girl. Alarmed, he and the girls parents started searching for her everywhere. They then found her in the storm water drain and rushed her to a nearby hospital, where she was declared brought dead, the police said. The body was handed over to her family after the post-mortem at MS Ramaiah Hospital. An official said that a case has been filed against BWSSB officer Gopalakrishna and others for granting permission for the family to stay next to the storm water drain illegally. Mayor Sampath Raj, who visited the spot, announced Rs 5 lakh compensation for the family of the deceased. He told Yelahanka zonal engineer Parmeshwar to build safety barriers across the storm water drain to prevent such accidents. A senior official said that families used wooden planks to cross the drain, which is filled with sewage water. More than 10 families who have come from different places have encroached the area and built small sheds next to the storm water drain. These families also use the drain as an open air toilet. BBMP officials know about the encroachment, but have not taken any action, said a resident who lives in an apartment nearby. Bengaluru: The Whitefield police are using drones to search for a techie who has gone missing since December 18. The techie had gone out around 6 pm after he got a call from a prospective Olx buyer for his car. The police are using the drones to study the area along the route taken by the techie, Ajitabh (29), and to trace his car. His last reported location was Gunjur. The High Court on Monday reviewed the status of the case and set the next date of hearing for January 16. Ajitabhs father approached the High Court on January 2 with the writ petition asking them to transfer the case to the CBI. DCP (Whitefield) Abdul Ahad said, We have been using the drones near Varthur and surrounding areas. We have a few leads in the case which cannot be revealed as it can affect our investigation. Chikkamagaluru: If politicians are now using social media to campaign in the run-up to the coming elections, the so-called moral police also appear to be using it to save young girls from jihadi elements. On Tuesday a message in Kannada by a Bajrang Dal activist , posted on social networking sites, warning Hindu girls against falling in love with boys of other religions and telling them they would be beaten up if they were caught in their company, went viral in Mudigere. You may have hundreds of reasons to give, but we do not want them. Our aim is to protect the Hindu religion, reads the message that ends with Dhramo Rakshathi Rakshithaha (Religion will protect those who protect religion). It was signed by the Bajrang Dal, Mudigere. Defending the posting, Mr Tudukur Manjunath, district convenor of the Balrang Dal , argued his outfit member responsible for it was doing the right thing in warning Hindu girls against falling for boys of other religions. He may have posted it out of concern for the Hindu girls, who are falling prey to love jihad, a trap laid by Muslim youth. The girls are later given talaq, leaving many of them on the streets, he claimed. Bajrang Dal has taken the onus of guiding society in the right direction and creating awareness among Hindu girls against love jihad is a part of this, he added. He agreed that the post should not have threatened violence against the girls. Meanwhile, a senior police officer told the Deccan Chronicle that they would not allow moral policing in the district and suitable action would be taken in the matter. Benagluru: A big step towards curbing child labour has brought a big smile on the faces of child rights activists. A Supreme Court order favours the plea of Campaign Against Child Labour Karnataka against the Karnataka Power Transmission Corporation Ltd. In January, the Supreme Court confirmed an earlier Karnataka HC order that an undertaking should be taken from industrial/commercial consumers that they will not engage child labour. Also, responsible activism has been entrusted to electricity inspectors, who have been ordered to disconnect power supply of any factory that they visit that employs children. The order clearly states, Disconnect power supply to those who employ children in violation of the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, 1986 and Section 24 of the Karnataka Shops and Commercial Establishment Act, 1961/Factories Act, 1948." "An SC judgment becomes the law of the land and the KPTCL has the obligation to enforce this verdict. CACL should give wide publicity to this judgement and put pressure on the Ministry of Energy to implement the order. This case was filed in the HC in 1999 and KPTCL went on to appeal in the SSC in 2006. The case was pending for almost 11 years," said Mathews Philip, Executive Director, SICHREM South India Cell for Human Rights Education and Monitoring. The order could not be implemented in the state as KPTCL went on appeal to the Supreme Court and saw to it that it was pending for a long time. The pending appeal is an excuse for non-implementation. The final order came in January 2018, nobody has heard of action by the government to enforce it," Mr Phillip said. New Delhi: Just days after fresh strains were reported in the Indo-Maldivian ties following growing proximity between the Maldives and China, Indias tiny maritime neighbour appears to have extended the olive branch to New Delhi in a bid to allay New Delhis concerns and defuse tensions. The Special Envoy of the Maldives President Abdulla Yameen and Maldives Foreign Minister Dr. Mohamed Asim will visit India from January 10 to 12 and will meet both External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Maldives remains the only SAARC country to which PM Modi has not paid a visit. On Maldives recently signing an FTA with China and Indias response, the MEA had earlier said, We have seen reports about the Maldives-China Free Trade Agreement. The reports have also alluded to the manner in which the FTA was passed by the Majlis. We are yet to see the document, and hence, it will not be appropriate for me to speculate on the contents. As you are aware, India attaches the highest importance to its relations with Maldives. Our two countries have strong historical and civilisation linkages at the people-to-people level. New Delhi/Bhopal: The Supreme Court on Tuesday said that it is not mandatory for cinema halls to play the National Anthem before screening a film. Recalling its November 30, 2016, order, which had made the playing of National Anthem before each film screening in cinema halls across the country mandatory, a three-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, said that playing of the National Anthem is now optional, at the discretion of cinema halls. The court, however, emphasised that citizens should show respect to the national anthem whenever it is played and added that its earlier order granting an exemption to the disabled from standing in cinema halls during national anthem shall continue to remain in force. Playing of the anthem is directive, but showing respect is mandatory, Chief Justice Misra observed orally on Tuesday. About 13 months ago, a two-judge Bench, which included Justice Dipak Mishra, had said that love and respect for the motherland is reflected when one shows respect to the National Anthem as well as to the national flag and made playing the Anthem mandatory. Tuesdays order comes after the government on Monday filed an affidavit asking the Supreme Court to reconsider its National Anthem order until the inter-ministerial committee it has set up to look at any required modifications to the existing rules Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act submits its report. Attorney general K.K. Venugopal told the court that a 12-member high-profile inter-ministerial committee is going to look into the occasions, circumstances and events for the solemn rendering of the Anthem. The panel will also examine whether any amendments are necessary to the Prevention of Insult to National Honour Act of 1971, and submit its report in six months. Referring to complaints filed under the 1971 Act against Infosys founder N.R. Narayana Murthy and Congress MP Shashi Tharoor for disrespecting the Anthem, Mr Venugopal submitted, Respect or disrespect to the Anthem has to be decided on a case to case basis. Your Lordships cannot think of a 1,000 ways of respect to the anthem. Leaving the issue to the government panel, the Bench said that the committee should look at all issues relating to the anthem holistically. Anthem has to be respected Three things are obvious. The anthem has to be respected as it is the salutation to the motherland. The list of occasions for showing respect to the anthem. Proper decorum has to be maintained during the anthem, the bench added. The Centres decision to look into all aspects relating to playing the national anthem follows the Supreme Courts observation in October last year that people cannot be forced to carry patriotism on their sleeves and it cannot be assumed that if a person does not stand up for the national anthem, he or she is less patriotic. Petitioner Shyam Narayan Choukseys counsel Abhinav Shrivastav, however, submitted on Tuesday that the national anthem is a tool for national integration. The Preamble uses the word fraternity and assures integrity. The courts order to play the anthem in cinemas and for all to stand regardless of caste or religion serves the cause of integrity. Therefore the Nov. 30 order should not be recalled, Mr Shrivastav said. Senior advocate Rajeev Dhavan submitted that the anthem has a ceremonial significance and a sacred element which should not be trivialised by playing it four times a day in cinemas. The committee set up by the home ministry will give recommendations regarding the playing and singing of national anthem, and changes in the Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act, 1971, if necessary. The panel will be headed by a special secretary level officer of home ministry and will comprise 12 other members, of the rank of joint secretary, from several ministries The committee is scheduled to hold a meeting on January 19 and is expected to give its recommendations in six months. New Delhi: Taking on Congress President Rahul Gandhi for his address criticising the Indian government from an international platform, senior BJP leader and Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Tuesday said that Mr Gandhi was spreading hatred among Indians with his speeches abroad like he did in the country. The BJP said Mr Gandhi accused the government of spreading hate and terror, besides few other things that are normally not said at international forums but for the longest time, the politics of hate and communalism has been practised by the Congress itself. Dubbing Mr Gandhi's speech made in Bahrain on Monday as irresponsible, Mr Prasad compared the Congress leaders speech with Prime Minister Narendra Modis address to 270 Indian origin (PIO) parliamentarians, focusing on boosting ties between India and other countries. The BJP strongly condemns Rahul Gandhi's irresponsible utterances.... He is spreading hatred among people, said the Union minister while wondering if the Congress' stand on the triple talaq bill worked to spread love or hate in the society. He accused the Congress of failing to take a stand on an issue of womans respect and justice. The senior BJP leader said Mr Gandhi's father and the then PM Rajiv Gandhi had committed a sin by passing a law under pressure from Muslim bodies to negate a Supreme Court order to provide alimony to Shah Bano after her husband divorced her. He said the same Muslim body is now opposing the triple talaq bill and claimed that the Congress decision to stall it in Rajya Sabha was a case of double standards influenced by vote bank politics. He cited Mudra loans given to tens of millions of people, rise in road construction works and opening of call centres in tier two cities and said this has led to creation of employment as he refuted Mr Gandhi's charge that the government had not created enough jobs. Mr Prasad also said that before comparing India with China and praising the latter, Mr Gandhi should have seen a report in an international magazines December issue, which predicts that India would overtake China in growth soon. Thiruvananthapuram: Special needs students, parents and teachers still await a favourable response to their long-standing demand for aided category to 33 special schools. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan had promised the State Association for Coordinating Rehabilitation and Empowerment of Developmentally Disabled (SACRED) on November 2 last year that its request will be granted at the earliest. This was after their two-day Secretariat dharna in November, attended by more than 10, 000 people. But so far it has remained on paper. The Chief Ministers Office had asked the social justice department to hold consultative meetings with stakeholders to zero in on a solution. Pinarayi Vijayan also held meetings with special needs school principals. Accordingly, the social justice department was asked to come up with a detailed report on ways to grant aided category to 33 special schools, a decision about which was taken by the previous UDF Government. Unfortunately when the LDF Government came to power in 2016, it cancelled this order much to the despair of 20, 000 special needs students, their parents and over 5000 teachers in the State. We are aware that the social justice department is planning to come up with a grading system for the special schools. An expert committee will grade the schools as per their infrastructure, staff and students strength. We are hoping that the LDF Government will see the plight of the 15, 000 special needs students, their parents and the teachers long standing demand, said Father Roy Vadakkel, chairman of the Association for Intellectually Disabled (AID) and director of Asha Nilayam Special School for Mentally Challenged Children at Ponkunnam in Kottayam district. But a top Government official came down heavily against the LDF Government citing that Pinarayi Vijayan could have considered the demands of SACRED much earlier without much delay. Unfortunately funds will not be earmarked for the functioning of special needs schools in the State budget as of now. In fact the slew of demands by the SACRED office bearers has so far not been considered favourably and the LDF Government is doing nothing, said a top Government official to DC. The status-quo circular issued by the Telangana government on January 4 have not brought any relief to parents as schools continue to violate the governments orders which said they could not hike fees for the academic year 2018-19 until further orders. Hyderabad: The status-quo circular issued by the Telangana government on January 4 have not brought any relief to parents as schools continue to violate the governments orders which said they could not hike fees for the academic year 2018-19 until further orders. Many schools even issued fee-hike structures on Monday, just days after the government asked them to maintain status-quo. Pallavi Model School in Alwal released its fee structure which clearly mentioned the fee hike for 2018-2019. Upset with this, members of Hyderabad School Parents Association (HSPA) made a representation to district education officers (DEOs) and mandal education officers (MEOs) after they received many complaints from parents stating that schools said they had not received the governments circular on the fee hike. MEOs, on their part, said they had sent the circular to all schools in their mandals through WhatsApp, adding that if schools continued to violate the orders, their recognition would be cancelled. Venkat Sai Kadapa, member of HSPA, said, Schools like International Baccalaureate School mentioned in its fee brochure that a 10 per cent fee hike can be expected every year. Other schools like Shri Ram Universal School, St Andrews School etc have also hiked fees. We have reported this to DEOs and MEOs but so far not received any reply. Chandrajeet Singh, a parent, said, School managements have become very powerful. They do not care about a government order and carry on with their business without fear. The government needs to come up with stricter laws to deal with schools which do not follow the orders. HSPA member Arvinda Jata said, This irony repeating again and again shows how schools are indifferent to the directives or the circulars. It is time the government shows to schools that it is not a puppet in hands of private school managements. Secunderabads deputy instructor of schools Mr Venu Gopal said, I personally sent the status-quo circular to all schools which come under our domain via WhatsApp, and also personally visited all the schools. If schools violate government orders, the authorities can cancel their recognition. HYDERABAD: Prison authorities in the state did strip search of prisoners, including undertrials, brought to jails for alleged involvement in crimes. The humiliating practice was prevalent in all the jails in the state even as the prisons department continued speaking about various reforms. There were 50 prisons across the state, including three central and seven district ones. About 1,400 personnel manned the prisons. In 2017, there were 68,369 prisoners. The strip search practice dating back to the colonial period continued in the State. Anyone brought to a prison was asked remove his clothes, including undergarments, in the presence of prison guards. There were no exemptions. The police arrested me claiming I was selling tobacco and the court convicted me for two days. When I was taken to the prison, the authorities asked me to remove all my clothes. It was too humiliating, claimed Mohd Fareed, a pan shop owner. Another person, Ahmed of Bibi-Ka-Chasma, who was convicted for the same offence, was asked to manually clean toilets in the prison. In the past, it was done in open halls at the entrance gate. Now, separate compartments have been set up, following complains, said a senior prison official. The exercise was repeated whenever a prisoner got back after attending court trial. Mobile phones, ganja, cigarettes, drugs and other articles are smuggled into the prison. To avoid it, we conduct a strip search, explained IG Prisons Akula Narasimha. Smuggling of drugs was a global problem in prisons. To keep drugs and also mobile phones at bay, authorities in several countries installed x-ray body scanners. Similar, equipment was also installed at airports in the country where officials of law enforcement agencies check persons suspected to be smuggling gold. Narasimha said they were now planning to procure body scanners and install them at prisons in the state. Yet there would be situations when we have to strip search prisoners, especially hardcores, for they have numerous ways to smuggle in drugs, he added. He cited a few cases where a few smugglers were found concealing ganja balls in their anus and ejecting them in prison toilets. BENGALURU: On Tuesday, trees around the Pattandur Agrahara Lake were axed which the residents believe is the handiwork of the BBMP, which has planned to build a link road from Hope Farm Junction to ECC. Sister Suma, one of the petitioners, said, After a petition was filed in the High Court in 2017, things had calmed down. But on Tuesday afternoon, we saw bulldozers in the area. The matter is sub-judice. How can civic agencies come up with a road? The courts hearing is scheduled for Wednesday. Mr Sandeep Anirudhan, a citizen activist, said that during the last hearing, the BBMP advocate had told the court that the road project was abandoned. So, why are they continuing with the project surreptitiously, he asked. One of the major reasons for the residents to file a petition in August 2017 was that a portion of St Josesphs Convent and an orphanage would be demolished for the road project. Corporator S. Muniswamy allayed the residents fear, saying that MLA Arvind Limbavali has said that the school will not be affected and no construction will be allowed on the lake land. Trees were felled in a plot owned by Embassy Group. The lake falls in Survey No 54 and the road is an extension of the 80 feet road which connects ECC to Whitefield, the corporator said Sister Suma, however, said that the residents do not want a road as five alternative routes are already available. New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday reserved its verdict on a batch of appeals relating to the Cauvery water dispute, even as Tamil Nadu maintained that the court should not leave it to Parliament to frame a scheme for implementation of the judgment. A three-judge Bench of Chief Justices Dipak Misra and Justices Amitav Roy and D.Y. Chandrachud reserved judgment on appeals against the Cauvery Disputes Tribunal's final award of February 2007 on allocation of water for Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala and Union Territory of Puducherry. Though the court had asked independent experts to adduce evidence, the bench said it was not considering the same. Prof. A.K. Gossain, water expert, who was brought in by Karnataka pleaded for a holistic approach to address the problem. When Tamil Nadu wanted the court to allow the Chairman of Cauvery cell R. Subramanian to adduce evidence, the court being a witness he will not be permitted. Later the CJI said, "we are not seeking the help of experts." While it took nearly two decades for the Tribunal to render its final decision in 2007, it has taken a decade for the arguments to conclude in the cross appeals against the award filed by the States of Tamil nadu, Karnataka and Kerala. Concluding his arguments Mr. Naphade said Tamil Nadu was of the view that the issue of framing a scheme for setting up of the Cauvery Management Board should not be left to the wisdom of Parliament. He said Tamil Nadu which was dependent on Cauvery water was always at the receiving end as Karnataka had never implemented in full any order passed by the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal or by the court. He rejected Karnataka's stand that allocation of water could be determined only at the end of the crop season or at the end of the water year. Launched in 1954, Old Monk was the largest selling dark rum in the world for a long time. (Photo: Facebook) Mumbai: Kapil Mohan, the mastermind behind famous rum brand Old Monk, passed away on Monday night at the age of 88. Mohan, who was the chairman and managing director of Mohan Meakin, the first known brewery in India, had a fatal cardiac arrest at his residence in Ghaziabad. He was also a recipient of the Vishisht Seva Medal and a brigadier at the time of his retirement from the Indian Armed Forces. Launched in 1954, Old Monk was the largest selling dark rum in the world for a long time. Recently, however, the sales had dropped and Old Monk saw a 54 per cent decline in sales between 2010-14, according to a report in Times of India. This was about a quarter of the sales it had had in the 1960s. Mohan was honored by the Government of India, in 2010, with the fourth highest Indian civilian award of the Padma Shri. After the news broke on social media, twitteratti paid tributes to the legendary entrepreneur by clinking their glasses. Sad to hear about the demise of the creator of iconic OLD MONK RUM - Brigadier (Retd.) Kapil Mohan, who ran Mohan Meakin Ltd. Undoubtedly the most favorite drink of youth and the armed forces among others in India. May his soul Rest In Peace. Prayers. pic.twitter.com/e90ZIHm2yv Aditya Raj Kaul (@AdityaRajKaul) January 8, 2018 Sad to hear of the passing of Brig Kapil Mohan -- and it does unreported in the news media! He is the man who ran Mohan Meakin and the face beind the Old Monk rum brand that is global. Remember meeting him for a family feud story. This is the stuff of business history. Madhavan Narayanan (@madversity) January 8, 2018 RIP he who made millions of people do a happy dance as if nobody is watching.https://t.co/DiBuMk0YVZ Meghnad (@Memeghnad) January 9, 2018 Let's raise a toast to #KapilMohan!#OldMonk and Coke wherever you are pic.twitter.com/j36SreVPbr Ashwin Mushran (@ashwinmushran) January 9, 2018 Mohan is survived by his wife Pushpa Mohan and nephews Hemant and Vinay, between whom he had distributed the responsibilities of his various companies, as he was unwell for the last few years. Bengaluru: Leaders of the state BJP were told to get their act together and be aggressive against the Congress in the run-up to Assembly elections, by party president Amit Shah. Mr Shah was visibly displeased at the end of two meetings with party MPs, MLAs, MLCs, and district presidents and expressed his ire against the party cadre as well. He reiterated that the state leadership need not worry about selections of candidates since central leaders have already received a feedback from all constituencies and would pick the candidates early. He instructed party district presidents to monitor elections related work and assigned them the task of strengthening booths which are considered weak by party leaders. The BJP president reviewed the progress in terms of appointment of 'Page Pramukh' for every page of the voters' list as he had instructed the local units to complete the task during his previous meeting. Each 'Page Pramukh' should monitor and supervise each page in the voters' list while the cadre should concentrate on individual voters in a booth, he added. . Most important, he asked the cadre to ensure a record turnout at a rally scheduled to be held in Bengaluru on January 28. To win the elections, Mr Shah has given a 23 point formula to the state BJP and set February 10 as the deadline to implement it. He instructed them to carry out wall writings in all booth limits saying, 'This time BJP government.' Mr Shah also instructed the BJP leadership to empower booth committees. Only 50 percent booth panels have been empowered, he said. Meanwhile, a cobra was spotted at the venue of Amit Shah's meeting with state leaders. Present government commitments had reached to about Rs 40,000 crore by way of pending bills, subsidies, contribution to CSS and others. Hyderabad: In spite of growth in revenue, the 2018-19 state budget would turn out to be very crucial and critical for the Telangana State government as it would an election one. As per the election schedule, the government would get a chance to present the budget, but would have no time to implement the proposals. Present government commitments had reached to about Rs 40,000 crore by way of pending bills, subsidies, contribution to CSS and others. Officials said clearing pending bills might not be possible in the current year and that could happen only next year. Besides, the government had to provide additional provision for farm subsidy of at least Rs 5,000 crore. Commitments in the current financial year would affect the next budget. Generally, during an election year, State governments tended to spend funds liberally on several present and new schemes and get political mileage. At present, pending bills had reached about Rs 25,000-Rs 30,000 crore. In the present financial conditions, the state government was not in a position to clear the bills this fiscal. By the next year, the flagship programme would come to near completion. The government also had to clear the Mission Bhagiratha bills in addition to the pending ones. Officials said that if the Government cleared only Mission Bhagiratha bills, others too would have to be cleared. The state had borne 20 per cent of the Mission Bhagiratha project cost from its own funds. It had to give about Rs 5,000 crore as subsidy to Discoms. For the fee reimbursement, it had to provide about Rs 2,500 crore. The government did not release its share in Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) this year. To get balance funds of about Rs 5,000 crore for these schemes, it would have to release about Rs 2,000 crore this year itself. Officials said it was not possible to spend Rs 5,000 crore and it would be carried forward to next year. This would be an additional burden on the state exchequer in addition as it would have to get matching grants for CSS next year. The State government had announced Rs 1,000 crore each for BC and MBC welfare, though no spending was done this year and would have to be done during the election year. The fertiliser subsidy scheme would require setting aside at least Rs 5,000 crore in the budget. The officials said that in the present situation, there was little scope for introduction of new schemes in the next budget. Sources in TRS said the Chief Minister was looking for a Muslim leader for the second seat. Hyderabad: Chief Minister and TRS chief K. Chandrasekhar Rao was said to have started an exercise to balance different communities in selection of three candidates for the ensuing Rajya Sabha biennial elections to be held in February end. He already made an announcement a few days ago that he would field a leader from Yadava Backward Community. Sources in TRS said the Chief Minister was looking for a Muslim leader for the second seat. Since the 12 per cent Muslim Reservation Bill may not be accepted by the Central government immediately to place it before Parliament, the Chief Minister is thinking of being prudent to select a Muslim leader to pacify the electorally strong community in Telangana, said a source. There would be three Rajya Sabha vacancies from Telangana this time from the normal two every two years. Biennial polls for the seats of C.M. Ramesh (Telugu Desam), Rap-olu Anand Bhaskar and the late Palvai Govar-dhana Reddy (Cong-ress) would be held. The TRS had just one Rajya Sabha member (Dr K. Kesava Rao) before coming to power in 2014 June. In 2016, it was able to send two more D. Srinivas and V. Laxmi Kantha Rao. The filling of three vacancies this year would be the last opportunity for the ruling TRS to send its Rajya Sabha members before the next Assembly elections in 2019. With TRS having 80 per cent strength in the Assembly strength, all the three seats would go to the TRS. Of the three present members, two are Munnuru Kapus and one is a Brahmin. With one seat for the coming polls already announced, the remaining two could see either the fielding of a Muslim and a Velama or a Reddy and a Velama, said another source. There were very few aspirants from the Muslim community and a few of them were given political posts. Though the Chief Minister did not give any firm commitment, former minister in the TD government, Uma Madhava Reddy, who joined the TRS recently was said to have made a request for a Rajya Sabha seat. As far as Velama community was concerned, the name of Chief Ministers close relative and TRS party leader Joginapally Santhosh Kumar was doing the rounds. Hyderabad: Dr Nagam Janardhan Reddy, BJP national executive member and former minister, would be one of top leaders who would be joining the Congress shortly. Recently, Telangana Congress chief N. Uttam kumar Reddy claimed that some top leaders from the TRS, Telugu Desam and the BJP would be joining the Congress after Sankranti. According to sources, Congress leaders had contacted Mr Janardhan Reddy inviting him to join their party and the BJP leader too appeared to have shown inclination to fight accept the invite to fight the TRS. Recently, Mr Janardhan Reddy met his followers from the Nagar-kurnool Assembly constituency which he represented for five times and appraised them about the Congress leaders contacting him. He learnt to have told them that he will wait for three more months in the BJP and meet them again before joining the Congress. Nagam was made as BJP National Council member and was given the Lok Sabha ticket to contest from Mahabubnagar and Assembly ticket to his son in 2014 elections. However, he appeared to be unhappy in the BJP due to lack of further push in the party. He also met BJP national president Amit Shah twice and explained him the state of affairs of the party in Telangana, which is not able to grow as real alternative to the TRS for several reasons. Despite this, he feels there is no significant change in the attitude of state BJP leadership. Mr Janardhan Reddy had reportedly complained to the BJP central leadership about massive corruption in some state government schemes and projects , but he feels the party could not initiate any action or enquiry into these major scams. In this backdrop, Mr Janardhan Reddy has started showing inclination to join the Congress as he feels it will be a fight between the TRS and the Congress in next Assembly elections. Though there are several names going round in the surprises category, sources in the PCC could not confirm them. We have been talking to leaders from different parties. But they are all insisting on the Cong-ress promising tickets to them in the coming elections. However, we have not taken any decision in this regard. Once we do it, more leaders will be join the Congress, the PCC sources said. It appears the long-drawn battle of the LGBTQ community against Section 377 IPC, which criminalises gay sex, might see an acceptable resolution after all. The Supreme Court has not only agreed that a three-member Constitution Bench will hear the plea against this archaic law a relic of Victorian-era prudishness but also virtually pointed the way ahead by talking about how societal morality changes from age to age. The fact that this law is still in force in this day and age, thanks to a 2013 verdict overturning a landmark Delhi high court ruling in 2009, is a poor reflection on the liberal nature of Indias open society, that has evolved over centuries with very modern acceptance of an individuals sexual preferences. There has been considerable progress: with transgenders and hijras being relieved of the legal stigma and social discrimination they faced over their indistinct gender identity. The obiter dicta in the Aadhaar privacy case too specifically mentioned the right to privacy over sex. As a matter of first principles, criminalising sex between consenting adults goes against the very grain of natural justice. As long as theres no coercion, theres no need for the State to know what happens in the bedroom. Gays have had a torrid time in India too long. While society has learnt to live with individual choices, it was the legal ruling that was disturbing most affected people. The lowest rungs of police forces often used the provision for harassment and extortion. The sooner its off the statute book, the easier life would get for LGBTQ people. Swami Rama Tirtha was a mystic saint of India who travelled to the US, preceded by Swami Vivekananda, during the last century. He was a great teacher of practical vedanta who used to call himself Baadshah Ram, Emperor Ram, even though he had renounced his family and all worldly belongings. It is reported that somebody who saw him in the US without any worldly belongings asked him: You look like a beggar, then why you keep calling yourself the emperor? Swami Ram replied: Look at me and not what I have or not have. He really looked like an emperor and behaved like an emperor. A man who has no desires does become an emperor in the real sense, but an emperor who is full of desires is just a beggar with unfulfilled desires. Contentment makes us emperors. Talking on the phenomenon of happiness and contentment, Osho introduced a certain law that only some mystics have known. He says: I can make you kings without kingdoms; you only have to act like kings, and act so totally that before you even a real king will appear as if he is just acting. And when the whole energy has moved into it, it becomes reality! Energy makes anything real. If you wait for kingdoms they never come. Even for a Napoleon, for an Alexander, who had big kingdoms, they never came. They remained miserable because they didnt come to realise the second, more basic and primal law of life. This basic and primal law depends on how we use our energy. The secret is hidden in our energy. One has to work on ones energy. One has to learn the art of becoming total and undivided in whatever one does. Totality creates its own reality. Act totally and be one with your act, it will become real. If you are acting half-heartedly then it will remain artificial. Osho suggests this secret law in My Way: The Way of the White Clouds, Create the effect, become the emperor, be a magician... and from this very moment, because there is no need to wait. One has to wait if the kingdom has to come first. If the cause has to be created first, then one has to wait and wait and wait and postpone. There is no need to wait to create the effect. You can be the emperor this very moment... Be happy, and in that peak of happiness you will see the whole world is happy with you. The enlightened mystic concludes: There is an old saying: Laugh and the world laughs with you; cry, and you cry alone. Even the trees, the rocks, the sand, the clouds... if you can create the effect and be ecstatic, they will all dance with you; then the whole existence becomes a dance, a celebration. In school, I had to memorise Julius Caesar and I got pretty good at it. The one quote that has always stood out for its perfection in an imperfect world is when Cassius appeals to Brutus to stop the powerful Julius Caesar. The plot to kill Caesar is predicated on these two lines The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings. This comment unleashes a chain of events, which results in Roman noblemen collectively assassinating Caesar. The morning that Judge O.P. Saini gave his long-awaited and oft-postponed verdict in the 2G spectrum case, these two lines reverberated in my mind. Having covered the scam and written several stories on it, I was stunned, simply because mala fide had already been established by the Supreme Court in a seminal judgment five years ago. Criminality could not be established by the CBI in the seven years that it worked on the case! And as Judge Saini himself stated: I waited seven years for evidence to roll in, and none came. I could only describe it as a tease. And even as one waited for the CBI to file a review petition challenging the verdict, news flowed in last week that the public prosecutor in the 2G case Anand Grover told the Supreme Court that the CBI had not followed his recommendation to challenge a 2015 special court order acquitting all the accused in the excess spectrum case. Three times in a row, the CBI has egg on its face first when everyone got away scot-free in the Aircel-Maxis case, second when the Allahabad high court overturned the CBI trial court verdict in the Aarushi murder case and now the 2G case. All this doesnt say much about Indias premier investigative agency. Further, in the Aircel-Maxis case, as in 2G, another probe agency the ED, got it completely wrong. In February last year, the Patiala House court acquitted former communications minister Dayanidhi Maran and his brother Kalanithi Maran and others in the Aircel-Maxis deal case filed by the CBI. Special judge O.P. Saini, who presided over the hearing actually scheduled to pass the order on the framing of charges, deferred it to February 2017. The ED had alleged a scam of over Rs 700 crores. If one were to do a quick touch point analysis between the 2012 Supreme Court ruling which struck down the licences as arbitrary and illegal and Mr Sainis acquittal, some pertinent points are raised: Excerpts from the judgment delivered by the Supreme Court Justices G.S. Singhvi and A.K. Ganguly during 2012 cancelling the licences allotted by A. Raja on a first come-first served basis: The exercise under taken under the leadership of the minister (A. Raja) was wholly arbitrary, capricious and contrary to public interest apart from being violative of the doctrine of equality. The material produced before the court shows that the minister (Raja) wanted to favour some companies at the cost of public exchequer. The judgment went on: Arbitrary action of the minister (Raja) though appears to be innocuous was actually intended to benefit some of the real estate companies who did not have any experience in the dealing with telecom services. The manner in which the exercise for grant of LOI (Letter of Intent) to the applicants was conducted on January 8, 2008, leaves no room for doubt that everything was stagemanaged to favour those who were able to know in advance change in the implementation of the first-come first-served principle. Excerpts from judgment delivered by the CBI special trial court judge O.P. Saini on December 21, 2017 acquitting A. Raja and others: There is no material on record to show that Raja was mother of conspiracy in the instant case. There is also no evidence of his no-holds-barred immersion in any wrongdoing, conspiracy or corruption. I have no hesitation in holding that record is not sufficient and the prosecution has miserably failed in proving charges. All accused are acquitted. The court has also raised questions on the chargesheet filed by the CBI and called the facts recorded therein factually incorrect. The judge has said the 2G scam was all about public perception, created by rumour, gossip and speculation, and that these cant be relied on in judicial proceedings. A huge scam was seen by everyone when there was none. These factors compelled people to conjecture about a big scam. Thus, some people created a scam by artfully arranging a few selected facts and exaggerating things beyond recognition to astronomical levels. * Judge Saini stated that the prosecution has failed to prove the case miserably. He holds that the chargesheet of the instant case is based mainly on misreading, selective reading, non-reading and out of context reading of the official record. The special CBI judge also says that there is no evidence on the record produced before the court indicating any criminality in the acts allegedly committed by the accused persons relating to fixation of cut-off date, manipulation of first come-first served policy. Positions as opposite as the north and south pole surely. Phantasmagoric chimera. The case falls off the cliff when it comes to establishing criminality. Truth be told, the same special judge, O.P. Saini, on November 4, 2011, while framing charges against A. Raja in a 29-page outline of the conspiracy stated several things. The sentence began on Page 2 and went on and on like a monologue, with a full stop only on Page 30. It explained the charge of conspiracy against Raja and others. There were 12 other charges, each one of them set in a single sentence. They were set out in just five pages. In the same case in November 2011, Mr Saini had (when everyone expected him to grant bail to Kanimozhi, the daughter of DMK supremo M. Karunanidhi), shocked everyone by dismissing the plea. The bail plea was on the grounds that Ms Kanimozhi was a woman and had been in jail for several months already. But Mr Saini argued that she was an influential politician and he could not risk witnesses getting intimidated if she was released. Significantly, in late October 2011, the same judge had given us a peep into what would come six years later. The special court did not charge former communications minister A. Raja and former telecom secretary Siddarth Behura with causing a loss to the exchequer by selling mobile licences below market rates in 2008, marking a major shift in the trajectory of the case. Judge O.P. Saini, in his 500-page order, remained silent on the alleged losses to the exchequer and instead shifted the primacy of the case to criminal breach of trust and cheating, which if proved, could lead to life imprisonment. A bare look at the Section 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act makes it clear loss to the state exchequer is not a necessary condition for the prosecution of accused persons for these offences, Judge O.P. Sainis order said. His order further said that loss or quantification of loss in exact terms was not the essential requirement of offence of criminal conspiracy to cheat or to commit criminal misconduct. The order also added that it may not be possible to determine (the loss) or to say that any pecuniary loss has been caused to the state exchequer, though it may be apparent that undue pecuniary advantage has been gained by a public servant or private person due to misuse of office or due to corrupt or illegal means. The principal focus of the 2G scandal, associated with large-scale loot of state-owned natural resources in the public perception, was that Mr Raja and other public servants caused huge losses to the exchequer by awarding mobile licences to ineligible firms at throwaway rates without using a market discovery mechanism. The case was sensationalised after the CAG said that the swindle had caused losses of up to Rs 1.76 lakh crores to the exchequer. The media then hotwired it. The CBI, in its chargesheet filed earlier, had stated that the loss to the exchequer was Rs 30,000 crores. The CAGs assumptions on numbers can be questioned for different models were used for these calculations and the end figure could have been over the top, but no one can deny the jiggery pokery that Mr Raja and gang indulged in by repeatedly changing the goalposts. Just like no one killed Jessica or Aarushi, no scam occurred in the 2G spectrum case. Justice may have been denied, more so if the sum of political arithmetic in the South has to be arrived at. But the BJPs main plank of large-scale corruption by the UPA is coming unstuck. After all, we are all underlings. India unveiled its national solar programme in 2011, seeking to ease chronic energy shortages in Asias third-largest economy without creating pollution. (Photo: File) Geneva: India hit back on Monday at Washingtons latest legal assault on its solar power policies at the World Trade Organisation (WTO), rejecting a US legal claim and exploring possible new protection of Indias own solar industry. In December, the United States triggered a new round of litigation at the WTO, arguing that India had failed to abide by a ruling that it had illegally discriminated against foreign suppliers of solar cells and modules. In a statement published by the WTO on Monday, India said it had changed its rules to conform with the ruling and that a US claim for punitive trade sanctions was groundless. India underscores that the United States request is not a valid request, the Indian statement said. It said Washington had skipped legal steps, failed to follow the correct WTO procedure, and omitted to mention any specific level of trade sanctions that it proposed to level on India, leaving India severely prejudiced. India would be vindicated if the proper process was followed, it said. In view of the above, India strongly objects to the US request of 19 December 2017, it said. Renewable energy has become an area of severe trade friction as major economies compete to dominate a sector that is expected to thrive as reliance on coal and oil dwindles. India unveiled its national solar programme in 2011, seeking to ease chronic energy shortages in Asias third-largest economy without creating pollution. But the United States complained to the WTO in 2013, saying US solar exports to India had fallen by 90 per cent. The WTO judges agreed that India had broken the trade rules by requiring solar power developers to use Indian-made cells and modules. In a separate move that could protect its solar industry from global competitors, not only US rivals, India told the WTO last week that it was considering the case for imposing temporary emergency tariffs on solar cells, modules and panels, after a petition from the domestic industry. So-called safeguard tariffs are permitted by the WTO if there is evidence of serious harm, or threat of serious harm, to a countrys production from a sudden, unforeseen surge in imports. India said the market share of imports had increased from 86 percent in 2014-15 to 90 percent in 2017-18, with growing losses for Indian producers and a fourfold rise in inventory levels. That amounted to prima facie evidence of serious injury to Indian firms, India said in the WTO filing. Washington: US President Donald Trump would gladly face Oprah Winfrey as an opponent in the 2020 presidential race, a White House spokesman said on Monday after social media buzz from her speech at an awards show thrust her name into the political arena. We welcome the challenge, whether it be Oprah Winfrey or anybody else, Hogan Gidley told reporters on Air Force One during a flight to Nashville on Monday. We welcome all comers. Winfrey, 63, stole the show at the Golden Globe awards on Sunday night with her speech upon receiving the Cecil B DeMille award for achievement and lit up Twitter with a surge of tweets carrying "#Oprahforpresident" and "#Oprah2020". She is actively thinking about a run, CNN reported on Monday, citing two of her close friends. CNN did not name the friends, who it said had spoken on condition of anonymity. At least one emphasised that Winfrey had made no firm decision. Winfrey has said in the past she is not interested in running for president, but the Los Angeles Times quoted Stedman Graham, Winfreys longtime partner in business and life, as saying on Sunday that, Its up to the people ... She would absolutely do it. Wearing a black gown to show support for victims, she used her platform to promote the Times Up movement against sexual harassment and assault, throwing her support behind others who have exposed sexual misconduct in Hollywood and elsewhere in politics and the media. She had that room in her hands. It was like a campaign rally, said Sherry Bebitch Jeffe, a senior fellow at the University of Southern Californias Price School of Public Policy. The nine-minute speech generated two standing ovations from the Hollywood glitterati and prompted 220,000 posts on social media mentioning the words Oprah and president in just 24 hours, said Todd Grossman of social media analytics company Talkwalker. After Trump won the White House in 2016 with help from his fame as a reality TV star, it no longer seems far-fetched to consider a similar campaign by Winfrey, an actress, movie and television producer, and chief executive of her OWN cable channel, political analysts said. Winfrey, long associated with Democratic politics and fundraising, would likely face a crowded field in the Democratic primaries in the 2020 race. But given her connections, Winfrey might have a fund-raising advantage over her rivals in liberal Hollywood, which is often called an automatic teller machine for Democratic candidates. Shes certainly a bigger celebrity than Trump ever was, especially in terms of connecting with her audience. Obviously this has given her an opportunity. What does she do next with it? said Alan Schroeder, a journalism professor at Northeastern University in Boston who has written on the intersection of show business and politics. Trump benefited from his star power to win more free media exposure than his rivals in the Republican primary and was able to run a relatively inexpensive campaign. His committee spent USD 343 million in the primary and general election campaigns with the help of USD 47.5 million of the real estate developers own money, which he lent to the campaign and later forgave. Hillary Clinton, his Democratic opponent, spent USD 585 million including USD 1.5 million of her own money. Winfrey could supplement any campaign with her own wealth. Forbes estimates she is worth USD 3.0 billion compared to USD 3.5 billion for Trump. She was raised in poverty by a single mother and went on to host the top-rated talk show The Oprah Winfrey Show for 25 years before ending it in 2011. Jeffe, the USC professor, cautioned against thinking of Hollywood as a monolith of liberal Democrats. Besides the liberal creative talent, Hollywood money also comes from the more conservative, unionized trade and craft workforce as well as from the business interests. She has credibility with all of them, Jeffe said. Chinese analysts said the Jiwani base was not necessary for China at present as it already has Gwadar. (Photo: AP) Beijing: China on Tuesday denied as "unnecessary" speculation reports that it was planning to build a military base at Jiwani in Pakistan's Balochistan province close to the strategic Chabahar port, which is being jointly developed by India, Iran and Afghanistan. According to reports, Pakistan may allow China to build the military base in Jiwani which is also close the Gwadar port being developed by Beijing. The Global Times quoted a Washington Times report that China is in talks with Pakistan to build its second overseas military base as part of a push for greater maritime capabilities along strategic sea routes. "I am not aware of what you mentioned," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang told the media when asked to comment on the report. The media in China and abroad said that Pakistan offered the key location to China as a retaliation to US President Donald Trump's New Year Day criticism of Islamabad for not cracking down on terrorist safe havens in the country. The Chinese media has been speculating that Trump's efforts to step up pressure on Pakistan may move it closer to Islamabad as Beijing is involved in a number of projects in the country under the USD 50 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). "As you know building of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is an important part of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)," Lu said. "China and Pakistan are also making efforts to build the CPEC which is in the common interests of the countries along the route. I don't think it is necessary for the outside world to make too much guesses in this regard," he said. Chinese analysts said the Jiwani base was not necessary for China at present as it already has Gwadar. Lin Minwang, a professor at Fudan University's Centre for South Asian Studies told Global Times that "both Beijing and Islamabad have the ability to build a joint naval and air facility in Pakistan, but it is unnecessary at this time." But he said it could be a backup plan for the Indo- Pacific strategy of the US and its allies, he told the daily. Lin believes if the US and its allies push their Indo- Pacific strategy to the extreme, China will surely carry out a plan with Pakistan to ensure the security of sea routes. Rawat said on Monday Indian and Chinese troops had resolved an issue over the recent attempt by Chinese teams to build a road on the Indian side of the border at Tuting in Arunachal Pradesh. (Photo: PTI/File) Beijing: China on Tuesday skirted a direct response to Army chief General Bipin Rawats remarks that there was a major reduction of Chinese troops in Doklam, but insisted that its soldiers stationed in the area were exercising sovereignty rights. China and India were engaged in a 73-day tense standoff at Doklam in the Sikkim sector, which ended on August 28. The Dong Lang (Dokalam) area has all along been part of China and under Chinas continuous and effective jurisdiction. There is no dispute in this regard, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang told the media when asked about Rawats remarks. Rawat said on Monday Indian and Chinese troops had resolved an issue over the recent attempt by Chinese teams to build a road on the Indian side of the border at Tuting in Arunachal Pradesh. Rawat also said there was a major reduction of Chinese troops in the Doklam area. Chinese border troops patrolling and stationing in the Dong Lang area are exercising sovereignty rights in accordance with the stipulations of historical conventions and upholding territorial sovereignty, he said, without commenting on the troop reduction. Lu also did not directly refer to Rawats comment that India and China have sorted out the issue relating to the plans of Chinese troops to construct a road well into the Indian territory at Tuting in Arunachal Pradesh in the last week of December. Lu reiterated Chinas claims over Arunachal Pradesh which Beijing says is part of South Tibet. My colleagues have responded to the question concerning this many times. I need to reiterate that there is a huge dispute on the eastern section of the China-India boundary, Lu said. So we have to reach an agreement through consensus. But before that we need to uphold peace and security. We can properly resolve the relevant dispute through mechanisms already established and bind by historical boundary related agreements, he said. On Doklam, China has been asserting that the area which was also been claimed by Bhutan belonged to it. The Doklam standoff, the longest in recent years between the two nations, ended after China agreed to stop road construction and India withdrew its troops. But much to the surprise of India, China continued the deployment of its troops in an area close to the site of standoff disregarding its previous practice of pulling out soldiers during the winter. Social Welfare Minister H Anjaneya reiterated on Monday that there was no question of banning cow slaughter in the state. He said beef was an international food and was consumed by people of all communities, including Hindus. The minister was responding to Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath's statement, taunting Chief Minister Siddaramaiah as to how he supported beef-eating while calling himself a Hindu. Most hotels abroad have beef prominently on their menu and it is consumed by many poor people, Anjaneya said. The minister said everyone has a freedom of choice when it comes to consumption of food. India hit back on Monday at Washington's latest legal assault on its solar power policies at the World Trade Organization, rejecting a U.S. legal claim and exploring possible new protection of India's own solar industry. Last month the United States triggered a new round of litigation at the WTO, arguing that India had failed to abide by a ruling that it had illegally discriminated against foreign suppliers of solar cells and modules. In a statement published by the WTO on Monday, India said it had changed its rules to conform with the ruling and that a U.S. claim for punitive trade sanctions was groundless. "India underscores that the United States' request is not a valid request," the Indian statement said. It said Washington had skipped legal steps, failed to follow the correct WTO procedure, and omitted to mention any specific level of trade sanctions that it proposed to level on India, leaving India "severely prejudiced". India would be vindicated if the proper process was followed, it said. "In view of the above, India strongly objects to the U.S. request of 19 December 2017," it said. Renewable energy has become an area of severe trade friction as major economies compete to dominate a sector that is expected to thrive as reliance on coal and oil dwindles. India unveiled its national solar programme in 2011, seeking to ease chronic energy shortages in Asia's third-largest economy without creating pollution. But the United States complained to the WTO in 2013, saying U.S. solar exports to India had fallen by 90 percent. The WTO judges agreed that India had broken the trade rules by requiring solar power developers to use Indian-made cells and modules. In a separate move that could protect its solar industry from global competitors, not only U.S. rivals, India told the WTO last week that it was considering the case for imposing temporary emergency tariffs on solar cells, modules and panels, after a petition from the domestic industry. So-called safeguard tariffs are permitted by the WTO if there is evidence of serious harm, or threat of serious harm, to a country's production from a sudden, unforeseen surge in imports. India said the market share of imports had increased from 86 percent in 2014-15 to 90 percent in 2017-18, with growing losses for Indian producers and a fourfold rise in inventory levels. That amounted to prima facie evidence of serious injury to Indian firms, India said in the WTO filing. The benchmark BSE Sensex today surged to close at a new life high of 34,443.19 on gains in IT, FMCG, oil & gas and energy stocks amid positive leads from global markets, extending its record-breaking run for a third day. Also, Nifty settled at fresh high of 10,637. But caution prevailed as crude prices surged to the highest level since 2015. Opening higher, the 30-share Sensex quickly rallied to an all-time intra-day high of 34,488.03 as Coal India, ITC and Tata Motors posted smart gains. Profit booking in some pharma, capital goods and telecom stocks at record levels, however, pulled the index to a low of 34,343.41 during the day trade. The Sensex finally settled up 90.40 points, or 0.26 per cent at 34,443.19, which is still all time closing high. It breached its previous record closing of 34,352.79 points hit yesterday. The index has risen by 559.41 points in the previous three straight sessions. The broader 50-share NSE Nifty also maintained its bull run and touched a new peak of 10,659.15 (intra-day). It settled higher by 13.40 points, or 0.13 per cent, at a new peak of 10,637.00, beating its previous record closing of 10,623.60, recorded in yesterday's trade. It also broke the previous intra-day record of 10,631.20 hit in yesterday's session. Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have been supporting the ongoing rally by pumping in sizeable capital. They purchased shares worth Rs 692.83 crore while Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) sold shares to the tune of Rs 206.30 crore yesterday, as per provisional data from the stock exchanges. A statue of Gautama Buddha was stolen from a village in Muzaffarnagar district, triggering protest by Dalits, police said today. The statue was stolen from Guyana Majra village yesterday, Charthawal police station SHO G C Sharma. Soon after the news spread, angry Dalit villagers staged a protest in the western Uttar Pradesh district, police said. Police have launched a search for the accused. The US has conveyed "specific and concrete" steps to Pakistan that it could take to eliminate terror networks on its soil without any distinction, a Pentagon official said today. The remarks came as the US in recent days stepped up efforts to put pressure on Pakistan to do more to combat terrorism. The Trump administration last week suspended nearly USD 2 billion in security assistance to Pakistan for its failure to take decisive action against terror groups like the Taliban and the Haqqani Network. "Our expectations are straight forward: Taliban and Haqqani leadership and attack planners should no longer be able to find safe haven or conduct operations from Pakistani soil," Pentagon Press Secretary Army Col Rob Manning told reporters during an off-camera news conference. He said the US had conveyed "specific and concrete steps" to Pakistan that it could take to eliminate terror networks on its soil. "We stand ready to work together with Pakistan to combat terrorist groups without distinction," Manning said. He reiterated that the amount -- USD 900 million in the Coalition Support Fund to Pakistan -- has been suspended, not cancelled or reprogrammed. This amount is a part of the security assistance to Pakistan. "The amount has been suspended, not cancelled or reprogrammed, as we continue to hope that Pakistan will take decisive action against the terrorist and militant groups that we seek. "This suspension is not a permanent cutoff at this time. Security funding and pending deliveries will be frozen, but not cancelled or reprogrammed at this time," Manning said. Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) scholar Manaan Wani has joined the Hizbul Mujahideen, the group's Pakistan-based chief Syed Salahuddin said in a statement to local media. "Joining of Manaan Wani exposes the Indian propaganda that the youths of Kashmir are joining militant ranks due to unemployment and economic distress," Salahuddin said in the statement to a Srinagar-based news gathering agency yesterday. Wani, who belongs to Tikipora in Lolab area of north Kashmir's Kupwara district, went missing last week. He was scheduled to return home from Delhi on January 6. The 26-year-old scholar was yesterday expelled by AMU following reports that he may have joined the terror group after his photograph, showing him with an AK-47 rifle, appeared in social media. "From years on, educated and qualified youths of Kashmir have been joining Hizbul Mujahideen to take this ongoing freedom movement to logical conclusion. This spirit of youths is laudable," Salahuddin said, confirming that Wani had joined Hizbul Mujahideen, in the statement in Urdu. Police had yesterday refused to deny or confirm the reports of Wani's joining the terror group, saying they were investigating the photograph of him brandishing the rifle on social media sites. Wani was a researcher in the Department of Geology at the Aligarh Muslim University, and last attended class on January 2, the university officials said. Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday tacitly countered Congress President Rahul Gandhi's barbs, as he urged Indian diaspora to uphold to the world his government's "Sabka Sath Sabka Vikas" (Together with All, Development for All) philosophy. Modi called upon Indian diaspora to spread India's message of religious and communal harmony to counter the menace of radicalism and extremism around the world. "Amid growing concerns over radicalism and extremism around the world, you can reiterate India's message of Sarba Panth Samabhaba (respect to all faiths)," Prime Minister said after inaugurating a conference of Indian-origin mayors and parliamentarians in foreign nations around the world. Prime Minister made the appeal just a day after Congress president used his speech to another congregation of Indian diaspora held in Bahrain to accuse the government led by Bharatiya Janata Party in New Delhi of dividing people of India on the basis of caste and religion. "While ideological differences are dividing world community, you can spread India's message of Sabka Sath Sabka Vikas," Modi told 134 PIO (Persons of Indian Origin) parliamentarians and mayors, who assembled in New Delhi from 24 countries around the world to attend the conference. The one-day conclave at Pravasi Bharatiya Kendra in New Delhi was the first such initiative by the Ministry of External Affairs to reach out to the PIO lawmakers and mayors around the world. Prime Minister Modi addressed the conference just a day after Congress president told Indian-origin people around the world that India was in a "serious problem" and they were "part of the solution". Modi, however, did not refer to Rahul's speech at the conference of the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin in Bahrain. He rather spoke about the achievements of his government in the last three-and-a-half years. He asked the PIO lawmakers in particular and the PIOs in general to be partners in India's development and act as catalysts in the economic growth of the country. Prime Minister subtly took a dig at the erstwhile Congress-led UPA government. "There was a time when people thought no development could happen in India and nothing would change," he said, stating that his government had introduced far-reaching reforms in every sector of economy to transform India. "If the world has changed its view about India in the past three or four years, it is because India itself has changed," the prime minister said. He noted that a record $60 billion of Foreign Direct Investment came into the country last year. "India is changing, India is transforming. India has moved far ahead and hopes aspiration of people of India are at their peaks and you will see the result of change in every sphere," said Modi. Rahul on Monday criticized Modi government's economic policies, highlighting job losses and lack of new employment opportunities. Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday called upon Indian diaspora to spread India's message of religious harmony to counter the menace of radicalism and extremism around the world. "When concerns are growing around the world over radicalism and extremism, you can reiterate India's message of Sarba Dharma Samabhaba (religious harmony)," Prime Minister said after inaugurating a conference of Indian-origin members of foreign parliaments in New Delhi. Prime Minister made the comment a day after Congress president Rahul Gandhi used his speech to another congregation of Indian diaspora held in Bahrain to accuse BJP-led government of dividing people of India along the lines of caste and religion. "While ideological differences are dividing world community, you can spread India's message of Sabka Sath Sabka Vikas, " Modi told the PIO (People of Indian Origin) Parliamentarians and Mayors, who assembled in New Delhi from around the world to attend the conference. Prime Minister did not refer to Congress president's speech at the conference of the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin in Manama, the capital of Bahrain, on Monday. He, however, spoke about the achievements of his government in the last three-and-a-half years. Over 130 PIO parliamentarians and mayors are attending the conference. Prime Minister subtly took a dig at the erstwhile Congress-led UPA Government. "There was a time when people thought no development could happen in India and nothing would change," he said, stating that his government had introduced far-reaching reforms in every sector of economy to transform India. "If the world has changed its view about India in the past three or four years, it is because India itself has changed," Prime Minister said. Gandhi on Monday criticized Modi Government's economic policies, highlighting job losses and lack of new employment opportunities. A woman crew of Jet Airways was arrested on charges of trying to smuggle out USD 4.80 lakh (approximately Rs 3.21 crore) out of the country while flying to Hong Kong, officials said on Tuesday. The flight attendant had wrapped the currency in foil and allegedly smuggling it out of the country on behalf of one Amit Malhotra, a resident of Vivek Vihar in the national capital, who was also arrested. The crew was intercepted by Department of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) officials when she was on a flight to Hong Kong on Monday. The DRI officials found USD 4,80,200 wrapped in foil in her possession, an official statement said. DRI officials are investigating the role of some other Jet Airways crew in the racket. According to officials, Malhotra was using crew members for smuggling of foreign currency. "Malhotra would collect money from bullion dealers in Delhi and send it via some airline crew to select foreign destinations. The money was being used for purchasing gold abroad. The gold would then be sent to India illegally," they said. He had befriended the Jet Airways crew six-seven months ago during a flight to India. Investigators claim that Malhotra has been smuggling forex for the past over one year while a probe is also on to find out the bullion dealers involved in the racket. Jet Airways said in a statement, "during an inspection by DRI team, a large sum of foreign currency was recovered from an employee of the airline.The employee has been taken into custody. Based on the investigations and inputs from law enforcement agencies, the airline will take further action." Opposition members in Jammu and Kashmir Assembly and Legislative Council raised slogans against the Speaker and the Chairman for taking part in a dinner meeting of the PDP-BJP coalition government, disrupting the proceedings in both Houses. As the Assembly met for the day, all opposition members stood up and raised the issue of Speaker Kavinder Gupta taking part in the dinner meeting hosted by Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti last week and alleged that he had lowered the sanctity of the House. They resorted to protests over the issue and sought reply from the Speaker. The members walked into the well of the House and created ruckus amid high-pitched noisy scenes and disrupted the Question Hour. In the Legislative Council too, opposition NC and Congress members staged a walkout from the House over the Chairman attending the dinner meeting. Leader of Congress Legislative Party Nawang Rigzin Jora said in Assembly, "You (Speaker) are not the Speaker of the government or the BJP but of the entire House. You should not have taken part in the meeting of the coalition government. We want your reply." He was seconded by CPI(M) MLA M Y Tarigami. "It is not a simple issue which can be brushed aside. It is the issue involved with sanctity of the House...It should not be compromised," Tarigami said. NC MLA Mubarak Gul, who was the Speaker during the previous Congress-NC rule, said the sanctity of the House had been compromised. NC MLA Ali Mohammad Sagar said, "It is unprecedented. This has not happened in the past." After over half-an-hour of protests and sloganeering, the Speaker replied to the opposition and said that he had taken part in the dinner and if it was wrong, he would not repeat it. With this, the House was restored to calm and the Question Hour began. Opposition members also walked into well of the Legislative Council and raised slogans against the Chairman. After noisy protests and sloganeering, Minister Naeem Akhtar intervened and urged Chairman Haji Anayat Ali to reply to the opposition to end the stalemate. Ali said he had gone there not to take part in the meeting, but to meet Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti over an invitation to take part in an event to mark the death anniversary of former Chief Minister Mufti Mohd Sayeed. So there was no question of compromising sanctity of the House, Ali said. Not satisfied with the reply, NC and Congress members staged a walkout from the House. The Chairman later requested the opposition members to come back to their seats and they came back. The Chairman later said that he would not take part in any such meeting in the future. There is no question of changing the constituency from which he is going to contest the upcoming elections, said Chief Minister Siddaramaiah. He has earlier mentioned many times that he would contest from Varuna constituency in Mysuru. Speaking to reporters at Madikeri, where he has come to attend a public function at the Crystal Hall, he said the government would look into the demand for a separate Ponnampet taluk. The CM said that strict action would be taken against people who provoke communal sentiments. He challenged JD(S) State President H D Kumaraswamy to publish documents to prove that Congress was behind the murder of BJP activist Deepak Rao's murder in Mangaluru. He stated that the Congress will not have a truck with any other party before or after the 2018 polls. The chief minister will address a convention of party workers at the General Thimmaiah grounds at 3.30 pm. More trouble seems to be brewing for the incarcerated RJD chief Lalu Prasad as two of his close aides have 'managed' to be lodged in the same jail in which Lalu is behind bars. According to police sources in Ranchi, Madan Yadav and Laxman Mahto, two of the close associates of Lalu, surrendered in the court on December 23, the day Lalu was convicted by a CBI court in the fodder scam case RC 64A/96 and lodged in Birsa Munda jail. A local person in Ranchi, Sumit Yadav, lodged a police complaint at Doranda (in Jharkhand's state capital) alleging that Madan and Laxman snatched his Rs 10,000 after assaulting him. When the Doranda police refused to register an FIR, Sumit lodged an FIR at Lower Bazar police station. As soon as the FIR was registered, the duo - Madan and Laxman - surrendered before the court on December 23, which, in turn, repatriated them to Birsa Munda jail. Call it a co-incidence or well-crafted design, as soon as Lalu was sent to Birsa Munda jail on December 23 evening, these two apprehended persons, who actually are RJD workers, were deputed for Lalu's assistance in the special jail cell. While Madan originally hails from Ranchi, Laxman is Lalu's key aide from Patna who takes care of his food and medicine. It is said that Lalu, who has undergone valve transplant in Mumbai and is suffering from diabetes and hypertension, takes medicine 15 times a day. Once Laxman was inside the Birsa Munda Jail, Lalu's family in Patna was rest assured that the RJD chief will be taken care of properly. "This episode proves that Lalu is a leader of feudal mindset and planned his aides' incarceration anticipating his jail term," said JD (U) spokesperson Neeraj Kumar. "We have learnt that Laxman was with Laluji in jail even when the RJD chief was imprisoned in 2013. Though it's a matter of probe how he managed to be jailed this time too, one thing is clear: This incident may have an adverse effect when the bail petition of Lalu would be heard either by the High Court or later by the Supreme Court," said a top-notch lawyer, refusing to be identified. India's first-of-its-kind citywide festival, the Mumbai Shopping Festival, is all set to take off on the lines of the famous Dubai Shopping Festival. From 12-31 January, the city would be abuzz with activities. Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis will be the brand ambassador for the 20-day-long festival and it is promoted worldwide with hashtag #MumBuyKar. "We are launching Mumbai as the place for world class shopping festival," Fadnavis said, adding it would epitomise the shopper in each Mumbaikar especially with the new notification that permits shops and restaurants to remain open 24x7. This is one of the biggest initiatives of the Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation (MTDC) in recent times.Tourism Minister Jaykumar Rawal said that the government is aiming to establish the festival on global platform as one of the most sought after event. The MTDC would also set up night bazaar, flea markets during weekends in Malad and Powai. Food truck zones would be created in Worli Seaface, Malad and Powai. Performances of various artists are planned in various locations like Crawford Market, Worli Seaface, Bandra Bandstand, Shivaji Park, Goregaon, Talav Pali Thane, Kalyan, Juhu beach, Vashi railway station, Kharghar and Kandivli besides other places. Upset over a case of dacoity filed against his mother which he thought was false and casteist slurs, a 38-year-old man from the Pardhi tribe committed suicide at Hingoli in Marathwada region of Maharashtra. Before killing himself, Dilip Waman Pawar, the victim, shot a video on his cell phone in which he narrated his reasons for suicide. The video went viral on social media. Pawar allegedly hanged himself from a tree in front of his house in Kalgaon Shivar area of Hingoli on January 6. Pawar, a contract farmer who leased land from others for cultivating, was allegedly being harassed by some local persons, said a police officer. The Pardhi community was once branded as `criminal' by the British. After Independence this classification was abolished, but the community leaders complain that it still carries the stigma and faces discrimination. Some local men had accosted Pawar a few days ago and accused his parents of stealing farm produce, the police officer said. An offence of `dacoity' under section 395 of the Indian Penal Code was also registered against Pawar's parents, and his mother was arrested. According to Pawar, it was a false case, and upset over all this, he tried to end his life on January 6 first by consuming poison. He recorded his statement in a video on his cell phone. However, he survived the attempt. A few hours later, he hanged himself, the police officer said. "We have registered a case under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act and abetment of suicide against 11 persons," he said. Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman "transited" through a simulated "multi-threat" environment on board aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya along with "escorts" during Indian Navy's operational manoeuvres in the Arabian Sea. On Monday and Tuesday, Sitharaman interacted with top brass of the Indian Navy and sailors in operational manoeuvres conducted off the western coast of India that saw participation of more than 10 naval warships, including aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, three submarines and various naval aircraft. "The Defence Minister initially embarked INS Kolkata, the first of the indigenously built Kolkata-class destroyers and then spent the night at sea on-board INS Vikramaditya. To assess the performance of the carrier in real conditions, the Defence Minister 'transited' through a simulated 'multi-threat' environment on-board along with her 'escorts' during Monday night," Indian Navy officials said. Reviewing the maritime prowess of the Indian Navy, Sitharaman presided over multiple complex naval operations, including air interceptions, missile, gun and rocket firings, ship-to-ship replenishment, night flying and antisubmarine operations. The Western Fleet of the Indian Navy undertook these major naval manoeuvres to showcase operational excellence and combat capabilities. "Having witnessed first-hand the prowess of the Western Fleet, I am confident that the Indian Navy is fully capable of defending the nation against any form of threat," she stated. Continuing the effort to collect feedback from armed forces personnel at all operational levels of the military, Sitharaman interacted closely and had open discussions with the sailors on-board the warships. She disembarked the ship by naval helicopter INS Hansa, to Goa, on Tuesday. DH News Service Saudi Arabia has hiked India's Haj quota for the second consecutive year. A "record number" of 1,75,025 pilgrims will go for Haj from India this year. The decision by the Saudi Arabia Government to increase India's Haj quota for 2018 has come days after Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi signed a pact with Saudi Umrah Minister Arabiaat Makkah. "For the first time after the Independence, a record number of 1,75.025 pilgrims from India will go for Haj 2018. This has happened because of the growing popularity of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and due to India's cordial and strengthened relations with Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations under the leadership of Modi," Naqvi said on Tuesday. India's Haj quota was about 1,36,020 three years ago. "Last year, Saudi Arabia had increased India's Haj quota by 35,000," Naqvi said. He also thanked King Salman bin Abdul Aziz al Saud, who is the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, and the Saudi Arabia Government for increasing India's Haj quota. Besides this, the Union Minister said, Saudi Arabia has also given "green signal" to India's decision to revive the option of sending Haj pilgrims through sea route. "Officials from both the countries will discuss all the necessary formalities and technicalities so that Haj pilgrimage through sea route can be started in the coming years," he added. About 3.55 lakh applications have been received for Haj 2018, Naqvi said. "Women above 45 years of age, who wish to go for Haj but do not have 'Mahram' (a male companion), are allowed to travel for Haj in groups of 4 or more women under the new Indian Haj policy," he said. The Supreme Court has asked the Bar Council of India, regulator of legal education and profession, to spell out how many law colleges can be set up district-wise in a state. A three-judge bench presided over by Justice Arun Mishra and Justice Mohan M Shantanagoudar also sought to know the criteria for granting permission to establish law colleges in a state. "The BCI is to furnish the data as to how many law colleges can be permitted to operate in a particular state (district-wise) and what is the criteria. The BCI must also file data on the law colleges approved by it in various states place-wise," the bench ordered. The court sought a detailed affidavit from the regulator by the second week of March after being told that law colleges had mushroomed in various states because of permission granted to a number of private law colleges. The top court was hearing a plea filed by Tamil Nadu government, which sought to know whether there was any requirement for private law colleges in the state. Apprehending mushrooming of law colleges, the state government had passed a law, the Tamil Nadu Establishment of Private Law Colleges (Prohibition) Act, 2014, which was challenged by Advocates Forum for Social Justice. India will showcase reforms and policy changes undertaken in the last three years at the World Economic Forum (WEF) at Davos, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi is leading the largest ever ministerial delegation and an equally large corporate contingent. Scheduled to be held during January 23-26 in this Swiss Alps town, the theme of WEF this year is 'Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World', and India is ready to showcase its contribution in many areas of policy reforms and climate issues, which have helped the globe, an official participating in the meeting said. Modi will be the first Prime Minister to attend the annual meeting of the WEF since 1997, when the then prime minister H D Deve Gowda had attended the meet. As many as six union ministers will be participating in the event. While the Prime Minister will attend the Inaugural Plenary Session on January 23, the ministers will participate in 25 sessions organised on next-generation industrial strategies, infrastructure acceleration, fourth industrial revolution, future of employment in manufacturing and production in the annual meeting, and share their views on transforming the nation into a New India by 2022. The annual meeting will be attended by 350 political leaders (among them over 60 heads of state), the chairs and chief executive officers of the world's most important companies and over 1,000 leaders from among other walks of life. India has been entrusted with the responsibility of hosting the welcome reception at the event. Indian food and yoga will mark the commencement of the ceremony. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Railways Minister Piyush Goyal, Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu, Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, Minister of State for External Affairs M J Akbar, and Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Development of North Eastern Region of India Jitendra Singh are the six Union Ministers taking part in the annual meeting. As many as 11 round tables will also be organised with Invest India and CII with existing and potential investors. "India has undertaken a wide range of transformative reforms and policy changes. The world needs to know about the benefits of GST and demonetisation, and FDI reforms at Davos the largest gathering of world leaders," the official said, and also expressed the hope that the prime minister may make some big announcement from the international stage. External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj is set to host Maldivian Foreign Minister Mohamed Asim this week, as both New Delhi and Male seek to ease strains in bilateral relations. Asim will arrive in New Delhi on Wednesday and hold a meeting with Sushma on Thursday. He will also call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday, sources in New Delhi said on Tuesday. The Maldivian foreign minister is the first high-ranking official of the archipelago nation in Indian Ocean to visit India after President Abdulla Yameen's government in Male inked a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with China. The FTA between Maldives and China caused unease in India. New Delhi did not publicly criticise Male, but reminded that President Yameen's government itself had articulated its India-First policy. The move by local authorities to suspend three councillors of an opposition party for meeting India's ambassador to Maldives, Akhilesh Mishra, also added to the strain in bilateral ties. Expressing concern over spurt in militancy in Jammu and Kashmir, former chief minister and opposition National Conference leader Omar Abdullah on Tuesday said the worrisome fact is that educated youth are increasingly resorting to militancy. "Instead of getting job letters, the educated youth feel lured to take up guns in their hands, as they find their future bleak," he said at a party function in Jammu to welcome Congress leader Prem Sagar Aziz into the NC. Referring to militants targeting police and security forces in the Valley, Omar said, "Spurt in violence is failure of the PDP-BJP coalition government. New Year took off on a very grim note with CRPF and police personnel, besides civilians getting killed in one after another incident." Without naming the PDP, the former CM said, "I was told that I had a role to play in creating Burhan Wani. But have you ever thought how many Burhan Wanis have you created in the last one-and-a-half years after coming to power? If I am responsible for one, how many are you responsible for?" Omar also asked the government not to project the killing of over 200 militants in 2017 as a success as "it is a 'certificate of failure', as more youth have joined militancy during the current dispensation than under NC regime." The NC leader also accused the Mehbooba Mufti-led collation government of "failure on all fronts". "Open criticism of the coalition government by the governor was proof of its failure," he said. Guv's rap Omar was referring to Narinder Nath Vohra's statement during a commemoration function here on Monday in honour of PDP founder, the late Mufti Muhammad Sayeed, that the "State faces many problems, some of our own doing and some others' contribution." Earlier, speaking in the Legislative Assembly, Omar questioned the role and responsibilities of Center's special representative to Kashmir, Dineshwar Sharma. "Sharma is acting as a super chief minister. What is the mission of the special representative? He works like a super chief minister, as we hear, by meeting delegations to look into problems with regard to power, water, non-availability of doctors at hospital, unemployment. Is it his job," he asked. India stares at an economic burden of nearly Rs 1.76 lakh crore ($28 billion) from food borne diseases, researchers warned health ministers on Tuesday. Food borne diseases account for 0.5% of India's GDP, which adds up to nearly $28 billion, scientists from the International Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi said in a study released at the first health ministers' meeting on food and nutrition here. The researchers calculated the total economic burden by clubbing the cost incurred on treating food borne diseases and the loss in economic productivity to arrive at the estimate. The burden is nearly three times the annual budget of the Union Health Ministry. The disease burden due to poor quality food is slated to rise from an estimated 100 million at the moment to nearly 170 million by 2030. It means one out of every nine people will fall sick because of poor quality food from the existing one in every 12 people. CAG raps FSSAI The study's release comes weeks after the Comptroller and Auditor General, in a report tabled in Parliament, flagged the poor regulation of the food and beverage sector by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India. The CAG report pointed out that as many as 65 FSSAI testing laboratories a out of a total of 72 a function without accreditation from the National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration. The same is true of eight out of 16 referral laboratories that operate without a certificate from the official agency. The audit watchdog also pointed out how the food safety regulator diluted its own norms and deviated from the rule book. Union Health Minister J P Nadda said the central government was providing Rs 482 crore to the states to strengthen 45 food testing laboratories. Health Ministers of Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttarakhand, Telangana, Puducherry, Jharkhand and Delhi attended the round table meeting. The AICC Plenary Session expected to be held after Rahul Gandhi's election as Congress president is likely to be held after the Karnataka Assembly polls. A senior Congress leader told DH that the plenary (the last was held in Burari on the fringes of Delhi in 2010) could be hosted by the Punjab unit of the Congress at Mohali after the upcoming elections to four states are concluded. The Karnataka Congress was keen to host the plenary in Bengaluru, but any such event in the state has been ruled out for now as it would divert the attention of the party from the crucial elections. "There is no talk of the plenary within party circles as of now," the leader said, adding that the party was busy with organisational issues in the immediate aftermath of the conclusion of the presidential election. Bengaluru had hosted the 81st plenary session of the AICC in 2001 during S M Krishna's tenure as chief minister. It was the first plenary after Sonia Gandhi took over as Congress president in 1998. Before that, Bengaluru had hosted the plenary in 1960 when Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy was the president of the party. Chief Minister Siddaramaiah was keen to have the plenary in Bengaluru but the delay in the conclusion of the organisational election process deprived the Karnataka unit of the opportunity to host the biggest gathering of party leaders. Rahul Gandhi formally assumed charge as Congress president on December 16. On Saturday, he decided that all state Congress presidents will continue in their posts, suggesting a gradual approach in re-casting the organisation. On Monday evening, interacting with NRIs in Bahrain, Rahul said he would present a "new shining Congress party" over the next six months. India's stature in the global community grew in 2017 with its diplomatic efforts proving successful on several fronts. It gained entry into the Wassenaar Arrangement and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, and its candidate Justice Dalveer Singh got elected to the International Court of Justice. India also signalled to China and the world that it is no pushover. It refused to be intimidated by China's military might during the Doklam crisis. Indeed, it came in for praise for its restraint in the face of Beijing's provocative baiting. That it did not buckle down to Chinese military pressure won India praise among China-wary countries in the region and outside. However, India's relations with its neighbours, in particular, were hardly in the best of health in 2017. Relations with Pakistan remained frozen and although India strengthened ties with Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal and the Maldives, it was unable to contain Chinese cultural, economic and military influence in these countries. With the exception of Bhutan, all of India's neighbours expressed interest in participating in China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). India may have isolated Pakistan on the question of terrorism in 2016 but in 2017, China managed to isolate India on the issue of BRI. The New Year will bring India new opportunities to build bridges in its neighbourhood and beyond. Leaders from 10 Asean countries will be chief guests at India's Republic Day parade, signalling the priority the Narendra Modi government accords Southeast Asia. Delhi's 'Act East' policy should get a fillip from this engagement. This is a big chance for India to build bonds with Asean. India would do well to focus on economic cooperation with its member-countries, rather than harp on its grievances with Pakistan. India's relations with China will prove challenging in the coming year. Delhi must explore options to the Special Representative mechanism that has proved to be unsuccessful in finding a solution to the border dispute. India needs to think through its rejection of BRI. If it is determined to stay out, it must develop other corridors. Linking Chabahar port and the India-Afghanistan-Iran trade corridor with the International North-South Trade Corridor should be speeded up. Pakistan will remain India's main foreign policy challenge in 2018. India failed to show initiative or ideas to re-imagine a new relationship with this troublesome neighbour. The Modi government can be expected to avoid making any major outreach to Islamabad for the better part of the coming year. General elections in Pakistan are due in July 2018 and Delhi will wait to see who wins that election before making its move. However, the Modi government could use this time to engage in quiet back-channel diplomacy. Former supercop Julio Ribeiro on Tuesday filed a PIL in the Bombay High Court seeking probe by a commission of inquiry into the fire incident at 1Above and Mojo's Bistro restaurants and restobars in the Kamala Mills compound which claimed 14 lives, including 11 women. Ribeiro, 88, has served as the commissioner of police in Mumbai, director general of police of Punjab and Gujarat, and Indian Ambassador to Romania. The PIL files assumes significance after the Mumbai police and the BrihanMumbai Municipal Corporation differed on the origin of fire. While NM Joshi Marg police station concluded that the fire started from 1Above restaurant, the Mumbai fire brigade pinpoints Mojo's Bistro. The anti-corrpution crusader and activist pointed out in his PIL that the commission of inquiry must probe into all aspects of fire. Besides, he demanded a compulsory fire audit of all pubs, restaurants, hotels and eateries all over the city to avoid similar incidents. He also demanded that a senior police officer probe corrupt civic officials and take stringent action against them. Ribeiro filed the PIL through advocates Sujay Kantawala and Ashish Mehta. The blame game has begun between the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewage Board (BWSSB) and the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) over the death of three men cleaning sewage at an apartment. BWSSB chairman Tushar Girinath said the board cannot be held responsible for the deaths since the apartment had installed the sewage treatment plant and maintained it privately. "STP cleaning needs to be supervised," Girinath said. "It can only be done by trained workers. The apartment has risked the lives of those people by allowing them to get into the septic tank unsupervised." He said the pollution control board had made STPs mandatory and the BWSSB was only implementing the rule. The BWSSB's engineer-in-chief, Kemparamaiah, said the design, operation and maintenance of the STP inside the apartment were approved by the KSPCB. "The KSPCB issues guidelines and monitors the functioning of the STPs," Kemparamaiah added. While the BWSSB's STPs are of higher capacity, the ones installed at the apartment are less than one lakh kilolitres. "If the apartments' associations approach us for guidance, we'll certainly offer them. But no one has contacted us," Kemparamaiah said. A KSPCB official was quick to point the finger at the BWSSB for not monitoring the STPs. Advocate Clifton Rosario termed the BWSSB's statements on the incident "unfortunate". He said it was "shameful" for the head of a government agency to totally distance himself from the deaths of people due to manual scavenging. He also said allowing workers to enter the septic tank was against the Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013. As the agency responsible for implementing the provisions of the Act, the BWSSB is responsible for the deaths, Rosario added. The advocate said the "educated" apartment owners must be held responsible for the deaths since they failed to take any precautions in letting the men enter the STP. It is high time the government framed guidelines for cleaning the STPs, both government and private, Rosario said. India's first private commercial moon mission, scheduled for launch by a Bengaluru-based space tech startup, TeamIndus, has reportedly run into rough weather. The mission itself is now said to have been called off due to a paucity of funds. In pursuit of the $30 million Google Lunar XPRIZE (GLXP), TeamIndus had signed a contract with Antrix Corporation, the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), in December 2016. Reports indicate this contract has been cancelled, although there is no official confirmation. Of the five finalists in the competition for the prize, TeamIndus was the only Indian team. The deadline to complete the lunar mission was fixed on March 31, 2018. Business website the-ken.com reported that the contract was for a chartered launch on ISRO's rocket, Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV). The portal's report also stated that it would be virtually impossible for TeamIndus to secure another contract on any other rocket to complete the launch process before the scheduled deadlines. The total budget of the moon mission is said to be about Rs 450 crore. However, only about Rs 225 crore was raised. Efforts were on to raise the remaining amount through sponsors. Hardware procurement was another issue. As part of the GLXP challenge, a rover had to be put on the moon surface before travelling 500 metres to beam back high definition video footages to earth. ISRO sources indicated that the space organisation was ready to provide the rocket. But problems arose due to issues with contractual requirements and timely instalment payments. Initially, 33 teams had entered the GLXP contest before the number was filtered to five including TeamIndus. Last year, this team had won the $1 million Milestone prize for landing technology. Besides TeamIndus, Israeli non-profit firm SpaceIL, Japanese space robotics expert Hakuto, American firm Moon Express and Synergy Moon, an international collaboration of space enthusiasts, were also in the race. A 10-year-old boy was stripped and physically assaulted by a teacher at Evershine English School in Kalidasa Layout, Srinagar, South Bengaluru, for not doing the homework. Mahesh, a class 6 student, was beaten by the teacher, Anitha, on Monday. His parents, along with activists of a pro-Kannada organisation, protested in front of the school on Tuesday, demanding action against the teacher. Mahesh told reporters he had skipped school for three days because of ill health and could not do the homework either. When he turned up at the school on Monday, Anitha asked him about the homework. When he replied that he could not do it as he had taken ill, she asked other students to strip him and then went on to slap him five times. Chaitra, the boy's mother, accused the teacher of beating him without knowing his health condition. According to her, teachers must not lose patience under any circumstances. She added that they would go to the police if the school management failed to take action against Anitha. Sudha Pragna, the founder principal of the school, said Mahesh was poor in studies and hadn't done the homework. "The school management will take appropriate action after seeking an explanation from the teacher. We also asked her to apologise to the boys' parents," she added. Child rights activist Nagasimha G Rao said assaulting children was a violation of their rights. If the student is poor in studies, it is the duty of the teacher to teach. They do not have the right to punish the student, he added. The surgical masks cannot filter particulate matter in the air. "We provide the surgical masks every year to the traffic policemen, but the masks are of no use," said Additional Commissioner of Police R Hithendra. He added that even if a mask with better quality is provided, the policemen on duty are unable to use it. They will have to use the whistle and give instructions to the public, which means they will have to remove the mask every time. "The alternative is to depute them in other departments on a rotational basis," said Hithendra. "Surgical masks do not give 100% immunity. Particulate matter and toxic gases can pass through them causing cardiovascular diseases," said Dr C N Manjunath, director, Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Research. "Vehicular exhausts within the air may be of sizes 2.5 mm or below which a surgical mask cannot filter," said Manjunath. Dr Vivek Anand Padegal, director of respiratory medicine, Fortis Hospital, said that air pollution can cause lung problems, cardiovascular diseases and even cancer. Padegal said that the masks that are available in the market are not effective. The N95 masks - an internationally certified mask that resists 95% particulate matter - are the ones that come close to protection from particulate matter, Padegal added. Home Minister Ramalinga Reddy said he was unaware of the kind of masks used by the traffic policemen. The minister said he will talk to the officials concerned and take a decision. Some buy their own "I bought a mask for myself. The ones given by the department is of no use," said a constable manning a busy traffic junction. Without removing the mask, he explained that the two circular knob-like structures help him exhale. The mask had two layers, inner white layer protects people from most of the dust that seeps through the mask after being filtered by an outer layer which had tiny holes in it. "We work around 8 to 10 hours a day. How can we expect not to be affected by pollution?" he said. BJP national president Amit Shah on Tuesday is said to have told party legislators, MPs and functionaries to strive to win booths and the party will automatically emerge victorious in the Assembly elections. At a late-evening meeting of MPs legislators, district presidents, heads of various morchas, office-bearers, constituency incharges held at a private resort on the outskirts of Bengaluru, Shah is said to have stressed the need for effective implementation of the party's micro-management plan to win the polls. Strengthening the booth committees and taking it forward by constituting "page pramukh" - appointing a party worker for each page of the voters' list - should be the priority of the state unit. Shah is said to have expressed his unhappiness and disappointment at BJP legislators and MPs that despite his repeated instruction they had failed to implement the tasks set for them. During his last visit to Bengaluru on December 31 Shah took legislators and MPs to task for not following his "one-plus-one strategy," wherein each elected representative not only looks after his or her constituency, but one more allotted by the party. He told them when he visits Bengaluru the next time they should have finished the visit to the constituencies allotted to them. The BJP chief is learnt to have come prepared with reports on the progress made by the elected representatives, compiled by a team of party loyalists, assigned by Shah. "There has not been much progress. It is not a big task. Why this lethargy. What is the problem in stepping out and working for your party. Elections are round the corner. This will not do" Shah is said to have told them. He set a deadline of January 16 for the state unit to prepare constituency-wise "charge sheets" to highlight the shortcomings of the Congress government. The meetings were held in the presence of Union Ministers Prakash Javadekar, Piyush Goyal, who have been appointed as election in-charge of the state and BJP national general secretary incharge of party affairs in Karnataka P Muralidhar Rao. The trio was asked to submit the report about the progress made in organising party workers at the grassroots level, by February 3. A San Diego man accused of using a juvenile to sell marijuana to students at Cathedral Catholic High School, as well as supplying pot to minors, pleaded not guilty Monday. Jan. 8. to 39 felony charges. William John Sipperley III, 50, faces several counts of employing a minor to sell or carry marijuana, furnishing marijuana to a minor over age 14 and maintaining a place where marijuana could be used or sold. He also faces several counts of felony child abuse, according to the complaint filed in San Diego Superior Court. Sipperleys bail was set at $250,000, and a judge signed an order requiring him to say away from five minors named in the document. If convicted, Sipperley could be sent to prison for up to 61 years and four months, said Deputy District Attorney Christina Eastman. Sipperley is charged in the same case as fiancee Kimberly Dawn Quach, a Cathedral Catholic parent arrested in October on suspicion of using a teenager to sell drugs at the Carmel Valley school. Quach, 48, has pleaded not guilty to a long list of similar charges and is being held in county jail in lieu of $201,000 bail. She was arrested in late September. Sipperley was booked into county jail on Jan. 2, according to jail records. San Diego police detectives had been looking for him since October. It was not immediately clear where authorities found him. The prosecutor declined to speak about the investigation. A search warrant affidavit that San Diego police investigators filed Oct. 3 alleged that Quach showed the teen how to make the sales, and that customers paid in cash or through online payments. A search of the home the couple shared with two minor children turned up marijuana plants drying on tables throughout the home, as well as planters, grow lights and other items used to grow the plants, according to the affidavit. --Teri Figueroa and Dana Littlefield are writers for The San Diego Union-Tribune Eighteen years ago, I wrote in The San Diego Union-Tribune of my struggle to answer my then 4-year-old sons questions about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and why we have a day to honor him. I remember squirming, trying to sort out my thoughts and translate my words into preschool-level understanding and most important of all, to get it right. On the one hand, I didnt want to prejudice him by pointing out that there are differences in peoples skin color. After all, he didnt seem to notice these differences. Why should I bring it to his attention? I was afraid to explain about Martin Luther King and his pursuit of equal rights for African-Americans, worried that my son would begin to see skin color in a new way while I wanted him to continue not to see skin color at all. On the other hand, if he was asking questions, then it was time to educate him. By carefully choosing my words, and with a bit of luck, my answers might form a filter through which future experiences with people of different races and religions could be viewed positively and with deeper understanding. We could establish a foundation for basic moral conduct in his life, one where injustice would not be tolerated. As I pondered my approach, I tried to hear how this would sound. My first thought is that he would be amazed that people would pay attention to something as trivial as skin color differences. After all, most children do not; prejudice has to be taught. My second thought was the fear that he would think hes wrong and its alright to make judgments about people based on race. That would be disastrous. There was nothing to do except take a deep breath and plunge ahead. There was a time not long ago when lighter-skinned people made bad rules and wouldnt let darker-skinned people do the same things they got to do, I said. They wouldnt give them equal rights. I told him that some human rules are good, while others are not. Equal rights means giving all people the same opportunities in life and letting them do the same things: ride the same bus, sit together in restaurants, drink from the same fountains, live in the same neighborhoods, go to school together, play together, and work together. Martin Luther King was a great leader and champion of equal rights. He helped change the rules in a peaceful way that made this country a better place for all people, regardless of the color of their skin. Even though African-Americans still struggle for equal rights, there is more tolerance, understanding, and respect for all people because of Dr. King. So we have a special day to remember and honor him. I kept it short and held my breath, waiting for his reaction. Had I done a good job? Had I done justice to a great man and a great cause? Childrens questions force us to scrutinize our own morals and values. If we have biases, they will too. Wed better not blow it, even and especially the first time they express curiosity, because there may never be a second chance to undo the damage. Racial tension As he grew older, I noticed that he became more aware of racial differences, which was expected. But it made my heart soar that at the same time he seemed astonished at discrimination and intolerance. His 9-year-old self and most of his peers regarded acts of hatred with an innocent wonderment that refreshes the soul. As hes aged even more, he has gained a deep realization that the true standard for goodness in people really is, above all else, an examination of the content of their character. And he senses that this is the standard by which he too shall be judged. It is this sentence, however, that I said to him all those years ago that now gives me pause: Even though African-Americans still struggle for equal rights, there is more tolerance, understanding, and respect for all people because of Dr. King. I wrote that 18 years ago, and now wonder if its true. This is not how it was supposed to go. Weve seen too many steps in reverse rather than progress moving forward. Rosa Parks and Ruby Bridges should be names familiar to all. Alas, I fear its not the case. Racial tension has increased, along with an increase in discrimination against the other of all kinds, based on faith, color, sexual and gender identity, and nationality. Yet there have been strides made in movements that I believe would make Dr. King, who professed equality for all, proud: LGBT rights, equal pay for equal work, immigrant rights, the outrage over sexual harassment. Yes, its still a long road ahead. But Martin Luther King Day is a way to remind us all that there are brave men and women who can change the course of history. We can choose to be despondent that it didnt work out as quickly as we had hoped or we can choose to face forward and accept that more work needs to be done for the cause of justice and equality. Let us not despair over setbacks. We as a society have enacted laws that no longer limit where people of all colors, nationalities, genders, and religions can live, work and play. The long view is that we are on the path toward more acceptance and enlightenment. As I wrote in 2000, The challenge for us as parents on this Martin Luther King Day is to reinforce Dr. Kings message of tolerance, peace, compassion and understanding. Let everyone see that we honor his legacy and still believe in The Dream. For if we are vigilant and demonstrate at every opportunity our belief in equality with words and deeds, so too will the children. And then the future will be secure. -- Opinion columnist and Sr. Education Writer Marsha Sutton can be reached at: suttonmarsha@gmail.com. Save my User ID and Password Some subscribers prefer to save their log-in information so they do not have to enter their User ID and Password each time they visit the site. To activate this function, check the 'Save my User ID and Password' box in the log-in section. This will save the password on the computer you're using to access the site. Note: If you choose to use the log-out feature, you will lose your saved information. This means you will be required to log-in the next time you visit our site. Days after 14 gurdwaras in Canada's Ontario province banned the entry of Indian government representatives, 96 more gurdwara management committees in Canada and the US have followed suit, barring Indian officials and members of Hindu outfits Rashriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) and the Shiv Sena from entering gurudwaras under their control. An announcement in this regard was made on Sunday at New York's Gurudwara Sikh Cultural Society right after a religious congregation organised to observe the death anniversary of Satwant Singh and Kehar Singh, who were given death penalty for killing former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The decision was taken in a meeting organised by Sikh Coordination Committee East Coast (SCCEC) and American Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (APGC). Sikh Coordinator East Cost and American Gurdwara Parbhandak Committee representative Himmat Singh said, ''A total 116 gurdwara management committees had participated in teleconference on Saturday night and 96 of these gurdwaras had confirmed agreement to proposal to bar entry of Indian officials in gurdwaras, along with representatives of RSS and Shiv Sena.'' He claimed that some gurdwaras couldn't confirm this decision due to technical glitches in teleconferencing. ''We have been getting emails from many gurdwaras and numbers will increase further,'' claimed Himmat Singh. Surjit Singh, US president of Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar), headed by Simranjit Singh Mann, also supported the resolution to ban entry of Indian officials. Himmat Singh added, ''Following Ontario gurdwara committees, we have been making it official that Indian officials will not be allowed any intervention in the management of gurdwaras in US. There will be no ban if someone visits gurdwaras in a personal capacity as devotee.'' During Operation Bluestar in June 1984, then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had directed the Indian military to storm the Golden Temple in Amritsar to drive out the Sikh extremist religious leader Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and his armed followers, resulting in some damage to the holiest of Sikh shrines. After the killing of Indira Gandhi, there was a pogrom against Sikhs, particularly in Delhi and its surroundings. While Sikhs in India have long since been reconciled with the government, resentment continues to simmer among expatriates in Canada and the US. Sixteen gurdwaras in British Columbia and Alberta provinces of Canada had passed a similar resolution on 4 January. A statement released by these gurdwaras read, ''This initiative was moved forward in western Canada by Gurdwara Sahib Dasmesh Darbar (Surrey, BC) and Gurdwara Dasmesh Culture Centre (Calgary, AB) and a total of 16 Gurdwaras in BC & Alberta agree and support that sewadars of Gurdwara Sahibs reserve the right to bar access to the stage and entry to officials of the Indian government. This would include, but not be limited to, Indian elected officials, Indian Consular officials, and members of organizations like RSS and Shiv Sena.'' It said, ''To be clear, no individual is being banned from Gurdwara Sahibs, but Indian representatives in official capacity will not be permitted to address the sangat.'' The statement added, ''Although this policy of restriction exists informally, it is due time for a formal declaration. This step is being taken not to restrict access to the Guru, but rather to ensure that the Gurdwara Sahib remains independent from the interference of corrupt officials who represent a government that for the last four decades has committed genocide against the Sikh community and has never had positive intentions in dealing with Sikhs as a separate nation of people.'' Nebraska has become the first Republican-controlled state to launch its own attempt to save net neutrality rules. On Friday, state senator Adam Morfeld (D) introduced legislation in the state legislature for legal provisions to protect neutrality at the state level. Under the bill, broadband providers like AT&T and Comcast would be barred from slowing down or blocking internet content and from striking deals with content companies for faster connection speeds. Whether the bill would pass in Nebraska legislature is not clear, but according to Morfeld who spoke to The Lincoln Star Journal, it has already garnered bipartisan support across the state's lawmakers. Similar action is under consideration in California, Washington, New York and Massachusetts after Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman Ajit Pai (R) successfully led a move to scrap the federal regulations in December. Even if such moves make it through the state legislatures, there may be other challenges. The FCC noted in its order to scrap net neutrality rules, that its measures preclude net neutrality regulations on the state level. Other lawmakers and state officials are also planning their own efforts to preserve net neutrality rules. New York attorney general Eric Schneiderman (D) plans to lead a coalition of other states' attorneys general in filing a lawsuit to retain the rules. Please allow ads as they help fund our trusted local news content. Kindly add us to your ad blocker whitelist. If you want further access to Ireland's best local journalism, consider contributing and/or subscribing to our free daily Newsletter . Support our mission and join our community now. The reduction in Sunday Masses in Dungloe is an isolated case and is not part of a wider diocesan policy. This was confirmed at the weekend by Fr Michael McKeever, the diocesan secretary for the Diocese of Raphoe. However, Fr McKeever did not rule out the issue becoming one in other parishes in the diocese in the future and in time an issue fo the diocese itself. Dungloe, which is in the parish of Templecrone, is being reduced from two Masses to one on a Sunday. And in further cutbacks the Mass on Saturday morning is to be no more. The last Saturday morning Mass in Dungloe was held on Saturday last. The 10am Mass on weekdays will also be impacted and there will be no 10am Mass, on any day there is an 11 am funeral. There are currently two services in Dungloe, on a Sunday at 9 am and 11 pm and one of these will go. Fr Aodhan Cannon is the parish priest in the parish of Templecrone and is based in Dungloe. The decision to make the changes was made by Fr Cannon after the parish was reduced from three priests down to two following the transfer of Fr Nigel Gallagher, to Annagry a number of months ago. The Dungloe decision is a decision being made purely by the parish priest in Dungloe, Fr Michael McKeever, told the Democrat/Peoples Press, in response to a query on the issue. Not diocesan policy It is not part of diocesan policy and has nothing got to do with the diocese, the diocesan secretary insisted. It is not an issue that has been discussed yet in the diocese. But that does not mean that it will not be discussed in the future. The Dungloe decision was taken only because of the reduction in the number of priests. There are currently six Sunday Masses in the parish of Templecrone - Dungloe, three and one each in Meenacross, Lettermacaward and Doochary. It was not possible for the two remaining priests to cover six Masses over the two days (Saturday vigil Mass) and Sunday. And besides the maximum number of Masses a priest is allowed celebrate is two, explained Fr McKeever. The diocesan secretary is not aware of any other reduction in any other parish in the diocese. However, he did admit he would not rule it out in the future. Age profile Given the age profile of the clergy in the diocese and the low number of new priests coming through the system, he said he would be surprised if it did not become an issue for other parishes. Fr McKeever, confirmed there are currently two students from the diocese studying for the priesthood, one in Maynooth and the other in Rome. It is not an issue but I have no doubt it is going to come up in the future and we (the diocese) are going to have to discuss it and ask the question are there too many Masses. There is no getting away from it with less priests there are going to have to be fewer Masses. The final decision on which of the services in Dungloe - the 9 am or 11 pm - is to go, is still being considered. It is still under review and it is a case of deciding which of them is to go, said Fr Aodhan Cannon PP, for the parish of Templecrone. It is not necessarily a case where one of the times will go. It could very well be a case where we might come up with a new time in between. I'm currently discussing the matter with a number of people and also listening to feedback from parishioners. The reduction in services seems to have been accepted by the parish. Fr Cannon, through the parish newsletter sought responses and submissions both verbal and written over the last couple of weekends and so far he said he has received very few complaints. All business is a gamble in one form or another. Even though it might not be as much of a crapshoot as a game of roulette, the odds are often against any small business making it beyond its first year. In fact, according to Neil Patel, 90% of start-ups fail. Although his figures are based more on experience and various data points than a concrete number, the main point to understand here is that a lot of businesses fail. When you start to look at things from this perspective, the notion of business being a gamble starts to take on more credence. So, if thats the case, what can you do to swing the odds in your favour? The obvious answer would be to think like a gambler. Unfortunately, in this instance, the tactics of a gambler are a little too simplistic to cut it in the business world. If you really want to help improve your chances of success, you need to think like a financial gambler, aka a trader. At the heart of any financial trade is an element of gambling. However, for the informed trader, the possibility of failure has been reduced to such a point that its less of a gamble and more of a calculated risk. Learn to Manage Your Money Lets look at this from the perspective of a CFD trader. What is CFD? In simple terms, a contract for difference (CFD) is a trade that basically speculates on the future price of an asset. More specifically, a CFD trader will be investing money on how different the price will be from the time they open a position to the time it closes. In business, youre also speculating the future of an asset. To put it another way, youre investing your time and money in an asset (i.e. your product/service) and hoping there will be a positive difference in its value. In reality, the time between Point A and Point B in both mediums will differ. However, the techniques CFD traders use to increase their overall expectation are still useful. For example, its important to manage your money. Starting small and knowing when to enter/exit a trade is important. As a general rule, you shouldnt risk more than 2% of your funds on a single trade. Moreover, you should cancel a trade when you hit a 10% loss. This concept holds true in business. If youre a shop owner with a 100,000 starting capital, you wouldnt spend 75% of it on stock. Similarly, if you ran a promotion and it started to lose money, youd want to stop at a certain point just like a trader would. Economic Factors Should Guide Your Business Decisions Beyond the process of managing your money, traders are acutely aware of economic markers. Whether its a political move, an impending corporate takeover or news from the financial world, everything can affect the price of an asset. Again, when you look at business, things are the same. If we take our shop example, youd want to know the local economy before you made a move. You wouldnt open on a Sunday if footfall was traditionally low on the day. Similarly, if a new local tax was being discussed, its probably going to affect your business rates. Identifying and then extrapolating pieces of information like this is what a CFD trader will do every day. Studying price indexes, statistical charts and reading news headlines not only gives them an insight into the current dynamics, but also the potential dynamics in the future. From this information, they can decide which moves are the best and then how much they should invest. Whenever a trader invests in something, theyre taking a risk. However, by managing their money and reviewing economic factors, they can reduce this risk. As a business owner, you need to do the same. Although the specifics might be different, the underlying process is the same. Business might be a gamble, but a little thought and planning can make it more like a trade and less like a round of roulette. [Republican] Gov. Rick Snyder proposed legislation Monday to offset what he said would amount to an unintended $1.5-billion annual tax increase for Michigan residents resulting from the recent federal tax reform package. Thats the lead sentence in an article in the Detroit Free Press from yesterday titled Snyder proposes plan to offset federal tax reform for Michigan taxpayers. The article goes on to say that our Republican governor is trying his best to protect Michigan taxpayers from the tax increase being imposed on them by the #TrumpTaxScam that the president signed into law in December: Snyder is proposing a restored $4,000 personal exemption for 2018 increasing to $4,500 in 2021 to offsetthe current $4,000 state exemption the administration believes will be lost as a result of the recent federal tax reform package signed into law by President Donald Trump. The Free Press reported Jan. 2 that the recent federal tax reform was expected to result in an unexpected tax hike for Michigan residents of close to $1.5 billion. While significantly increasing the standard deduction, the package reduced federal tax exemptions to zero. Because federal exemptions are carried over to state tax return forms, legislation is needed to clarify Michigans Income Tax Act so that exemptions at the state level can continue, Snyder said. A $1.5 BILLION tax increase for Michigan taxpayers. Thats a stark admission from our Republican governor that his Partys president along with the members of the House and Senate from his Party have raised the taxes of Michiganders, despite all of their rhetoric to the contrary. Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan was quoted as saying, A lot of people think its going to raise their taxes. So the proof is in the pudding, and I think the results will speak for themselves. Well, weve tasted the pudding already and the results have spoken. Now even Republicans are forced to admit that what Trump erroneously describes as the largest tax cut in history (its not) isnt a tax cut at all, not for many Americans. Lets all remember this and do whatever we can to make sure Republicans are shown the door in November of 2018. P.S. It appears that Gov. Snyder is using this situation as a way to boost the political profile of his Lt. Gov., Brian Calley, who is running to replace him in 2018: Snyder said he and Lt. Gov. Brian Calley worked with the state Department of Treasury over the holidays season to analyze the effects of the federal tax reform and come up with a state fix. We are putting Michigan families first by working to enact a simple and fair solution to fix the unintended consequences of the federal tax plan, Snyder said in a news release. Calleys opponent, Bill Shady Schuette, wants to use the opportunity for his own political gain, too, of course. Hes recommending lowering the state income tax and blowing a nearly $1 billion hole in our state budget: The health of nine million children is at risk, with even more at stake in hard-hit Flint. Its bad enough that if Congress does not act to reauthorize the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP), nine million lower-income children will lose the health insurance that allows them to see a doctor or go to the dentist. The problem is even worse in Flint, where CHIP is providing additional essential healthcare services to children and young adults whose health has been jeopardized by exposure to lead-tainted drinking water. Whats more, CHIP funding is helping to pay for lead abatement in Flint, including the replacement of pipes. Congressman Dan Kildee of Flint, Mich., calls the inaction of Republicans in Congress and their use of reauthorizing CHIP to gain leverage in partisan debates about other priorities, such as funding the government amoral and irresponsible. There seems to be this idea in Congress in the last couple of years that in order to do one good thing, we have to do harm to somebody to offset the good thing were going to do, he says. It turns Washington into a purely transactional environment thats not based on principle or whats good for the country. Last October, Congressman Kildee and his fellow Michigan Congressional delegates sent a letter to Speaker Paul Ryan. It expressed their disapproval with Republicans failure to put forward a bipartisan reauthorization of CHIP, instead holding the program hostage as a bargaining chip in their ongoing efforts to cut other essential healthcare programs such as Medicare. As Congressman Kildee points out, CHIP was created in 1997 with strong bipartisan support, led by Senators Ted Kennedy (D) and Orrin Hatch (R). CHIP was the first commitment of Congress that recognized the inherent right to healthcare. I think a lot of people dont see CHIP in its full breadth: CHIP was really the first clear statement that healthcare is a right, and were going to start with the kids. With partisanship at a fever pitch in Washington, its hard not to see Republicans foot-dragging over reauthorizing CHIP as a cynical attempt to send a message that healthcare is not, in fact, a right. After all, they have been attacking the Affordable Care Act (ACA) since it was passed, and seem hell-bent on gutting Medicare and Medicaid, too. Some Ayn Rand acolytes in Congress may think they never should have acknowledged healthcare as a human right when it came to CHIP, but those conservative ideologues need to be willing to vote against it and explain their vote, Congressman Kildee says. Whats indefensible is that theyre not bringing it up, or insisting that we choose some other population to victimize in order to get the CHIP program funded. Republicans need to exhibit leadership and call for a clean reauthorization of CHIP and take that vote. The stakes are high for the nine million children who rely on CHIP, because their families are above the income level for receiving Medicaid but dont earn enough to be able to afford health insurance. One of the programs funded by CHIP is MiChild, a program in Michigan that provides health and dental coverage for children from working families that make more than double the federal poverty level $43,290 for a family of three. Some states, including Michigan, also allow CHIP to cover pregnant women. CHIP currently provides health insurance to 116,000 children in Michigan. But theres even more at risk in Michigan. In the wake of the Flint water crisis, Michigan was granted a waiver by the federal government to use CHIP money to remove lead hazards from the homes of low-income residents in Flint and other communities across the state. Michigan is using CHIP money to spend about $119 million over five years to detect and remove lead hazards from homes in Flint and other areas of the state. So far, CHIP funds have been used to replace about 1,000 lead service lines in Flint, remove lead paint and remediate lead-tainted soil. In addition, the state of Michigan was allowed to expand CHIP funds to provide health insurance for an expanded pool of people younger than 21 and pregnant women living in Flint since the water switch that exposed them to dangerous levels of lead in April 2014. Although Congress reauthorized CHIP funding for some states where expiration was most imminent in December 2017, Michigan was not among them. Without reauthorization, CHIP funding in Michigan is expected to run out by April or May 2018. Without reauthorization, all of the services to Michigan kids including mitigating the health risks of the Flint water crisis will evaporate. Its a question of whether the federal government is going to keep its promise to the people of Flint to stick with them as they go through this recovery, Congressman Kildee says. We need to sound the alarm bells and get an authorization that isnt forcing us to trade off some other priority to get CHIP reauthorized. Congressman Kildee calls it hypocritical that Republicans in Congress were more than willing to pass tax legislation that cuts more than $1 trillion in taxes for the wealthiest Americans without any offsets to pay for it. Yet they insist that helping kids get essential healthcare services must be paid for at the expense of other vital programs. I cant call it tax reform its the biggest shift of hard-earned wealth in recent history. It was not to help kids who are struggling, to put food on the table of hungry people, to educate children who have potential that might not be realized without some help, to make cities like Flint safer, to ensure theres clean air or clean water. It was to shift massive wealth from working people to the wealthiest Americans. Yet when it comes to kids being able to go to the doctor or the dentist, Republicans suddenly get religion about spending priorities. Shame on them. With Congress back in session, Congressman Kildee and other Democrats are pushing hard for Congressional leadership to bring CHIP reauthorization up for a vote and fast. He urges everyone to call their elected officials and demand reauthorization of CHIP, not just for the good it will do in Flint but in cities and states across the country. Congressman Kildee feels confident that if it comes to a vote, CHIP will be reauthorized. After all, he says, its always enjoyed bipartisan support that even right-leaning officials can get behind. If Orrin Hatch can put his name on it, they can, too, he says. Its the health and futures of children that are on the line here, which should make reauthorizing CHIP a straightforward decision. Its a binary choice, Congressman Kildee says. You either approve the authorization of CHIP or it goes away and kids get kicked off healthcare. By choosing not to put CHIP reauthorization up for a vote, theyre making a choice. We need to force them to do it. We cant allow them to have their way without a fight. Tell your representatives in Congress to push for a vote and to vote yes to reauthorize CHIP. You can find them HERE. [Photos from visits to Flint courtesy of Congressman Kildees office.] Blog Archive June 2021 (1) May 2021 (77) April 2021 (77) March 2021 (82) February 2021 (68) January 2021 (64) December 2020 (67) November 2020 (66) October 2020 (66) September 2020 (67) August 2020 (74) July 2020 (83) June 2020 (92) May 2020 (86) April 2020 (104) March 2020 (105) February 2020 (74) January 2020 (75) December 2019 (75) November 2019 (70) October 2019 (89) September 2019 (69) August 2019 (81) July 2019 (77) June 2019 (73) May 2019 (110) April 2019 (110) March 2019 (102) February 2019 (85) January 2019 (123) December 2018 (116) November 2018 (112) October 2018 (121) September 2018 (107) August 2018 (150) July 2018 (163) June 2018 (190) May 2018 (145) April 2018 (112) March 2018 (124) February 2018 (113) January 2018 (164) December 2017 (150) November 2017 (144) October 2017 (169) September 2017 (171) August 2017 (135) July 2017 (131) June 2017 (147) May 2017 (160) April 2017 (138) March 2017 (156) February 2017 (143) January 2017 (203) December 2016 (208) November 2016 (185) October 2016 (173) September 2016 (194) August 2016 (232) July 2016 (225) June 2016 (238) May 2016 (231) April 2016 (215) March 2016 (246) February 2016 (226) January 2016 (252) December 2015 (230) November 2015 (250) October 2015 (234) September 2015 (222) August 2015 (253) July 2015 (275) June 2015 (279) May 2015 (223) April 2015 (226) March 2015 (243) February 2015 (258) January 2015 (281) December 2014 (292) November 2014 (296) October 2014 (413) September 2014 (472) August 2014 (506) July 2014 (483) June 2014 (488) May 2014 (512) April 2014 (497) March 2014 (531) February 2014 (482) January 2014 (535) December 2013 (482) November 2013 (441) October 2013 (416) September 2013 (491) August 2013 (521) July 2013 (491) June 2013 (470) May 2013 (457) April 2013 (426) March 2013 (420) February 2013 (414) January 2013 (489) December 2012 (433) November 2012 (504) October 2012 (469) September 2012 (430) August 2012 (427) July 2012 (360) June 2012 (336) May 2012 (362) April 2012 (322) March 2012 (263) February 2012 (224) January 2012 (291) December 2011 (295) November 2011 (325) October 2011 (330) September 2011 (319) August 2011 (333) July 2011 (318) June 2011 (387) May 2011 (373) April 2011 (389) March 2011 (375) February 2011 (335) January 2011 (400) December 2010 (445) November 2010 (395) October 2010 (312) September 2010 (262) August 2010 (277) July 2010 (323) June 2010 (386) May 2010 (360) April 2010 (333) March 2010 (351) February 2010 (336) January 2010 (384) December 2009 (353) November 2009 (300) October 2009 (308) September 2009 (350) August 2009 (298) July 2009 (255) June 2009 (203) May 2009 (193) April 2009 (186) March 2009 (197) February 2009 (173) January 2009 (148) December 2008 (181) November 2008 (197) October 2008 (236) September 2008 (304) August 2008 (314) July 2008 (273) June 2008 (27) May 2008 (1) April 2008 (6) October 2007 (1) May 2007 (1) April 2007 (6) March 2007 (2) February 2007 (1) October 2006 (1) September 2006 (1) August 2006 (4) July 2006 (4) June 2006 (1) July 2005 (1) May 2005 (2) March 2005 (1) June 2004 (2) May 2004 (1) April 2004 (4) March 2004 (2) February 2004 (2) July 2003 (2) June 2003 (5) Indonesia offers its first study programme in livestock engineering Indonesia's Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM) is opening a new study programme in livestock engineering, a first in the Southeast Asian country. The programme, which will be offered by the UGM Faculty of Animal Sciences, aims to produce qualified and professional engineers for the animal husbandry sector. The dean of the Faculty of Animal Sciences UGM, Dr. Ir. Ali Agus, said the establishment of the engineer profession study programme is a strategic step to prepare human resource in the livestock engineering sector. Agus explained that livestock engineering was not placed under the Faculty of Engineering because "scientifically, we are different from mechanical engineering, chemical engineering, electrical engineering and so forth. Animal science is related to living things and its industry". Agus added that the new programme also aims to help the management of animal husbandry, including processing, packaging, engineering technology and food security. The study programme's participants have two course options: the "Past Experience Recognition" and regular course studies. According to the chairman of the Livestock Engineer Study Programme, Dr. Ir. Zuprizal, the Past Experience Recognition is for those who already have Engineer titles and five years of work experience. The participants do not attend classes but make a portfolio that will be validated by UGM. Regular course students The regular course study requires the prospective students to have work experience of two years. Instead of teaching the fundamental theories, the regular path will provide courses regarding livestock industry. First registration for Past Experience Recognition for lecturers at Faculty of Animal Sciences UGM ended on Dec. 29, 2017. Zuprizal said the Regular class consists of 24 credits with 70% of study apportioned for industrial practice and 30% for professionalism ethical code and engineering work safety. The graduates of the study programme will be recognised at the 7 level in National Qualification. "Fresh graduates who are accepted as government employees can directly be placed at the 7 level while the companies who accept the fresh graduates of this study programme will obtain guarantee on the quality of the workforces," said Zuprizal. By registering and attending the study programme, Zuprizal said, the new graduates will obtain Engineer title from UGM while their professionalism will be tested by the Association of Indonesian Engineers (PII). "The engineer certificate which is issued by the Association of Indonesian Engineers can be used at international level, thus the fresh graduates will be able to compete in ASEAN Economic Community," he added. Petersime announces new distributor for Austria and Switzerland Petersime has appointed ME International Installation GmbH as its official distributor for Austria and Switzerland effective from January 1. ME International Installation was founded in 1980 by managing director Rolf Muller. In 2018, his team celebrates a 30-year partnership with Petersime as distributor for the German market. Throughout the years, they have seen a significant growth in their business and have successfully expanded their distributorship activities. Petersime and ME International Installation have now strengthened their partnership even further; from January 1, ME International will expand its market with Austria and Switzerland. Based in Achim, Germany, ME International Installation will provide sales, service and distribution support for Petersime incubators and hatcheries, as well as spare parts, throughout Germany, Austria and Switzerland. "I am delighted to expand our partnership with ME International Installation GmbH. With their experience and know-how, together we strive to further develop the capability of the Petersime distribution network to deliver a consistently excellent service to our customers," said Hugo De Ruyck, global sales manager of Petersime. Nina Muller, CEO of ME International Installation said the appointment represented an opportunity for the company to expand and support Petersime's customer base. "ME International has worked with Petersime for over 30 years and we are proud to have such an important partnership. We are excited by the challenge of offering a fast and efficient level of service to really meet the needs of German, Austrian and Swiss hatcheries," Muller added. 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Al-Tamimi is well known for her activism for a free Palestine. Videos and pictures of her confronting and slapping Israeli soldiers have been viral for weeks. "WE HAVE MADE THOSE CONCERNS KNOWN" UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters "What is clear is that people need to have their rights respected. The detention of children is our particular concern and we have made those concerns known. on Monday. "PARTIES TO LOOK AFTER SYRIA'S OWN INTERESTS" The UN spokesman also expressed deep concern for the safety and protection of tens of thousands of people in southern Idlib and rural Hama in northeastern Syria: "With the seventh winter of the conflict underway, more than 13 million people need basic aid and protection. While some parts of Syria are witnessing a welcome reprieve from hostilities, many others face intensified military operations and conflict." Dujarric added Dujarric expressed that UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres had called the parties to look after Syria's own interests rather than their own. Dujarric said UN humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock is scheduled to visit Syria from January 9 to 12. Popular clothing store H&M offered a brief response after being accused of selling a racist hoodie on its website. Fans took to Twitter to express their disgust with the store after it posted a photo of an African-American boy wearing a green hoodie which reads, "Cutest monkey in the jungle." The store has since apologized. Still, that did not stop it from getting hate on social media. A representative for H&M released an official statement in hopes of the retailer bouncing back from the backlash. "We sincerely apologize for offending people with this image of a printed hooded top," they said. "We believe in diversity and inclusion in all that we do and will be reviewing all our internal policies accordingly to avoid any future issues." It did not take long for fans to jump on H&M after the photo went viral early Monday. Several took to Twitter to call out the store for not realizing how the photo could contribute to racial tensions that the nation has already experienced. One fan asked the store a simple question and did not hold back when it came to calling out the store with a direct tone. Another expressed disappointment that a store such as H&M could be "this negligent" and "lack awareness," considering that it is already the new year. In the year 2018 theres no way brands/art directors can be this negligent and lack awareness. If look at other sweaters in same category they have white kids. We have to do better. pic.twitter.com/Av4bS4t6yn alex medina (@mrmedina) January 8, 2018 One fan cleared it up and said that the hoodie was not the problem but rather putting it on an African-American child with a statement concerning a monkey. That H&M hoodie in and of itself is not racist nor offensive. However putting it on and marketing it with a black child with historical and current context is just not a good look. Zee (@AsToldByZee_) January 8, 2018 One went as far as calling out fans who did not see an issue with H&M's now controversial and viral move. Im seeing some few uneducated black kids talking poo online saying the use of the word #Monkey in the H&M add is nothing to be upset about or raise alarm on... it just shows some people just go to school for show but dont have LAKAIYE and its shameful MOELOGO (@moelogo) January 8, 2018 Another took it a step further and, instead of coming for H&M, questioned the whereabouts of the child's parents and those spearheading his modeling career. Everyone is killing H&M UK for the ad of the inappropriate hoodie as they should BUT where were his parents, manager &/or agent?! Like cmon pic.twitter.com/XmMxgAr8tc Lenny S (@kodaklens) January 8, 2018 One encouraged the store that it would take a nice sale for her to look the other way. Run a 75% off sale @hm and all will be forgiven Kia-Ann (@Saint_Kia) January 8, 2018 Not The Only One H&M is not the first retailer to be hit with racial accusations recently. Fans might remember Abercrombie & Fitch putting out a shirt with Wong Brothers' laundry service which read, "two Wongs can make it white." Another shirt read, "Get Your Buddha on the Floor." Urban Outfitters also came under fire after it put a Kent State sweatshirt with blood stains on its racks. The campus fell victim to an ugly shooting massacre back in 1970. Zara was also targeted after it came out with a striped blue-and-white pajama top for children. It featured a yellow star on the left chest. The item was compared with outfits that concertation camp victims wore during the Holocaust era. Cosmetic line Dove also faced backlash for its racially insensitive ads. Be sure to keep up with Enstars for the latest. Is Kylie Jenner keeping her pregnancy under wraps because she doesn't want people to make fun of her pregnant body? According to a new report, the 20-year-old Keeping Up With The Kardashians star and lip kit entrepreneur is keeping her baby bump to herself in an effort to avoid the harsh criticism she could potentially receive from her fans and haters. Kylie is living in a self-imposed jail because shes terrified of getting fat-shamed the way Kim [Kardashian, 37] was when she was pregnant with North [West, 4], a source explained to Hollywood Life on Jan. 7. When Kardashian was pregnant with her first child, she was thrust into the spotlight for allegedly overeating and gaining far more weight than what is typically normal for an expectant mother. She was then seen on the cover of magazines who suggested she couldn't stop eating while pregnant with her second child, son Saint West, 2. Young Kylie's Pregnancy Scare Kylie was a teenager then, the source noted, speaking of Kardashians first pregnancy, and it made a huge impact on her. Shes got major anxiety about it and its not a case of her not loving being pregnant. Its more of a phobia. She knows how harsh people are and she just feels too fragile right now to deal with any sort of body shaming that shes sure will happen." Although not much is known about Jenner's pregnancy, she and boyfriend Travis Scott are rumored to be expecting a baby girl sometime in the coming weeks. As she reportedly awaits the birth of her first child, Jenner and her boyfriend have been targeted with a number of shocking rumors, including reports of a breakup and others that claim they will soon wed. Jenner and Scott began their relationship in early 2017 after Jenner split from Tyga after a few years of dating. Then, just months later, Jenner began facing rumors of a pregnancy and as those rumors continued, the longtime reality star began to live her life away from the cameras and the prying eyes of the paparazzi. To see more of Kylie Jenner and her family, including her sisters, Khloe, Kourtney, and Kim Kardashian, and Kendall Jenner, don't miss new episodes of Keeping Up with the Kardashians Season 14 on Sunday nights at 9 p.m. on the E! Network. NeNe Leakes and Sheree Whitfield have never been ones to back off when it comes to beefs between the two. In the latest feud, they went back and forth over whose man has the worst criminal history after Sunday night's episode of The Real Housewives of Atlanta on Bravo. Pot-Meet-Kettle? It came after Leakes revealed on a recent episode of the popular reality show that Whitfield's mystery boyfriend is known as a con artist in the Atlanta area. He is currently serving time in jail after swindling businesses out of millions of dollars. When Kandi Burruss told Whitfield about Leakes' accusations and statement about Whitfield's boyfriend, Tyrone Gilliams, Whitfield reminded Burruss and the millions of fans tuning in that Leakes and even her husband, Gregg Leakes, have not been able to steer clear of a jail cell either. "Really, NeNe? You and Gregg both have mughstots," Whitfield said during a confessional interview on the series. Still, it is safe to say she was not too bothered by the criticism surrounding Gilliams' jail time as she also told Burruss that he would "eventually" come home to her luxurious Chateau Sheree mansion. Interestingly enough, NeNe responded to Whitfield's statement pretty much the first chance she could. She happened to be a guest on the network's Watch What Happens Live which aired a couple of hours after The Real Housewives of Atlanta. Leakes decided to bring in Whitfield's son Kairo Whitfield's criminal history in her clap back. She said that a simple mugshot is not the same as serving roughly ten years in jail for stealing millions of dollars. Battle of the Mugshots "Sheree needs to worry about her own mugshot... her son got a mugshot and her man got a mugshot," added Leakes. She had no problem reminding fans why Whitfield had a mugshot, just in case they forgot. She said Whitfield was caught stealing out of a store. Supermodel and actress Tyra Banks was also a guest on the show Sunday night. She made it clear she did not want to be a part of any of the "mugshot" drama. See NeNe's statement below. Sheree first told her co-stars about Gilliams during a girls' trip to San Francisco. It was the first time she had really opened up about a relationship other than her previous marriage to Bob Whitifield. The Real Housewives of Atlanta airs on Bravo Sundays at 8/7c. Be sure to keep up with Enstars for the latest on your favorite celebrities. Days before the premiere of the second season of American Crime Story titled The Assassination of Gianni Versace, the Versace family has released a statement. American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace Storyline And Cast The hit true crime series, which picked up nine Emmy Awards for its take on the infamous murder trial of O.J. Simpson in its first season, is back for a second outing. The second season of executive producer Ryan Murphy's critically acclaimed anthology series, as the title suggests, focuses on the murder of Gianni Versace by serial killer Andrew Cunanan in 1997. Cunanan shot Versace outside the designer's Miami home and murdered five other people in a killing spree that ended with his suicide. Versace was 50 years old at the time of his death. Edgar Ramirez plays the role of the late fashion designer while Darren Criss portrays the character of Cunanan. The upcoming season not only explores Gianni Versace's murder but also documents his relationship with sister Donatella (Penelope Cruz) and boyfriend Antonio D'Amico (Ricky Martin). The Versace Family Releases Statement The Versace family had remained mum about the upcoming FX miniseries, which will also include real-life events, until now. The family has now released a statement, saying that it had not authorized and had nothing to do with American Crime Story's sophomore season. The family said that it did not provide authorization for Murphy's upcoming installment of American Crime Story. It had no form of involvement with the forthcoming series that revolves around the murder of Versace. "Since Versace did not authorize the book on which it is partly based nor has it taken part in the writing of the screenplay, this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction," the family said in the statement. Network Responds To Versace Family's Statement Fox 21 Television Studios and FX Productions, which handles the show's production, responded to the Versace family's statement by saying that the first season of American Crime Story titled The People Vs OJ Simpson was inspired by Jeffrey Toobin's non-fiction bestseller The Run of His Life. Similarly, the network added that The Assassination of Gianni Versace is adapted from Maureen Orth's non-fiction book Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S., and it stands by Orth's meticulous reporting skills. In November, Donatella said she does not intend to watch the FX series because it is based on a book that tells incredible falsehoods. The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story debuts on FX on Jan. 17. Check out the official trailer below. The European Union has announced its new plan to boost its support to the Iraqi people. The strategy aims to address the many challenges the country is facing following the territorial defeat of the Daesh forces. Federica Mogherini, EU diplomacy chief, said that it was crucial to support Iraq at this point of history to rebuild the country with the participation of all components of the society as well as promote and protect fundamental rights and the rule of law. Only inclusiveness can guarantee true reconciliation so that Iraqis can close once and for all with the past. This needs international support and we are ready to contribute, to keep supporting the Iraqi people and government in these challenges, for the sake of the people of the country and the region, she said. The EU aims to focus on delivering continuous humanitarian aid to the Iraqi people and facilitating the stabilization of areas liberated of the jihadists. This includes almost 3 million displaced Iraqis that are not able to return home. The strategy also seeks to promote long-term reforms, reconstruction and reconciliation efforts that Iraq will need in order to keep peace and rebuild a united and democratic country. This will include promotion of an effective and independent judiciary system, addressing migration, boosting national identity and reconciliation between communities as well as supporting Iraqs good relations with all its neighbors. The EUs latest Iraq strategy was adopted in 2015 as part of a broader plan for Syria and Iraq and this years addition is a natural next step in the EUs enlargement moving beyond the territorial struggle against the ISIS. The EU will work closely with the Iraqi government, the United Nations, the Global Coalition against Daesh, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank to consolidate international engagement in support of Iraq. Six European leaders Commission Vice-President Andrus Ansip, Commissioners Dimitris Avramopoulos, Elzbieta Bienkowska, Vera Jourova, Julian King and Mariya Gabriel are meeting today (9 January) to discuss progress made in tackling the spread of illegal content online, including terrorist propaganda and xenophobic, racist and hate speech as well as breaches of intellectual property rights. The leaders commented ahead of their meeting that in recent years, online landscape has significantly increased in the resources such as automated removal but the process must be faster since there are still tens of thousands of pieces of illegal content The longer illegal material stays online, the greater its reach, the more it can spread and grow. Building on the current voluntary approach, more efforts and progress have to be made. The EU admits that online platforms are an important force behind innovation, growth and digital economy but they also carry a societal responsibility in terms of protecting users and society at large especially in preventing criminals and terrorists from exploiting their services. In December 2016, Internet companies announced the creation of a shared Database of Hashes to be able to better track terrorist content on social media and prevent from its usage elsewhere. Major social media websites like Facebook, Twitter and Googles YouTube are increasingly using automatic tools to remove dangerous content online which was further facilitated by the EU Internet Forum pushed for automatic detection of terrorist propaganda. Facebook was, for example, praised by the EU Commission in mid-2016 for its ability to review most complaints within a 24-hour target timeframe as per the code of conduct that was agreed by the European Commission, Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and YouTube. Justice Commissioner Vera Jourova called the results encouraging and further pushed for self-regulation and more feedback to the people who report abuses. This shows that a self-regulatory approach can work, if all actors do their part. At the same time, companies need to make further progress to deliver on all the commitments, Ms. Jourova commented in a statement. Hey everyone, i have a question please, a few actually, if anyone has been through the same situation as i am currently, it would be useful for us to share our experiences. I'll start with the main question first then share some clarifications below. Can it happen that an employer extends an official job offer (basically a detailed contract meeting the criteria of MOHRE/formal/on letterhead) and then for some reason stalls the following work permit/visa procedures with the purpose of ultimate revocation of the offer? by just saying that the visa application was denied after some time for example... details and context of the situation: -application for a position on company's website/video chat interviews/job offer received some time later -offer accepted and contract signed (only by myself, i don't have a copy of the contract with both my and my employer's signatures on it... is that in accordance with certain laws in abu dhabi? What does it mean for the legality and validity of the contract? Why hasn't the contract been signed by the employer?) -after that i was asked to send a copy of my passport, a photo, academic credentials (college degree) and to complete security forms (issued by the free zone where the company is headquartered, abu dhabi) and also to fill in an employment visa application form Since then, more than a month ago, i received no informative feedback and absolutely no details about what's going on and why the work permit approval and visa application are taking so long. I was informed that they haven't applied yet for the visa after all this time, which made this whole situation seem suspicious to me...all i'm told when i call is it's a process and that i will be informed when it's done. my questions to HR on the phone regarding possible waiting time were dodged multiple times, and my emails to them and calls not answered in this situation, especially when they say they haven't even applied for the visa yet, i found my self left with only one possible scenario, which is they are probably not applying for the employment visa and they are trying to subtly back away from the offer for some internal reason...or is this only the stress of waiting putting imaginary thoughts in my head?? I don't know... what do you think guys? Has anyone been through or heard of an experience like this? Any HR professionals here? Your thoughts and suggestions will be so appreciated The new requirements for the TSS visa states that: "...has at least 2 years of relevant work experience in their nominated occupation. Depending on the nominated occupation, experience in related roles and flexible working arrangements may be recognized as work experience. " I'm looking to come to Australia in November on a WHV to try to find sponsored work in the IT industry (software development). I've been doing a ton of research on this but I am a bit confused between the difference of the experience classified by the "SKILL LEVEL REQUIREMENT MET DATE" and the experience used to fulfill the"ACS Suitability Criteria" defined by the ACS. Can this relevant experience be either or? The reason I am asking is because I don't have a lot of work experience. Graduated in August 2016 with a Bachelors in IT and started working in June 2016. I plan on staying at my job until September which gives me more than 2 years of software development experience. JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. 2) I have recently found that I may not need a lawyer at all if I want help filing the paperwork for my business - which I much prefer. Apparently, an expert comptable can do this, and I have also been looking at the website Company Formation France & Europe | Euro Start Entreprises | Open A Company France for their help - seems the going rate to help me set something up is approximately 1500 euros. I can afford it, but does this seem reasonable to you based on your experience? Click to expand... B]3)[/B] To date, I still have not filed the work to have my social security in France. In other words, I don't yet have a Carte Vital. But I have been to the CPAM office, they were very kind, and the paperwork seems very straight forward to get set up with a social security number and carte vital... Do you feel this is something I can do right away, separate from setting up my business in France. Click to expand... One caveat to everything I say about US taxes - I "just happen" to be a CPA back in the US. Have not bothered with continuing education for ages, so I have to pretty much just "read the fine instructions" that come with the tax forms, but I do have some training in "interpreting" how this stuff (sometimes) works and that comes in very handy when doing my own personal tax forms.You absolutely do NOT need a lawyer to set up a business, and you don't need an expert comptable. There are websites where you can do it all online for just a bit more than the various filing fees - but for those you really need to understand enough French to work the site.Seriously, go to the CCI and the CFE before you start engaging comptables and attorneys. There is also a system of accounting "associations" who can do quite a bit of your accounting work for a fixed fee - and you get a tax break for the company by using them. Plus, the advise they give is very reasonably priced. Since you're in Paris, there's a reasonable chance you may be able to get help with all this in English.The requirements for setting a secu number have changed greatly since I had to do it. As have the conditions for signing up with CPAM. Did you have to show proof of any sort of health insurance in order to get your visa? (That used to be the norm - at least for the first year - but that may have changed, too.) The key thing at this point is to get a secu number - that will be necessary in order to set up any sort of business entity, whether you do it yourself or get a professional of some sort to help you with the process.But do talk to the CCI before you go too much farther. They have more information to answer your questions than you might imagine.Cheers,Bev no, there was no test required for that in my case... just showing reports from their previous school to show that they were schooled ! the only test we had to go through is an admission exam for a specific school which had a program for extra hours of English, the test was to check their level in English and whether they would fit in that program or not. My kids were 10/8 by then. then at school they had specific lessons on how to integrate with the french system/language/..etc. Hi, We're looking to book a Brittany ferry to Spain in July and wondered if anyone had a Club Voyage membership number they could share. I believe that the club member also gains some benefit by recommending new customers. Please pm if you are able to help. Many thanks, Phil A big part of it is that, in the US health insurance is pretty well based on the notion that you will have Medicare once you turn 65 and that any insurance policy is only a supplement to Medicare benefits. It's possible to buy into Medicare, but for that you have to have lived in the US for 5 years. From what I know, many Brits who "live" in the US get the type of visa where you can make multiple trips as long as you don't overstay the guidelines - winds up being a total of 6 months in a year. That allows them to retain their British residence so that they're covered by the NHS as long as they manage to get "shipped home asap." It's not an "immigration visa" and so they are not considered resident in the US. Even just for travel insurance, it can be difficult to find coverage for the US if you're over 65. But yes, you'll probably do better (at least in terms of coverage) if you find a private policy from outside the US. Medical insurance is expensive in the US, in part because the fees charged are not subject to any kind of controls and there is no real "national" health care plan. Cheers, Bev Introductions Please introduce yourself to the other Expat Forum members here. Tell us who you are, where you are from, where you are now and any other information you would like to share. Details have been released on the city of San Antonios first seven CivTechSA projects a new partnership with Geekdom aimed at finding ambitious startups to help solve some local problems, for free. While the winning companies dont get paid, they get a 16-week residency with the city where they can embed with officials and access city data to tackle the problem. They can also sell their products back to the city or to other municipalities. The Border Patrol has told agents to quickly process emergency vehicles through immigration checkpoints and reminded them they have discretion at sensitive locations, such as hospitals. Border Patrol acting Chief Carla Provost outlined the policy in a memo Friday, a little more than two months after the agency was criticized for its treatment of a 10-year-old girl who crossed through a checkpoint north of Laredo on her way to a hospital in Corpus Christi. Its not clear how much Provosts memo would impact immigrants in the same situation as Rosa Maria Hernandez, the 10-year-old from Mexico who was followed by agents to a hospital in Corpus Christi after crossing the checkpoint on U.S. 59. Because Hernandez is in the country illegally and wasnt accompanied by a guardian, she was put in deportation proceedings and taken to a government child care facility, the Border Patrol said at the time. Activists working on Hernandezs behalf initially said the girl, who was being taken to a childrens hospital for emergency gall bladder surgery, was in an ambulance when she passed through the checkpoint, but the Border Patrol later said she was in a nonemergency medical transport vehicle. Provosts memo tells agents they can expedite transit through or around a checkpoint during immediate emergency operations. It also instructs the Border Patrols liaisons with the community to encourage medical service providers to alert the agency before sending patients through checkpoints. Lastly, it reminds agents they do have some discretion about taking medical patients into custody. In the event that a follow-up inspection or immigration interview of the vehicle occupants is conducted at the hospital, sectors are reminded to be cognizant and familiar with the sensitive locations policies when applying this guidance, Provost wrote. Hospitals and churches are among the sensitive locations where Department of Homeland Security policy instructs agents to avoid operating. In October, when Rosa Maria was put in government custody, the Border Patrol said it had no choice but to refer her to the Department of Health and Human Services because she wasnt accompanied to the hospital by her parents, both of whom live in Laredo but are also in the U.S. illegally. Border communities dont offer the same medical services as larger cities, so undocumented immigrants are often faced with a difficult choice when referred to a hospital or doctor north of one of the Border Patrols interior checkpoints, said Sam Robles, the communications director at the Workers Defense Action Fund, which advocated on behalf of Rosa Maria. When you think about the resources in South Texas, especially about medical assistance, its not always available in the first 15 or 20 miles or whatever our internal border inspections are, Robles said. So we hope this is a relief for our families in South Texas who desperately need medical attention and no longer have to fear being stopped or being deported. I think for us and other advocates, we want to see what happens next. This announcement appears to represent some progress so that others will not have to endure what Rosa Marias family experienced, said U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-San Antonio, who was critical of how the Border Patrol handled Rosa Marias case. This would not have happened without the outcry from local advocates. I commend their success on the very challenging immigration front. Continued vigilance is required. Alex Galvez, a California attorney whos representing Rosa Maria in immigration court, called the memo just a bureaucratic answer. It doesnt acknowledge that anybody whos recuperating from an operation is not going to be approached by an immigration officer or that an interview will not be conducted, Galvez said. It doesnt answer any of the communitys concerns regarding how Rosa Maria was treated. It doesnt set any boundaries or limitations. An official with Customs and Border Protection, which oversees the Border Patrol, who was authorized to speak with the media but insisted on anonymity said the memo is to remind agents of the procedures they should be taking when encountering medical services vehicles. Theres a difference between vehicles that are emergency and nonemergency. Theyre asking agents to continue and engage so we can get notification ahead of time and we can facilitate that transit, the official said. Galvez said Rosa Maria is in deportation proceedings but has not had a court date set. jbuch@express-news.net | Twitter: @jlbuch WASHINGTON U.S. Rep. Will Hurd said Monday that he has reached an agreement with a Democratic lawmaker to fix the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and increase border security, a compromise he hopes will be a foundation for a deal in coming days between Congress and the White House. Hurd, R-San Antonio, who emerged as a key negotiator aimed at a DACA fix, said legislation he has crafted with California Democrat Pete Aguilar includes border security provisions demanded by Republicans along with protections for around 800,000 young immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children. Their legislation requires the Homeland Security Department to conduct a mile-by-mile analysis of the 2,000-mile border with Mexico by 2020 and authorizes, if federal officials deem it necessary, building physical barriers in certain segments. But the authorizing legislation doesnt fund the border wall that President Donald Trump continues to demand. That funding would need to come in a separate appropriations bill as negotiations proceed, aimed at a deal to prevent a shutdown of many government operations Jan. 19. Its a foundation for these discussions. Its a big deal, Hurd said. The significance of this is that you have Republicans and Democrats agreeing to border security and a DACA fix. And that hasnt happened before, he said. A bipartisan meeting dealing with immigration is scheduled for Tuesday at the White House. At that meeting, the newly drawn legislation likely will be aired. Last Friday, the White House distributed a list of hard-edged immigration proposals, including a request for $18 billion to build the wall. Hurds Uniting and Securing America Act is the product of negotiations between Hurd and Aguilar, a leader of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus who is influential among Democrats on immigration matters. The legislation had not been aired as of late Monday by Republican and Democratic caucuses in the House, and the high-level negotiations might well move in different directions. But Hurd said he is hopeful and believes that there is support for what theyve put together among dozens of Republicans and an equal number of Democrats, many of whom have pressed for a vote on what they refer to as a clean Dream Act: legislation that would offer DACA protections that Trump ordered stripped as of March 5. There have been many conversations, and the goal is to continue to talk about this and figure out how you get more votes and get this done and make sure the kids who have only known the United States of America can stay here, he said. Of the reasonable people that are ultimately going to get this deal done, nobody is talking about deporting these kids to countries theyve never known, he said. The Hurd-Aguilar legislation offers a permanent legislative fix for DACA and enables individuals who qualify to get in line for a green card and eventual citizenship after a conditional residency. Hurd said requirements would include two years of post-secondary school or completion of military enlistment, employment 80 percent of the time and no criminal record. A summary of the legislation notes that it does not include a special path to citizenship for DACA recipients. What that apparently means is that DACA recipients would enter the same stream as legal permanent residents seeking citizenship. Regarding so-called chain migration, which Trump says he wants to end, the summary notes that it maintains present law requiring parents of individuals who arrived in the U.S. illegally to leave the country for at least 10 years before applying for a visa to return. Many of the border security provisions draw from Hurds previously filed Smart Wall legislation, which aims at deploying sensors, radar and other surveillance technology in a broadly designed effort to gain operational control over the border within three years. Other provisions include increases in the number of immigration judges and attorneys to reduce the backlog of cases that have left people in legal limbo for years. Additionally, the bill has provisions aimed at improving conditions in Central American nations from which many families have fled in recent years, complicating immigration problems in the U.S. The nonprofit Bipartisan Policy Center recommended some of the provisions in the legislation. Henry Cisneros, a former San Antonio mayor who chairs the centers immigration task force, called the legislation a positive step. I dont know what the final legislation will look like, but I think that it is a substantial contribution to this process, he said, referring to challenges in bringing Republicans and Democrats together. WASHINGTON The Trump administration announced Monday that it will end special protections for Salvadoran immigrants next year, a decision that could lead to the expulsion of as many as 200,000 people, many of them from Texas. The long-awaited decision came from newly appointed Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, who said the special status, known as Temporary Protected Status, will cease Sept. 9, 2019. The 20-month delay was designed for an orderly transition, the administration said in a statement. It also would allow Congress time to craft a potential legislative fix for those who will either be required to leave the country or be deported. The decision comes as President Donald Trump and congressional leaders are negotiating continued protections for some 800,000 so-called Dreamers, young immigrants who were brought into the country illegally as children. El Salvador is the fourth country whose citizens will have lost Temporary Protected Status under the current administration, joining Nicaragua, Haiti and Sudan. Until now, Salvadorans had been considered the largest beneficiaries of the program, which provides special legal status for people whose countries have been affected by natural disasters, war or political tumult. The protections were granted to citizens of El Salvador after 2001 earthquakes that killed more than 1,000 people. The Obama administration temporarily extended the protections in 2016, setting up Mondays deadline for another extension. San Antonio Democrat Joaquin Castro, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said ending TPS protections would have consequences both for the U.S. and for those forced to leave. Previous administrations determined that forcing the return of Salvadorans to their country would be a threat to their personal safety. The Trump administrations failure to extend the TPS designation for these individuals paves the way for the deportation of hundreds of thousands of people and endangers their lives, he said in a statement. The Center for American Progress, which tracks immigrants with Temporary Protected Status, said about 36,000 Salvadorans who fall under the TPS umbrella live in Texas. In addition, they have about 42,000 U.S.-born children in Texas. Royce Murray, policy director at the pro-immigrant American Immigration Council, said 37,000 of the nearly 200,000 people who would be affected work in construction and that many of them have been employed in rebuilding after hurricanes last year in Texas and Florida. An additional 22,000 work in the restaurant and food service industries, many in supervisory positions. Roughly 34,000 of the Salvadorans threatened own homes in the U.S., raising the prospect of foreclosures and damage to neighborhoods, Murray said. The effects that this will have not just on their families but on their employers and on their communities that rely on them will be sudden and profound, she said. The decision is expected to cause shock waves for large populations of Salvadorans in Houston, Los Angeles, New York and Washington, D.C. In recent years, thousands more have entered the country illegally through Mexico, along with others from Central America fleeing violence and poverty. Activists on both sides of the immigration debate reacted forcefully. These individuals are taxpayers and employers. They are homeowners, good neighbors and parents of American children, said UnidosUS President and CEO Janet Murguia. Yet, despite a chorus of opposition from elected officials and business, religious, civil rights and community leaders around the nation and around the globe, the Department of Homeland Security has moved forward with a decision that does nothing more than harm our country, our allies, and endanger the lives of individuals who are making measurable contributions to this country. Murguia urged Congress to take action to extend the status for the Salvadorans. Other critics of the decision noted that the State Department currently has a travel warning for Americans considering travel to El Salvador. Advocates for limited immigration welcomed the decision. By ending the Salvadoran TPS, Secretary Nielsen has taken a major step toward saving the TPS program so it can be used for future emergencies, said NumbersUSA President Roy Beck. The past practice of allowing foreign nationals to remain in the United States long after an initial emergency in their home countries has ended has undermined the integrity of the program and essentially made the temporary protected status a front operation for backdoor permanent immigration. Salvadoran President Salvador Sanchez Ceren spoke by phone Friday with Nielsen to renew his plea to extend special status for Salvadorans seeking refuge in the U.S., according to the Associated Press. Among those directly affected is Cristian Chavez Guevara, a 37-year-old Salvadoran TPS holder from Houston who said the program changed his life after he first entered the U.S. illegally. I was able to get a license, pay taxes, and my life finally seemed to feel normal, he said. Since then, Ive been building dreams for the future and working to pave a more promising path forward for my family. All of that has come to a halt today. Guevara said the effect will be felt in both countries. The economic situation in El Salvador is very bad, he said. Organized crime controls the streets and neighborhoods. As TPS holders, we help fill economic needs for our families back in El Salvador. But all of our dreams and hopes ended today. Frank Mora, who directs Central America studies at Florida International University, said 17 percent of El Salvadors gross domestic product comes from remittances sent by Salvadorans in the U.S. The loss of that money if Salvadorans must return home would fuel more of the violence and instability that plague the country, he said. This is a significant chunk of the Salvadoran economy that would have an immediate and significant impact on the already precarious economic, political and social condition in the country, Mora told reporters. In rendering her decision, Nielsen said conditions in El Salvador have improved sufficiently, determining that the original conditions caused by the 2001 earthquakes no longer exist. She cited millions of dollars in international aid since the earthquakes that helped finance water and sanitation projects and reopen damaged schools, roads and hospitals. She also noted that the U.S. government has repatriated more than 39,000 Salvadorans in the past two years, which the administration takes as evidence that the country of 6.2 million is able to handle the return of its citizens. MacAulays address was the first by a Canadian agriculture minister at the American Farm Bureaus annual meeting By Diego Flammini News Reporter Farms.com Canadas agriculture minister voiced support for the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to a room full of farmers in Nashville, Tenn. yesterday. Speaking to an audience of about 5,000 people at the 99th American Farm Bureau Annual Convention, Minister Lawrence MacAulay reaffirmed Canadas goals in the tri-lateral trade discussions with Mexico and the United States. The Government of Canada is committed to working with the United States to strengthen our relationship and promote NAFTA, he told reporters during a conference call today. I reminded our American friends of how vital our trade partnership is for both of our economies. Lawrence Maculay addressed the American Farm Bureau Federation's Annual Convention Photo: Jordan Buie/The Tennessean Canada is the largest trading partner for 29 states In total, our nations traded over $60 billion in agriculture and food products last year. The U.S. has targeted Canadas supply management system in NAFTA talks. Several American farm groups and President Trump have called supply management unfair and protectionist. But Canada will not budge on the matter, especially as other countries struggle with an oversupply of dairy products. Why would (Canada) dismantle a system thats so efficient? MacAulay said. Theres other countries including (the United States) that have some difficulties in the dairy industry in particular. All countries have certain things they wish to protect. President Trump to speak later today President Donald Trump will address the ag community this afternoon at the Annual Convention. Some political analysts have said rural America helped President Trump win the 2016 election, but his policies havent reflected his commitment to rural communities. But the fact that a sitting President is attending the convention should give farmers a vote of confidence, MacAulay said. Hes speaking to an audience that is fully committed to NAFTA and that understands the value of trade, he said. I think its a great thing that hes coming here and I hope its nothing but productive. Farms.com will provide coverage following President Trumps address. The Division of Animal Sciences at the University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources (CAFNR) boasts many strengths, including its vast research and work with beef cattle reproduction and genetics. The faculty, who have responsibilities not only in research, but also in teaching, extension and economic development, are experts in taking their findings and sharing them with farmers, ranchers and the Missouri community as a whole. With the help of a $300,000 grant from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the division will be able to expand on those leadership opportunities. The grant, through USDAs National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA), will be used to develop The National Center for Applied Reproduction and Genomics (NCARG) in Beef Cattle. The goal of NCARG will be to promote the economic impact of the technologies Mizzou animal sciences faculty have developed and are using every day. The focus is on giving farmers and ranchers the answer to the question What is the return on investment if I invest in reproductive or genomic technologies? Were not just trying to fill peoples heads with new knowledge its more about lighting a fire, said Jared Decker, an Extension beef geneticist at Mizzou. Were focused on helping farmers and ranchers understand the technology, but, more than that, to trust the technology and identify ways they can use it. We want to educate producers and help them take that next leap. The multi-disciplinary grant is in partnership with the MU College of Veterinary Medicine. NCARG will have a big focus on continuing education for veterinarians, including educational and training opportunities for veterinary students, graduate students, farmers, ranchers and allied industry professionals. This center again underscores the collaborative environment between schools and programs that exist at Mizzou to advance training for veterinary and animal science students, and research that benefits Missouri stakeholders, said College of Veterinary Medicine Interim Dean Carolyn Henry, DVM, MS, DACVIM (Oncology). The idea for a center of this type has been discussed amongst faculty in the Division of Animal Sciences for the past few years. David Patterson and Mike Smith, both professors of reproductive physiology, have taught numerous full-day sessions at American Veterinary Medical Association meetings. With all of the programs in place at MU, Patterson and Smith had many discussions on ways to share that research with not only Missouri, but on a national level. Our reproductive and genomic research is so closely tied and both are great strengths within our division, Patterson said. A center of this nature is the logical next step for our division. With beef cattle, there is so much technology that could help operations. We want to help transfer that technology to industry participants at all levels. Patterson has led the reproductive extension work in the Division of Animal Sciences, with Decker leading the genetic extension efforts. There will be a big focus on the economic impact of using these technologies as well. Scott Brown, an assistant extension professor in the Division of Applied Social Sciences, will lend his expertise in agricultural and applied economics to the center.show the increase in profitability that can result from integrating reproductive and genetic technologies in commercial herds, Brown said. NCARG already has received numerous letters of support from veterinary medical professionals, U.S. beef breed associations, pharmaceutical houses, genomic testing companies, industry consultants, the artificial insemination industry, branded beef and feeder calf programs, and state agencies, organizations and companies. I think it really reflects how people value research in reproduction and genetics at Mizzou, Decker said. I think they value the extension and educational expertise at Mizzou as well. The Division of Animal Sciences has worked extremely hard to build relationships with each of these organizations and groups, and its exciting to see them offer their full support. NCARG is still in the beginning stages of development. The group is seeking a location to house NCARG and is continuing to search for partnerships. Were taking the model weve developed in Missouri over the past 20 years and making it a national center, Decker said. Were hoping to spread the model of integrating research and extension in genetics, reproduction and economics and putting that together. Thats worked really well in Missouri. Now, lets spread it nationally. Along with Patterson, Decker, Smith and Brown, Bill Lamberson, Scott Poock, Thomas Spencer and Jeremy Taylor were part of the development of the grant. Its incredibly disappointing and the fact that they came into government, they say the books are in a bad way and everyone needs to tighten their belts, but were going to deliver $5b worth of election commitments and were going to break all of our promises to do that, Ms Davies said after the budget was released. The High Court declared Mr Joyce ineligible for parliament in late October, after it was revealed in August he had breached Section 44 of the Constitution and was a citizen of New Zealand by descent via his father. He said more than 80 per cent of Australias workforce was located in its largest cities, where the public service spent four times more on wages than in the regions. The voluntary dairy cattle export charge has been significantly under-collected and, as such, has not been sufficient to meet the RD&E and marketing needs of our dairy cattle export trade, Mr Westaway said. WA sheep producers had it good both ways in 2017 with record wool prices and high lamb prices. Export wethers have also sold well. There is recognition of a need to increase the flock size in WA from 14 million head but increased demand for WA stock in the Eastern States, which is good for producers who have struggled with seasonal conditions, may delay the rebuild process. The future of Fauquier Times now depends on community support. Your donation will help us continue to improve our journalism through in-depth local news coverage and expanded reader engagement. Support On December 1, the Argentine government enacted Law 27.401, which will enter into force in March 2018. We were deeply involved in the drafting and debate of the statute. In this post and the next one, well summarize some of the key features of the new law. Which legal entities are subjected to the new regime? Argentina Law N 27.401 (unofficial English translation here) establishes criminal liability for private legal persons, defined in the Argentine Civil Code. These include: Companies incorporated under any legal form (LLCs, PLCs, partnerships, etc.) whether of national or foreign capital and including state-owned enterprises Civil associations, foundations, mutual associations, cooperatives Churches, confessions, religious communities or entities, and Horizontal property regimes. Notably, labor unions and their healthcare associations (obras sociales sindicales), professional associations and political parties are not considered private legal persons under Argentine law. Therefore, these entities are out of the new statutes reach. Which offenses trigger corporate liability? Article 1 of the statute establishes the liability of the aforementioned legal persons for the following offenses: Active domestic bribery (article 258 of the Criminal Code) Transnational bribery (article 258-bis of the Criminal Code) Trading in influence (Article 258 of the Criminal Code) Participating in the offense of concusion the act of incorporating the proceeds of an illegal exaction into the patrimony of the public official or of a third party (art. 268 of the Criminal Code) Participating in the offense of illicit enrichment of public officials (art. 268 (1) and (2) of the Criminal Code), and An aggravated form of misrepresentation in books and records specifically directed at concealing the commission of bribery or trading in influence offenses (art. 300 bis of the Criminal Code). Notably, these offenses do not have a minimum threshold, making legal persons liable regardless of the significance of the prohibited transaction. Standards of Liability. The Argentine private sector strongly advocated for a standard of liability based on organizational failure. But consistent with the existent regime for other crimes, the law creates a standard of strict liability: legal persons are liable for the aforementioned crimes committed, directly or indirectly, with their intervention or in their name, interest or benefit (Article 2). This approach is consistent with the standard of corporate liability already in force for other crimes, such as customs crimes, tax crimes, money laundering, insider trading, and securities fraud, among others. The individual offenders may be employees or third parties even unauthorized third parties, provided that the legal person ratified the act, even tacitly. Therefore, the statute creates a need for robust due diligence, monitoring, and management programs over business partners and other third parties. The statute also establishes successor liability in cases of merger, acquisition or other forms of corporate transformation. Therefore, integrity due diligence will also become an important part of any M&A transaction. Defenses. Strict liability is mitigated somewhat by what we called organizational merit, which can offset organizational failure. According to article 9, companies may be exempted from punishment and from administrative liability provided that they: Have implemented an adequate compliance program, prior to the commission of the offense and the violation of which required a specific effort from the individual offenders Self-report the crime to the competent authorities, and Return the undue benefit. Since these three conditions are concurrent, the law is more demanding than the models based on organizational failure (Chile, United Kingdom, Spain), where adequate procedures alone are enough for a full defense. * * * In the next post, well talk about deferred prosecution agreements under the new law, as well as penalties and other sanctions for offense, aggravating and mitigating factors, mandatory compliance programs for some contracts with the national government, and components of an adequate compliance or integrity program. _____ Guillermo Jorge, pictured above left, ([email protected]) and Fernando Basch, right, ([email protected]) are partners at Governance Latam, an advisory firm based in Buenos Aires www.glatam.com.ar. Alyssa Milano has called on Ivanka Trump to donate to the Time's Up campaign to support the women who've accused her father of sexual harassment. Alyssa Milano The 45-year-old actress asked the American businesswoman whether she would offer financial support to the women who have accused US President Donald Trump of historic sexual harassment, after Ivanka praised Oprah Winfrey's inspirational speech at the Golden Globes on Sunday (07.01.18). In response to Oprah's powerful speech - in which she discussed the Hollywood sex scandal - Ivanka tweeted: "Just saw @Oprah's empowering & inspiring speech at last night's #GoldenGlobes. Let's all come together, women & men, & say #TIMESUP! #United (sic)" But Alyssa was quick to respond to Ivanka's tweet, posting a tongue-in-cheek request for Ivanka to fund the legal case of her father's accusers through the Time's Up campaign. The actress wrote on the micro-blogging website: "Great! You can make a lofty donation to the Time's Up Legal Defense Fund that is available to support your father's accusers. "2/ If you mean it, @IvankaTrump, will you donate $19million to the @TIMESUPNOW legal defense fund? $1m for every woman who came forward about your father, and was silenced and demeaned. (sic)" Time's Up was founded earlier this year in response to the movie industry's sex scandal, and is designed to help tackle assault and harassment. Oprah, 63, made her headline-grabbing speech at the Globes after she accepted the Cecil B DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award. The TV veteran used the opportunity to discuss sexual harassment, racial injustice and press freedom, and her speech has been widely interpreted as a criticism of the current President. Reflecting on the sex scandal, she said: "I want to thank the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. We know the press is under siege these days. "We also know it's the insatiable dedication to uncovering the absolute truth that keeps us from turning a blind eye to corruption and to injustice." Danielle Lloyd has defended the decision to choose the sex of her next baby. Danielle Lloyd The 34-year-old model already has four boys and she is desperate to have a girl, which has led her to arrange a procedure that allows her to select the gender of her next child. Danielle - who has boys Archie, seven, Harry, six, and four-year-old George with her ex-husband Jamie O'Hara, as well as 16-week-old Ronnie with Micheal O'Neill - explained: "It's always been my dream to have a little girl. It's about having that mix and bringing up a little girl. I know she might not be 'girlie' - she probably won't be with four brothers - but it's just about having a little mini-me almost." The controversial process is illegal in the UK, and her decision to choose the sex of her baby has been widely criticised. But Danielle - who plans to go to Cyprus to undergo the procedure - has no doubts about her decision. Speaking to 'The Emma Barnett Show' on BBC Radio 5 live, she shared: "I could continue to have babies and hope I'd have a girl but I want to be realistic. I've got four boys at the moment and they are a handful." The Liverpudlian also admitted to being frustrated by other stars who have gone through the same procedure, but haven't been honest about their decision. Danielle revealed, too, that she's also enjoyed lots of support from her fans on social media. She said: "A lot of people are doing it but they keep it quiet, and that is what is so frustrating for me." Meanwhile, Danielle discussed her most recent pregnancy, revealing she took tablets made out of her placenta after giving birth to baby Ronnie. The model confessed: "I ate it in tablet form. My placenta tablets really did give me a boost. Before I've had PND and I never got it (this time) and I believe it's definitely down to the tablets." 'The Emma Barnett Show' is broadcast on BBC Radio 5 live between 10am and 1pm from Monday to Thursday. Victoria Beckham used to have "quite bad skin" when she was in the Spice Girls. Victoria Beckham The 43-year-old designer - who has become a fashion icon and beauty guru since she left the band in 2000 - has admitted it's taken her a long time to find out what products work for her because she used to suffer with spots when she was younger. Speaking to Into The Gloss, she said: "'I used to have quite bad skin when I was younger and I was constantly covering up spots and things like that. "Luckily, I don't have to worry too much about that anymore. Over time, you learn what works for you. And, you know, I tried some interesting looks in the Spice Girls. "At this point, I've done so many photo shoots and red carpets that I've learned so much about my beauty style by looking back at pictures of myself." The brunette beauty has revealed she spends 648 on products for her everyday skincare routine, 366 on make-up, 124 on body products and 66 on hair care. Victoria - who spends her time between the UK and the US - is often jetting back and forwards and likes to give herself a mini-facial every time she boards a long flight. She will then cleanse her skin with Sarah Chapman's Skinesis Stem Cell Collagen Activator in a bid to fight against the air-con on board and give her a fresh look. Meanwhile, Victoria - who joined forces with the cosmetics giant Estee Lauder on a makeup collection in April 2016 - wears a "bucket load" of concealer. She said recently: "I am a control freak in case you haven't heard already. "When I did the collaboration, I had a dining table full of cosmetics and ideas. I even had ideas about how much pigment should be used for the perfect concealer. I wear a bucket load of it." A 27 million Windsor Castle refurbishment is underway ahead of the royal wedding. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Scaffolding on the big gated entrance at The Royal Mews - the exclusive Royal Family-only entrance - went up on Monday (08.01.18) and work is expected to take between four and five weeks to complete, meaning it should be done in time for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's nuptials on May 19. According to Mail Online, if some of the work is not ready in time then castle bosses could make it "disappear" by using life-size images of the castle walls which have been used during previous building to hide unsightly scaffolding. Castle renovations were announced in 2016 but Harry, 33, and Meghan, 36, were still keen to hold their wedding at St George's Chapel in the grounds, rather than Westminster Abbey. Other refurbishments being made to the castle include a Georgian entrance hall being reinstated, a new education centre, and there are also plans to build a new cafe on the ground floor. The refurb is expected to run until the end of 2018. While Harry and Meghan got their choice of Windsor Castle for their wedding, they are said to have been put off having their reception at their first choice, Frogmore House, which is a mile away from the castle, and look set to hold it at nearby St George's Hall instead. A senior royal source recently said: "They would have loved Frogmore for the party, particularly Meghan, who has called it 'dreamy', but they have been told St George's Hall is far more practical. "One person who would have readily approved of their choice was the queen, for whom Frogmore is a very special place. "The queen would also have loved the family to see what had been done at Frogmore: the house has just been renovated by a group of friends as a 70th wedding anniversary gift to her and Philip." It is essential to have bread during the meal is the first principle laid down by Turkeys Association of Cuisine Professionals. That bread is present when eating be done is as binding as a religious commandment. Both bread and water are considered holy in Turkey. Bread is considered a blessing from God, thus even a small piece is considered precious. A Turk who comes across a piece of bread on the street takes it to a higher spot after kissing the food first. Living on breaded meals in Turkey would be no problem at all. You could have a sesame-studded simit (bread ring) for breakfast, crusty bread and cheese for lunch, a spicy meat lahmacun (Turkish pizza) drizzled with lemon for dinner. You could even top it off with a midnight swig of boza (fermented millet drink). Bread in all shapes and sizes Ekmek is the general term for bread of any sort but these days spongy white sourdough loaves are found everywhere. It can be shaped into oblongs, circles, long tubes, plaits or small rolls, glazed with egg yolk or milk, sprinkled with sesame, poppy or nigella seeds, or just left plain. It is usually made with strong white flour, to which a little wholemeal flour is sometimes added Normal ekmek Pide (flatbread) is basic homemade village fare as well as a pouch for doner and a base for pizza. Pide (flatbread) Lavas (thin crispy bread) is yeast free but ballons exuberantly when cooked. Lavas Exuberantly ballooned lavas The chewy simit is sold in every town square and on just about every street corner in Turkey. Turks are inclined to eat their bread plain, in between mouthfuls of food or with a little salt. Butter isnt usually offered but as most restaurants will have a pat available, you can probably get some to spread on your slice. Ramazan Pide During Ramazan (the month of fasting), normal loaves are sold in the mornings, but pide with corekotu (black cumin seeds) is sold in the afternoons so hungry people have something special with which to break the days fast. You can still find this pide for the rest of the year although its not as plentiful. Pide with corekotu (black cumin seeds) Lahmacun Lahmacun is a type of pizza, most often topped with ground meat, onion, chilli and parsley. Other possible toppings include cheese, meat pieces and sausage. The classic lahmacun is oval and about a foot long, though restaurants may make palm-sized portions. Classic lahmacun Each region has its own way of making lahmacun. For example, in Antep theyre made with garlic but no onion and in Samsun theyre made in boat shapes with filling-hugging edges. Boat shaped lahmacun from Samsun The best come from big woodfire ovens and are paddled in and out on wooden oars. Wood fired oven When youre not doing it daintily, lahmacun is eaten as follows: slice it into strips, drizzle with lemon, daub it with chunks of tomato, roll it up and eat it with your fingers. Once its finished, you can eat the debris off your hands and arms. You can eat your lahmacun with a knife and fork, but its not as much fun! Is there bread on the hook? In Turkey, theres an ancient tradition called Askda Ekmek, which relates to paying it forward with bread. Askda Ekmek- Is there bread on the hook? The ancient tradition of paying it forward in Turkey Click on the link below to read an interesting article by Lisa Morrow which explains Turkeys ancient tradition. Turkeys ancient tradition of paying it forward Sources: World Food Turkey/ Daily Sabah/BBC Cambodian labour minister Ith Samheng recently issued guidelines to owners of garment and footwear units in the country to prevent workers from fainting in workplace. The 11 guidelines include operating ventilation fans an hour before workers arrive, installing thermostats, and maintaining fire protection systems and adequately trained boiler operators.The factory management has to check the environment surrounding the building, both inside and outside the factory, especially before allowing workers to enter, a report in a Cambodian daily quoted Samheng as saying. Cambodian labour minister Ith Samheng recently issued guidelines to owners of garment and footwear units in the country to prevent workers from fainting in workplace. The 11 guidelines include operating ventilation fans an hour before workers arrive, installing thermostats, and maintaining fire protection systems and adequately trained boiler operators.# The guidelines mandate factories to turn on fans and open all windows and doors in hot weather so that airflow is not restricted at building exits, and make arrangements for infirmary and emergency help in the factory.The ministry will take strong action against violators, Samheng added.Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia deputy secretary general Kaing Monika, however, said half of the fainting issues studied, based on a National Social Security Fund report, were the result of mass psychological illness, including personal stress coming from family issues, panic and mass hysteria. (DS) Fibre2Fashion News Desk India China started collecting a new type of tax the environment protection tax from January 1 to protect the environment and reduce pollutants. Companies and institutions discharging pollutants directly into the environment will pay taxes for creating noise, air and water pollution and generating solid waste. Companies that discharge more will pay more tax.Tax rates are higher for pollutants that are more hazardous. A database of eligible companies has been prepared by tax authorities. The introduction of the tax ended the pollutant discharge fee, which was being collected for nearly four decades. China started collecting a new type of tax the environment protection tax from January 1 to protect the environment and reduce pollutants. Companies and institutions discharging pollutants directly into the environment will pay taxes for creating noise, air and water pollution and generating solid waste. Companies that discharge more will pay more tax.# The new tax will benefit companies committed to cutting emissions and saving energy, a Chinese news agency quoted Liu Jianmin, director of the local taxation bureau at Jinjiang city in Fujian, as saying.Local governments will keep the tax revenue and will have the right to set tax rates. Environmentally fragile regions, such as Beijing, Hebei and Tianjin, have adopted higher rates.Authorities will monitor the emissions of the companies every quarter and those whose emissions are down may apply for tax redemption. (DS) Fibre2Fashion News Desk India Jeanologia, a leader in sustainable technology from Spain, has contributed to a saving of around 8 million cubic metres of water in 2017 with their technology, equivalent to the quantity of water needed for human consumption in a year in Miami. This has been possible with the laser, ozone and eflow technology in the 60 countries Jeanologia is present in.Not only water, but these technologies also allow the reduction in energy and chemical use, at the same time as increasing industrial productivity. Jeanologia, a leader in sustainable technology from Spain, has contributed to a saving of around 8 million cubic metres of water in 2017 with their technology, equivalent to the quantity of water needed for human consumption in a year in Miami. This has been possible with the laser, ozone and eflow technology in the 60 countries Jeanologia is present in.# Enrique Silla, CEO at Jeanologia said, We constantly work with the objective of achieving a completely sustainable industry. Thats why we unite forces with the leading brands and providers to guarantee zero pollution, eliminate harmful emissions and residues, as well as dramatically reducing water, chemical and energy consumption in the production process.To achieve this, we have developed the EIM (Environmental Impact Measuring), the only software on the market capable of analysing the environmental impact within the sector of garment finishing. With the EIM, we have created an industry standard that makes it possible to measure the environmental footprint of the production process, which are already being used by renowned brands such as M&S, Tommy Hilfiger or H&M, Silla added.Every day water as a resource is becoming scarcer, and the optimisation of its consumption is fundamental. According to the calculations of the World Economic Forum, the demand for water will have increased by 40 per cent in 2030.That is why the company has set out as its challenge for the coming years to save 85 per cent on water and chemical use with the first ever Laundry 5 Zero. It is a pioneering wash system that combines laser, ozone, eflow, and H2Zero technology, guaranteeing zero waste and zero pollution. (GK) Fibre2Fashion News Desk India Youyoung Industries, a South Korean shoe fabrics maker for sportswear brands, was recently acquired by VIG Partners, called Vogo Investment Group earlier, for $206 million through a special purpose vehicle jointly set up with Youyoung founder-CEO Jung Ho-tae. Jung will be the second largest shareholder in the new entity and will be part of the management.Meanwhile, Kin Beom-joon, former head of Korean telecom carrier KT Corp, will be appointed as CEO of Youyoung, according to Korean media reports. Youyoung Industries, a South Korean shoe fabrics maker for sportswear brands, was recently acquired by VIG Partners, called Vogo Investment Group earlier, for $206 million through a special purpose vehicle jointly set up with Youyoung founder-CEO Jung Ho-tae. Jung will be the second largest shareholder in the new entity and will be part of the management. # Founded in 1991, Youyoung supplies footwear fabrics to global brands, such as Nike, Adidas, New Balance, Under Armour and Puma. The company also partnered with Nike to develop an advanced outer fabric in 2015. (DS) Fibre2Fashion News Desk India HON PM BAINIMARAMA AT THE OPENING OF THE VUNAREWA RURAL ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT AT VUNAREWA SETTLEMENT IN NADI Turaga na Talatala;Advisory Councillor, Nawaka;Government Officials;Ladies and Gentlemen.Bula vinaka and a very good afternoon to you all.What an exciting way to kick-off the New Year in Vunarewa, as your community welcomes the comfort, security and convenience of reliable and affordable electric power.This rural electrification project I am opening today will bring 105 Fijians in the Vunarewa Settlement onto our national grid, giving them access to the enormous benefits of electricity. This is one of several rural electrification projects Ive had the pleasure of opening these past few weeks, and again today we are taking another step along the path of progress my Government has charted for Fiji and the Fijian people over the last ten years.When we invest in development, like this electrification project, we bring Fiji and the Fijian people close to realising our tremendous potential as a nation. Of course, we have the big projects the roads, bridges, jetties, and even the new airport here in Nadi but its these small projects as well that make a real difference in the lives of our people. And every step we take, no matter how small, is part of our great journey forward as a nation.This project, and all of the developments weve brought to Fiji, is part of our simple strategy for success a strategy weve stuck with over the past decade. When we invest in infrastructure and expand access to services, such as electric power, we give ordinary Fijians the chance to be everything they are capable of being, as citizens, students, parents and providers. Combined with our sound financial management, weve created an engine of progress that has carried our economy to eight straight years of growth, with nothing but positive projections in the years ahead.My Government knows what works when it comes to managing and growing an economy. And as weve welcomed economic prosperity, weve done our duty as mandated by the Fijian Constitution by spreading the benefits of our success to every corner of the country, including here in Vunarewa.For our rural areas, that has meant building a solid foundation of essential services, so that Fijians in these communities can go beyond worrying about finding water, keeping the lights on at night or staying connected with the rest of our nation. This project is part of that vision.I know many of you go to work in Nadi, and youve seen first-hand how beneficial electric power can be in raising standards of living and in helping get more done in a given day. Now, that ease and reliability have made their way directly to your community, and every member of your families can keep the lights on without having to rely on inefficient diesel generators or lantern lamps. Your entire community can stay active long after the sun has set, your children can study into the night and you can spend more time with your families and loved ones.This project is part of a massive programme of rural electrification my Government is funding throughout the country, this year alone weve allocated 42.6 Million Dollars to electrify homes in rural areas across Fiji.My fellow Fijians, our work isnt only about making services available, its about making those services accessible and affordable. My Government has a network of support in place to support eligible Fijians with a fifty per cent subsidy on electricity bills.Families earning less than 30,000 Dollars a year qualify for this subsidy programme, with up to the first 100 kilowatt hours of electricity a month subsidised. If you meet these requirements please apply at any office of our national electricity provider, the Fiji Electricity Authority.Now that you are all part of our national grid, youve gained access to an entire new world of possibilities, and I know your community takes that opportunity seriously, and I look forward to watching your community get the most out of this development for years to come and seeing the benefits it will have for all of you; especially your young people, who can now learn and grow with the great comfort of reliable electric power.This project is an investment, an investment weve been able to make because our economy has done so well. Only with greater prosperity can we continue to bring even greater development into the lives of the Fijian people.My fellow Fijians, as you all know, with the election on the horizon this year, many of the usual faces will come forward with their usual political messages. And Im sad to say that weve already started to hear many of the same false promises and see the same dirty tactics employed by those in the Opposition.As always, I ask you to think for yourselves and put your best interests first. You must protect yourselves from those who would use you to help themselves. Dont buy into the falsehoods from people who arent in your positions and dont understand your situation. Dont let yourself become tools for someone elses political gain.As I said last week, Ive been sad to see that the interests of some unionists and politicians have been put ahead of many of our people, particularly those working here in Nadi. Unfortunately, some have failed to step back and see the bigger picture, and consider how their actions affect the working of our larger economy. Many of you work in our tourism industry, you know that our industry, and our economy, succeeds only when we work together as a team, when we can depend on another to put in the hours and get the job done.Ive been told there is a march planned in Nadi this weekend, and again, I fear it will simply be another opportunity for those seeking relevance ahead of the elections to try and gain political mileage on the backs of ordinary Fijians.Personally, Ive always put my stock in the ability, common sense and know-how of the Fijian people. Here in Nadi, you can see for yourselves the new state-of-the-art airport, the world-class roads and the other networks of infrastructure my Government has delivered for the Fijian people. You can see for yourselves that my Government has a winning game plan for Fiji and, make no mistake, we are going to stick by that game plan moving forward.Weve taken our nation to unprecedented heights because weve stood together, as team players, united in our vision for what Fiji can achieve. That will always be the spirit that drives my Governments agenda, and that is the only way we can continue to make life better for our people.With those few words, I now have great pleasure in declaring this electrification project open.Vinaka vakalevu. Thank you. As Chinas Belt and Road Initiative gathers momentum, new opportunities in Russia are attracting Chinese investors drawn to the huge market, trade and investment potential between these two super powers. Recent monetary reforms and government incentives are further encouraging Chinese investors to see Russia as an inviting destination for offshore investment. At a recent breakfast discussion in Hong Kong, hosted by FinanceAsia and Russian law firm the Pepeliaev Group, investors took the opportunity to gain valuable insights from a panel of expert commentators doing business in Russia, including Michael Hammond, chief executive officer Asia-Pacific at Gazprombank, Andrey Yakunin, co-founder of London-based alternative investment group,VIY Management, Pepeliaev Group senior partner Rustem Ahmetshin and group partner Ilya Bolotnov. The reason for Chinese investor interest in Russia is simple, said Yakunin: We both like profits and dislike losses and thats a good common denominator. BEYOND OIL AND GAS The worlds largest nation by land mass is recognised for its oil, gas and mineral resources, but Russias 144.3 million citizens and rising middle-class consumers are a huge potential market for fast-moving consumer goods, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, technology and retail. The pace of economic cooperation between the two nations is dramatically illustrated by the growth in recent trade figures. Sino-Russian trade volume from January to September reached a modest $61.6 billion, but it was up 22% from a year earlier, according to the Kremlin. Russian President Vladimir Putin said in November that he was confident trade in 2017 would reach $66 billion. Both governments are working together to encourage cross-border trade and deeper financial ties. In March the Central Bank of the Russian Federation opened its first foreign branch in China. One of the largest China-Russia deals in 2017 was CEFC China Energys $9.1 billion purchase of a minority share in the Moscow-based oil major Rosneft. Elsewhere, Fosun led a consortium that bought a 10% stake in gold producer Polyus for $887 million. China is organising cross-border investment partly by establishing specialised funds, such as the China-Central and Eastern Europe Investment Cooperation Fund and the Silk Road Fund. A joint Russia-China Investment Fund, supported by sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corporation and the Russian Direct Investment Fund, has invested in 19 projects including Chinese taxi service Didi Chuxing and Russian hypermarket group Lenta. The $1 billion fund was established in 2012 and in November 2017, it was topped up with a further $1 billion. Closer economic ties between corporates are likely to benefit Hong Kong. We believe you will see many more Russian companies having dual listings between Moscow and Hong Kong, said Hammond. So far though, there have been few Chinese companies tapping Chinas onshore capital markets with a handful of exceptions such as Rusal, which placed in September the second tranche of Panda bonds, again for three years with a coupon rate of 5.5% in renminbi. The scarcity is partly because access to Panda bonds bonds issued by non-red-chip foreign names is not entirely straightforward. International capital markets are very efficient and can provide fast access for raising large amounts of financing. While Russian companies would be very interested in coming to China, it is important for them to understand if the time spent in building the access to this new market will result in efficient transactions, Riccardo Orcel, deputy CEO of VTB Group and head of VTB International Global Banking at VTB Capital, said via email. BELT AND ROAD Russias rich energy resources are also strategically important in the development of Chinas Belt and Road Initiative, launched in 2013. A number of key projects are on the move, including the Moscow-Kazan high-speed railway with construction scheduled to begin in 2018. The project is the first stage in a plan to build a 7,000 km transnational railway linking Moscow and Beijing. Russias government has laid out the welcome mat to investors by implementing significant incentives, benefits and free customs zones in many of its 85 regions as it endeavours to shift focus away from Moscow and the port city of St Petersburg. Its keen to encourage regional growth, particularly in Siberia and its eastern border with China where it has implemented a preferential tax system for new enterprises. The One Belt One Road investment project for Chinese companies has created a real pivot towards the region and we anticipate a strong pick in investments, said VTBs Orcel. REFORMS AND OPPORTUNITIES Much of the growing relationship with China results from European Union and US sanctions imposed in 2014 following Russian military intervention in Ukraine. In response, Russia imposed counter sanctions. In August, the US passed further legislation extending sanctions in finance, energy and defense sectors. These moves, which initially caused the rouble to crash, are redrawing trade routes. Corporates are expanding their markets beyond Western Europe and the US. Together with government fiscal discipline, Russia has reined in inflation to below 4%. It now has one of the worlds lowest percentages of government debt to GDP. Asian investors in Hong Kong, China, Taiwan and Korea are buying Russian eurobonds. If you want a safe investment with a relatively high yield, you should look at eurobonds. If you look at the Russian federation, its definitely investment grade. Its split investment grade at the moment because, in our eyes, its a political stance from Fitch, Standard & Poors and Moodys, said Hammond. This split investment grade rating is due to both Moodys and S&P differing from Fitch Ratings. Moodys rates Russian government bonds as Ba1 while the S&P rating is BB+ and positive, making Russian eurobonds high yield. Fitchs credit rating for Russia is BBB-, and therefore eurobonds are listed as investment grade. The financial infrastructure is also slowly falling into place. As a currency of preference, the US dollars influence is waning with many Russian contracts now transacted in renminbi. Historically Russia was a US dollar-based economy and most foreign trade, finance and capital markets traded in it. Dealing in the US dollar is complicated for a large section of the Russian economy. This is an amazing opportunity for China to move a significant part of the Russian capital markets from its traditional US dollar-base into renminbi, said Hammond. National payments systems, such as China UnionPay and Russias domestic Karta Mir, have rapidly gained ground, bypassing transaction issues and reliance on US payment systems Visa and Mastercard. Internationalisation of the renminbi is Chinese government policy but Hammond is cautious about how long this will take. Unless there are real flows of business and money, the derivatives or FX markets will not develop sufficiently. It will take a long time for this internationalisation to become really heavy but its on its way. The slow de-dollarisation of trade between Russia and China is happening but it takes time. If you look at the British Empire, it took 50 to a 100 years for sterling to collapse. Now its the renminbis turn, he said. One company successfully operating in Moscow for the past five years is Shenzhen Absen Optoelectronic. General manager John Song has experienced foreign currency issues first hand. Two years ago the rouble declined 10% in one night which almost stopped the business because most international trading was in US dollars. This was bad for our customers as they couldnt control their profit in the market, but its going very good now. But he pointed to renminbi transfers to China and Hong Kong as an ongoing issue. We need to exchange roubles to renminbi via a central bank, but the central banks RMB amount is limited. Russian companies need to keep more renminbi in their accounts for transfers. Getting money from Russia is a slow process because it needs to be checked and verified by an intermediary bank in New York, Song said. AN EYE FOR INVESTMENT The Pepeliaev Group has worked with Hong Kong and Mainland China clients since 2013. Ahmetshin said its been an interesting learning curve. We wanted to build a legal bridge between our two countries. We had to learn about Chinese traditions and business mentality that really differs from Russian and European cultures. Weve learnt a lot from our clients like Alibaba and Great Wall, he said. When choosing a location or region in which to operate, Ahmetshin suggests investors need to evaluate what government measures are in place to support foreign investment, the potential for business growth based on economic and market analysis, transport, ease of doing business and investment climate. Russian corporate and contract law specialist Ilya Bolotnov says Chinese investors must pay attention to their IP, and register trademarks and domain names in advance. It is essential to build a relationship with entrepreneurs and invest in the development of that relationship. It is equally important to make sure your legal position is right. I tell my clients to be very careful. Do your legal and tax due diligence step by step. This is not a complicated exercise because very basic information can be collected from open sources, Bolotnov said. Having successfully negotiated establishment and legislation, other Chinese companies are sure to emulate Shenzhen Absen Optoelectronics success in Russia. Profit is good and we have a good five year plan, Song said. When a $27 billion liquefied natural gas plant in the Russian Arctic came online in December, the first symbolic shipment from the Yamal peninsula was supposed to sail to China, instead it went to the UK. The public relations snafu is one of the more high-profile illustrations of how growing trade between Russia and China has been hindered by blunders and misunderstandings. Russia cant afford to nettle China. Moscow needs to find ways to continue to attract Chinese investment in order to avoid projects floundering and the economy growing as Western sanctions bite harder. Much is at stake as Chinese investment in Russia has been rising fast, diverting resources, trade and infrastructure across Russia towards China. The value of major projects underway in Russia with Chinese involvement has jumped to $73.1 billion as of September, up from $10.1 billion in September 2015, according to BMI Research, a risk analysis unit of Fitch Group for investors. These projects represent 42% of the total infrastructure project pipeline in Russia, up from 10% just two years ago. Chinese capital is coming, it is already increasing substantially, Alexey Tyupanov, chief executive of EXIAR, a Russian agency for export credit and investment insurance, told FinanceAsia. POLITICAL PRESSURE Top-down political pressure has so far been powering the spending by Chinese state-run institutions in Russia. Chinese President Xi Jinpings signature policy, the Belt and Road Initiative, aims to spread Chinese influence along ancient trade routes, including across Russia to Europe. Chinese banks in particular have been savagely undercutting other lenders on pricing, to the point where the Russian and Chinese banks now dominate debt finance for projects across the country. They are trying to interfere in the existing relationships by introducing very aggressive pricing, with half price of the contract and zero interest rates for example, said Anna Ponomareva, head of export finance at Russias second-largest lender by assets, VTB Bank. I dont think anyone will be able to compete on financial terms with the Chinese, but from the point of view of certain areas of knowledge of certain experience [we can], said Alessandro Decio, CEO of Italian ECA Servizi Assicurativi del Commercio Estero (SACE), speaking to FinanceAsia on the sidelines of a conference in Moscow. For Russia, this flood of investment is expedient. The US slapped sanctions on Russia in 2014 following Moscow's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine. US President Donald Trump approved fresh sanctions on Russia in August for its interference in the 2016 US elections. Longer-term a stronger relationship with China could lessen Russias reliance on western markets and bolster the commodities-dependent economy against the threat of a glut of North American shale gas. The volume of Sino-Russian trade from January to September hit $61.6 billion, up 22% from a year earlier, according to the Kremlin. Russian President Vladimir Putin said in November he is confident that trade in 2017 would reach $66 billion. He noted in September that over the previous two years, investment from China into the Russian Far Eastern Federal District alone amounted to more than $3 billion. Partly as a result of this largessse from China, Russia is fighting its way out of recession just in time for elections in March. FLASH POINTS While Chinese investment in Russia seems mutually beneficial, the relationship is not entirely smooth. Geopolitical tensions combined with cultural differences have been the cause of tension between the two neighbours. The negotiating power in trade deals is heavily weighted towards the Chinese. China has been Russias biggest trading partner for years, while Russia languishes in 15th place, based on Chinese trading relationships by export sales in 2016. As a result, Chinese state-run investors may be able to negotiate favourable terms for Chinese sub-contractors for the projects or divert exports to China, for example. In Gazproms gas pipeline to China, dubbed Power of Siberia, its Chinese partner is China National Petroleum Corporation. The Russian energy giant awarded CNPCs pipe-building unit, China Petroleum Pipeline, a contract to construct part of the pipeline in 2016. If contracts are not entirely awarded on economic grounds this could impact the profitability of projects. So other parties looking to invest in these infrastructure projects will need to carefully study project finance contracts before committing capital, to see what clauses and concessions have been made that prioritise Chinese policy above more financially beneficial options. Another potential pitfall is the lack of experience and contacts Chinese companies have in Russia. One prominent private Chinese investor told FinanceAsia he was wary of picking up so-called bargains in Russias beaten-up economy given the currency volatility and widespread corruption. Russia is ranked 131 out of 176 countries in Transparency Internationals 2016 corruption index, tied with Iran. ENERGY IN FOCUS The key sector to watch as this relationship develops will be the energy, given Russias global importance as a commodities supplier and China's position as the worlds largest importer of a wide array of commodities. Already the field of players in Russia is morphing. US sanctions restrict access for a list of Russian energy companies to US capital markets and make tapping European markets difficult. The White House also banned exports to Russia of high-tech oil exploration and production equipment. Both American and European companies have been pulling out of Russian deals in the wake of these US moves. ExxonMobil suspended drilling by its joint venture with state-controlled oil major Rosneft in the Arctic and Black Sea, while Royal Dutch Shell and Gazprom Neft have put plans to develop an offshore shale project on ice. To be sure, Russian gas exports to Europe and Turkey quietly climbed 8.1% year-on-year in 2017 to a record high of 193.9 billion cubic metres despite Western sanctions, according to Alexi Miller, head of Gazprom. However that looks likely to change. The US has also voiced objections to projects such as Nord Stream 2, the gas pipeline between Russia and the European Union via the Baltic Sea. In sharp contrast to the West, Chinas Xi has been notably warmer towards his Russian counterpart. President Putin and I are united in the fact that at present the Chinese-Russian relations are experiencing the best period in their history, Xi said in July during a trip to Moscow. Xi has visited Moscow more than any other capital since becoming Chinas leader. On January 1, 2018, the Second Russia-China Crude Pipeline invested and constructed by CNPC officially became operational. The interplay of all these heavyweight national interests played out dramatically in the case of the Yamal LNG project, the first Russian LNG project commissioned for eight years. In July 2014 the US Office of Foreign Asset Control included Timchenko, co-owner of Russias fastest-growing natural gas producer Novatek, on its Sectoral Sanctions List, which prohibits US companies and banks from providing new finance of longer than 90 days to the company. Novatek still needed funding for its mega LNG project on the northeast corner of the Yamal Peninsula, in northwest Siberia. It went cap in hand to China, which stepped up with equity investment, private equity, and loans. China is the world's second-biggest importer of LNG after Japan, and growing fast as the country switches from coal to gas usage. China imported 384,000 tons of natural gas from Russia from January to November, a year-on-year growth of 49.6%, according to Chinese custom statistics. The shareholders in the $27 billion Yamal LNG project are Novatek with 50.1%, French oil major Total owns a 20% stake, state-run China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) with 20%, and finally the China state-run Silk Road Fund with 9.9%. The biggest lenders to the project to the tune of $12 billion are two Chinese policy banks, China Development Bank (CDB) and the Export and Import Bank of China (CEXIM). Despite sanctions, Europeans did find ways to participate in Yamal LNG with export credit agencies (ECAs), which provide state support for exporters, taking the lead. Of course there are some private credit insurers in the market as well, but for those mega projects with long tenor repayment periods and very high volumes, there is actually no alternative than to have state support for such schemes, Edna Schone, head of Germanys Euler Hermes, one of the ECAs that provided insurance coverage for lenders in Yamal LNG, told the audience at a Russian investment conference in Moscow. Germany is Russias largest LNG customer. But when the project is fully operational, Novatek expects the plants annual capacity will reach 16.5 million tons, of which one third will be transported to China. Chinese sub-contractors are working on Gazprom's Power of Siberia pipeline ROAD AHEAD Ultimately, Chinas ambitious Belt and Road plans stretch much further than Russia; the routes go south through Central Asia and across Western Europe to the UK, as well as across the sea to Africa. French President Emmanuel Macron urged Europe to take part in China's Belt and Road plan as he began a state visit on Monday. China is already streamlining overland trade links with Central and Eastern Europe by helping governments to implement critical infrastructure projects as they grapple with fiscal weakness. All the while it is establishing a European bridgehead in pursuit of more lucrative contract opportunities in Western Europe for its domestic infrastructure companies. China announced a series of investments and cooperation deals with Hungary at a trade forum held in the capital city Budapest in late November. For Russia, that could appear threatening geopolitically and damaging commercially. They are trying to win the European contracts where Russian companies were always contracted, VTB Banks Ponomareva said. Chinas investment is not boundless. Gazproms plan for an LNG plant in Vladivostok to sell to Asian markets was put on ice in 2015 and has recently been revived on a much smaller scale. China is already mulling over several natural gas projects, including a fourth pipeline from Central Asia. CNPC, CDB and Novatek have an understanding for investment in the Arctic LNG 2 project in northwestern Siberia while Gazprom is lining up Chinese money for its Power of Siberia 2 project. Further afield Sinopec, Bank of China and the Chinese Investment Corp have inked agreement on an Alaska LNG project. Such a large supply of potential projects in 2018 means Russia needs to up its game as China holds the upper hand in talks. WASHINGTON (dpa-AFX) - A 37-year-old Indonesian woman has been detained by police officials in Jakarta after a newborn baby was found dead on an Etihad airplane. Police suspect that the women secretly gave birth on the flight. According to reports, Hani, who previously worked in Abu Dhabi for four years, was held soon after arriving from Bangkok at Soekarno-Hatta airport around 1am. 'She didn't look healthy and won't be questioned until she is fit. The woman is now at the airport's health center,' said Airport Police Chief Ahmad Yusef. Hani, a migrant worker, had started to bleed hours after the flight had taken off from Abu Dhabi, which made the pilot to divert the flight to Bangkok. She received medical help and was removed from the flight at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport. However, the dead newborn was only found when the flight reached Jakarta. The ground cleaners in Jakarta found the dead baby wrapped in a plastic bag in a drawer in one of the plane's toilets. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. BEIJING, Jan. 9, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- At the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping, Emmanuel Macron, president of the Republic of France, will pay a state visit to China from Jan. 8 to 10. To mark the 54th anniversary of the establishment of bilateral relations on Jan. 27, China.org.cn had an exclusive interview with the French president right before his visit. Macron spoke on a host of topics, including the two countries' diplomatic ties, China's Belt and Road Initiative, global anti-terrorism operations, international cooperation and solutions for climate change. The full transcript is located at: Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. SEOUL (dpa-AFX) - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (SMSN.L, SSNNF.OB, SSNLF.OB) said it expects that its fourth-quarter operating profit will increase about 63.77% from last year. The company projects operating profit of about 15.10 trillion Korean won in the fourth-quarter, compared to 9.22 trillion won reported last year. While it reported operating profit of about 14.53 trillion won in the third-quarter. The company also estimates fourth-quarter Consolidated Sales of about 66.00 trillion won compared to 53.33 trillion won last year. Overall the company estimated full-year 2017 consolidated sales of about 239.60 trillion Korean won and consolidated operating profit of about 53.60 trillion Korean won. Final earnings results will be released later this month. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. REDWOOD SHORES (dpa-AFX) - Rimini Street Inc. (RMNI) issued statement related to a decision entered by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Oracle vs. Rimini Street. Rimini Street said, 'Today, the Court of Appeals reversed certain awards made in Oracle's favor during and after our 2015 trial, and vacated others, including an injunction that had already been stayed by the appellate court. Rimini Street should eventually receive a refund of up to nearly $50 million of the judgment previously paid by Rimini Street to Oracle.' Rimini Street noted that the appellate court also overturned all awards and judgments against Rimini Street's CEO, Seth A. Ravin. The Court of Appeals, while affirming the jury's finding of 'innocent' copyright infringement for processes that Rimini Street claims are no longer in use since at least July 2014, stated that Rimini Street 'provided third-party support for Oracle's enterprise software, in lawful competition with Oracle's directed maintenance services.' Rimini Street noted that it will continue to prosecute its pending claims against Oracle for, amongst other claims, what Rimini Street believes are illegal anticompetitive practices. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. CUPERTINO (dpa-AFX) - Apple Inc. (AAPL) defended its record of providing parental controls and other protections for children who use its iPhones and other devices, after investors urged the company to take more steps to curb the ill effects of smartphones. Apple said that its mobile software includes extensive parental controls governing different types of content and applications, noting that it started offering some of them as early as 2008. 'We think deeply about how our products are used and the impact they have on users and the people around them. We take this responsibility very seriously and we are committed to meeting and exceeding our customers' expectations, especially when it comes to protecting kids,' Apple said. But, Apple didn't directly comment on a letter sent to the company on Saturday by Jana Partners LLC, a leading activist investor, and the California State Teachers' Retirement System, or Calstrs, a major pension fund. That letter urged Apple to develop new software tools to help parents control and limit phone use. They also asked the company to assist in studying the impact of overuse of smartphones on mental health. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. HONG KONG andDOHA, Qatar, Jan. 9, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Comba Telecom Systems Holdings Limited ("Comba Telecom" or "the Group," Hong Kong stock code: 2342), a global leading wireless solutions provider, today announced that it has been selected as a preferred vendorfor Ooredoo Group ("Ooredoo"), a major international telecommunications operator with headquarters in Doha, Qatar. Ooredoo is a leading multinational company with operations spanning the Middle East, North Africa and Asia. Accordingly, Comba Telecom signed a group-level global Frame Agreement (FA) for five years with Ooredoo, effective immediately. According to the agreement, Comba is to provide a large percentage of the forecasted volume of base station antennas and associated ancillary products, such as jumpers, combiners, couplers and splitters, to Ooredoo in up to ten geographic markets. Over the next five years, the supplied equipment would help advance and expand Ooredoo's macro networks capabilities and deliver ubiquitous 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G connectivity to end-users, enterprises and government organizations. Driven by a growing mobile-first, digitally savvy young generation and with more affordable and functional smartphones becoming available, the Middle East North Africa region has fast become the new hub for advanced mobile broadband networks. In fact, the mobile broadband market in the Middle East is expected to grow by almost 140% between 2016 and 2022, increasing from 1.1 billion to 2.6 billion connected users.1 Mobile broadband operators in the region, therefore, are facing commercial and technical pressure to continually enhance their services to deliver best-user experiences. As the need for enhanced performance increases, mobile operators must conduct network upgrades which incorporate the latest technologies in base station antennas and associated ancillary products. Mr. Simon Yeung, Executive Director and Senior Vice President of Comba Telecom and President of Comba Telecom International, said, "We are extremely honoured to be named as a preferred vendor to Ooredoo. The award and contract win are built on our track record of success in providing full turn-key in-building solutions to Ooredoo since 2011. Today we have achieved a breakthrough, extending our relationship across the seven key national markets in the region and ten globally. "As a leading global wireless solutions company with strong R&D capabilities spanning regions, we are confident that our award-winning BTS solutions and associated ancillary products will help mobile network providers such as Ooredoo enhance their network performance, delivering ultra-fast, stable and seamless mobile services to their end-users, and ultimately bolstering the region's smart connectivity development." Yeung added. Mr. Waleed Al Sayed, Ooredoo Group Deputy Chief Executive Officer, said: "We're delighted to announce our new agreement with leading wireless solutions provider Comba Telecom. This agreement enables us to deploy new antennas that will support the underlying enabling technologies such as higher order sectorization, carrier addition, carrier aggregation and massive MIMO, as we upgrade our radio networks from 2G to 5G technology. With this agreement, Ooredoo now has access to robust state-of-the-art antennas that are capable of delivering super-fast connections to our customers, enabling them to enjoy the internet even more." 1 Ericsson Mobility Report_2017 June https://www.ericsson.com/assets/local/mobility-report/documents/2017/ericsson-mobility-report-june-2017-raso.pdf About Comba Telecom Systems Holdings Limited Comba Telecom is a leading global wireless solutions provider with its own R&D facilities, manufacturing base, and sales and service teams. The Company offers a comprehensive suite of products and services including wireless access, wireless enhancement, antenna and subsystems and wireless transmission to its global customers. Headquartered in Hong Kong, Comba Telecom's global operations include manufacturing bases in China, R&D centers in China and the USA and more than 40 offices worldwide. Comba Telecom has been included into several indexes including the MSCI China Small Cap Index, Hang Seng Composite Index (Information Technology Industry Index, MidCap & SmallCap Index and SmallCap Index), Hang Seng Global Composite Index, Hang Seng Internet & Information Technology Index, as well as Hang Seng Corporate Sustainability Benchmark Index. For further information, please visit: www.comba-telecom.com. About Ooredoo Ooredoo is an international communications company operating across the Middle East, North Africa and Southeast Asia.Serving consumers and businesses in 10 countries, Ooredoo delivers the leading data experience through a broad range of content and services via its advanced, data-centric mobile and fixed networks. Ooredoo served 138 million customers and generated revenues of USD 8.9 billion as of 31 December 2016. Its shares are listed on the Qatar Stock Exchange and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange. Twitter: @Ooredoo Facebook: facebook.com/ooredoogroup LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/ooredoo YouTube: www.youtube.com/ooredoogroup LONDON (dpa-AFX) - Persimmon plc (PSN.L), a British housebuilding company, reported Tuesday that its fiscal 2017 revenues grew 9 percent to 3.42 billion pounds from prior year's 3.14 billion pounds. The company said it anticipates pre-tax profits for the year will be modestly ahead of market consensus. In its trading update, the company said legal completion volumes were strongly ahead by 872 new homes or 6% to 16,043 from last year's 15,171. The company's average selling price increased 3% to about 213,300 pounds from 206,765 pounds a year ago. The company is slated to release its full-year results on February 27. The value of forward sales as of December 31, 2017 was about 1.36 billion pounds, 10% ahead of the prior year. Second half legal completion volumes of 8,249 were 455 stronger than for the first half of the year, an increase of 6%. Further, the company said it continues to perform strongly in generating free cash and held cash balances of about 1.30 billion pounds at 31 December 2017, up from 913 million pounds last year. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - January 9, 2018) - Northern Empire Resources Corp. (TSXV: NM) (OTC Pink: PSPGF) (the "Company" or "Northern Empire") is pleased to summarize the progress of the Company in 2017 and reports plans for H1 2018. Michael G. Allen, President, CEO and Director, stated, "On behalf of the Board and Management, I would like to thank our shareholders for your support during this transformational year. With the combination of the acquisition of the Sterling Gold Project, successful exploration, and significant financings we have grown the Company, and are well positioned to continue to increase shareholder value in 2018. With $18 million in the treasury we are cashed up and excited to advance the project in 2018 by drilling known targets, expanding resources and exploring for new oxide gold deposits within this high-grade camp." 2017 Highlights February 15 - Announced LOI to acquire the Sterling Gold Project, a 55-square-kilometer land package, featuring the permitted Sterling Mine. April 3 - Announced resource estimate for the Sterling Gold Project - 709,000 Oz Au at 2.23 g/t Au with a 1.0 g/t cut off within 4 deposits: Sterling Mine, Secret Pass, SNA, and Daisy.* May 30 - Closed $25 million in financings. Completed acquisition of Sterling Gold Project. Coeur Mining became major shareholder. June 22 - Expanded Sterling Gold Project to 95 square kilometers. July 10 - Strengthened management with appointment of Douglas J. Hurst as Executive Chairman August 1 - Commenced 5,200-meter drill program at Sterling Gold Project September 18 - Reported first drill results: 47 meters of 1.47 g/t Au (Daisy Deposit), and 82.30 meters of 1.25 g/t Au (Secret Pass Deposit) October 18 - Strengthened Board of Directors with the appointment of Raymond W. Threlkeld October 23 - Expanded Sterling Gold Project to 116 square km November 2 - Reported drill results: 12.19 meters of 8.37 g/t Au (Sterling Mine) November 28 - Completed $15 million bought-deal financing December 4 - Reported drill results: 10.00 meters of 14.59 g/t Au (Sterling Mine) December 12 - Announced new 15,000-meter drill program Approximately $2.2 million of warrants exercised over the course of 2017 *For further details of the resource estimate please see the Company's April 3, 2017 news release and July 18, 2018 technical report filed on SEDAR. 2018 Plans (H1) Complete 15,000-meter drill program Initiate baseline environmental studies Initiate metallurgical studies on all known deposits Drilling has commenced using two rigs on the Sterling Gold Project. The 15,000-meter program will be a combination of reverse circulation and core drilling. Property Update The Company has staked an additional 112 claims to capture newly identified targets, bringing the property to a total of approximately 125 square kilometers. Qualified Persons Michael G. Allen, P. Geo., President of Northern Empire, and a Qualified Person as defined by NI 43-101, has reviewed the technical information contained in this news release. He is the non-independent qualified person for this news release and has verified the data. About Northern Empire Northern Empire Resources (TSXV: NM) (OTC Pink: PSPGF) is a well-financed gold exploration and development company focused on an emerging gold district in southern Nevada. The Sterling Gold Project hosts four distinct deposits, including the fully permitted, open-pit Sterling Mine. Northern Empire is led by an experienced team of professionals with an exceptional record of creating value for shareholders (Newmarket Gold, Kaminak Gold, Underworld Resources, and International Royalty Corp). The Company completed a successful drill campaign in 2017 and will aggressively drill known mineralized zones in 2018 to expand resources and explore for new deposits on its 125 km2 land package. ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF NORTHERN EMPIRE RESOURCES CORP. "Michael G. Allen" President, CEO and Director NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICES PROVIDER (AS THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS NEWS RELEASE. Certain information set forth in this news release contains "forward-looking statement", and "forward-looking information" under applicable securities laws. Except for statements of historical fact, certain information contained herein constitutes forward-looking statements, which include the Company's expectations about the future performance based on current results and expected cash costs and are based on the Company's current internal expectations, estimates, projections, assumptions and beliefs, which may prove to be incorrect. Some of the forward-looking statements may be identified by words such as "will", "expects", "anticipates", "believes", "projects", "plans", and similar expressions. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and undue reliance should not be placed on them. Such forward-looking statements necessarily involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which, may cause the Company's actual performance and financial results in future periods to differ materially from any projects of future performance or results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statement. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: liabilities inherent in mine development and production; geological risks, the financial markets generally, the results of the due diligence investigations to be conducted by the Company. There can be no assurance that forward-looking statement will prove to be accurate, and actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipate in such statements. The Company undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements if circumstances or management's estimates or opinions should change except as required by applicable securities laws. The reader is cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. For further information contact: Michael G. Allen, President, CEO and Director Tel: +1 (604) 646-4522 BRUSSELS (dpa-AFX) - Hungary's foreign trade surplus decreased in November from a year ago, as imports grew faster than exports, preliminary figures from the Hungarian Central Statistical Office showed Tuesday. The trade surplus dropped to EUR 718 million in November from EUR 797 million in the corresponding month last year. Economists had expected a surplus of EUR 675 million for the month. Both exports and imports expanded by 6.1 percent and 7.8 percent, receptively in November from last year. The share of EU member states was 80 percent in exports and 78 percent in imports. During the January to November period, total trade surplus of the country was EUR 7.7 billion versus EUR 9.2 billion in the same period of 2016. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befurwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgultigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich moglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere uber die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann. BRUSSELS/FRANKFURT/PARIS (dpa-AFX) - European stocks rose to extend gains from the previous session on Tuesday, although the momentum appeared to have slowed somewhat after the Bank of Japan trimmed the size of its bond-repurchase offer in its latest market operation. The pan-European Stoxx Europe 600 index was up 0.3 percent at 399.63 in late opening deals after rising 0.3 percent the previous day. The German DAX was rising 0.2 percent, France's CAC 40 index was gaining half a percent and the U.K.'s FTSE 100 was moving up 0.3 percent. Altice N.V. soared 6 percent. The telecom company's board has approved plans for the separation of Altice USA Inc. (ATUS) from Altice NV, which will be renamed 'Altice Europe'. Biocartis Group N.V. rallied 3.5 percent after it signed a new companion diagnostic (CDx) development agreement with biotechnology company Amgen Inc. Franco-Dutch airline Air France-KLM rose half a percent on reporting a 3.4 percent increase in passenger traffic for December 2017. Morrison Supermarkets jumped 2.7 percent in London after it reported a better-than-expected performance over the festive period. Tesco lost nearly 2 percent after its sales grew 3.1 percent in the 12 weeks to December 31, according to Kantar Worldpanel. British American Tobacco rose over 1 percent on expectations that tax cuts in the U.S. will boost 2018 EPS. On the economic front, German industrial output expanded 3.4 percent month-on-month in November, reversing a revised 1.2 percent drop in October, official data showed. Output was expected to grow 1.8 percent. Another report revealed that German exports climbed 4.1 percent month-on- month in November, in contrast to a 0.3 percent drop registered in October. The rate exceeded the expected rate of 1.2 percent. France's foreign trade gap widened in November, as exports fell faster than imports, data from the customs office showed. The trade deficit rose to 5.7 billion euros in November from 5.3 billion euros in the previous month. Economists had expected the deficit to narrow to 4.7 billion euros. Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Kostenloser Wertpapierhandel auf Smartbroker.de LUXEMBOURG, January 9, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The European Investment Bank (EIB) will provide a loan of EUR40m to Indivumed GmbH, a physician-led, integrated global oncology company providing high-content tumour data and an optimum quality biobank to third parties such as biopharmaceutical companies and research institutes. The EIB funding will allow Indivumed to develop and validate new assays biomarker for the Biobank business and technology platforms. In addition, the Company is aiming at building a unique 'Global Cancer Database Solution' which would support cancer researchers worldwide by providing access to data from cancer patients, as well as bioinformatic tools to better understand complex cancer data. The financing was made possible by the support of the European Fund for Strategic Investments (EFSI). EFSI is the central pillar of the Investment Plan for Europe, under which the EIB Group and the European Commission aim to act as strategic partners to boost the competitiveness of the European economy. Ambroise Fayolle, Vice-President of the EIB responsible for Innovation, EFSI and Germany commented, "Indivumed has the potential to positively contribute to not only accelerating the rate of novel drug development but also increasing the success rates of drugs in their journey to marketing authorisation. Our financing demonstrates EIB's strong commitment to supporting the growth of European biotechs and medtechs with high policy and health impacts." And he added: "The project has benefitted from the support of our Innovation Finance Advisory team, who identified Indivumed as a highly innovative venture in the cancer bio-banking market, and helped best prepare it for an EIB financing. This demonstrates the clear added value of the integrated approach, which the Investment Plan for Europe provides to companies in Europe in order to strengthen their competitiveness." Vytenis Andriukaitis, Commissioner for Health and Food Safety, said, "Investments in health pay off. They help to increase the well-being of the entire population and of all individuals. The healthcare systems in many EU Member States have growing needs for investments in modern infrastructure, innovative technologies and new models of care. The investment in Indivumed shows that the EU Institutions are committed to assist Member States in doing just that. I am pleased that the EIB is signing this agreement today to help stakeholders in the health sector make more use of the Investment Plan for Europe for the benefit of our citizens." "We are very proud to receive funding from EIB for our efforts to accelerate the development of personalized cancer therapies," says Hartmut Juhl, MD, Founder and CEO of Indivumed. "Now, we can fully utilize our global clinical network that allows us, since 2002, to collect tissues and clinical data from cancer patients under identical scientific standards worldwide. The EIB funding together with additional private investments will enable us to create a Global Cancer Database Solution that pools genetic and comprehensive phenomic data from European, North-American and Asian patients. Using an integrated IT-platform, cancer researchers will be able to better understand the complexity of cancer, develop and validate faster and more cost-efficient new drugs and diagnostics, which, taken together, will subsequently benefit cancer patients worldwide." Background information About the EIB The European Investment Bank (EIB) is the long-term lending institution of the European Union owned by its Member States. It makes long-term finance available for sound investment in order to contribute towards EU policy goals. The EIB Venture Debt, a more recent product in EIB's portfolio launched under EFSI, provides finance for small, high-risk innovative projects undertaken by European companies. By committing sizeable amount of capital for medium and long term, it allows innovative companies to focus on growing their business. In addition, the EIB's venture debt provides a positive signaling effect to investors and has the potential to catalyze additional financing for the companies. Innovation Finance Advisory of the EIB aims at helping innovative firms access finance more easily. The EIB Advisory is a joint EIB-European Commission initiative to assist eligible public and private counterparts to improve the bankability and investment-readiness of innovative projects that need substantial long-term investments. It consists of a qualified team of experienced finance professionals to guide innovative companies on elements such as business plan, funding structure and governance. About Indivumed Indivumed, an ISO-certified global oncology research company based in Hamburg, Germany, has established the world's leading cancer database and biobank, retaining unique patterns of biomolecules such as RNA, DNA, and proteins as they existed in the human body. This cancer database makes multi-omics capabilities possible that will allow for characterization of samples and data such as whole genome gene expression analysis, expression analysis of cancer-relevant proteins, expression analysis of cancer-relevant phosphoproteins and bioinformatic solutions for integrating molecular, biological, and clinical information. Indivumed's products and services allow for in-depth understanding of the underlying mechanisms of a patient's cancer, addressing important demands in translational research and molecular diagnostics to support implementation of personalized health care. About the Investment Plan for Europe The Investment Plan for Europe, the Juncker Plan, is one of the EU's top priorities to boost investments and to create jobs and growth by making smarter use of existing and new financial resources. The EIB Group is playing a vital role in this investment drive. Through guarantees from the European Fund for Strategic Investments (EFSI), the EIB and the EIF are able to take on a higher share of project risk, encouraging private finance providers to participate in the projects. In addition, EFSI is accompanied by a new advisory service, the European Investment Advisory Hub, which enables public and private project operators to structure their investment projects more professionally. The investment offensive also aims to make the regulatory environment in the EU more conducive to investment, especially in the digital, energy and capital market sectors. The European Parliament and Member States have agreed in December 2017 to extend EFSI's duration and increase its financial capacity. Press contacts: EIB: Christof Roche c.roche@eib.org Tel.:+352-43-79-89013 Mobile: +32-479-65-05-88 Website: http://www.eib.org/press Press Office: +352-4379-21000 press@eib.org Follow us: Visit the EIB on Facebook Get the latest updates on Twitter See our videos on YouTube Browse EIB pictures on Instagram Indivumed: Marketing & PR Tel.: +49(40)41-33-83-0 press@indivumed.com http://www.indivumed.com ALBANY, New York, January 9, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Transparency Market Research has published a new report titled "SLS, SLES and LAS (SLS (SLS Dry, SLS Liquid) SLES and LAS) Market for Detergent & Cleaners, Personal Care, Textile & Leather, Oilfield Chemicals and Other Applications - Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast, 2017 - 2025." According to the report, the global SLS, SLES and LAS market was valued at US$ 8.23 Bn in 2016 and is anticipated to reach US$ 11.61 Bn by 2025, expanding at a CAGR of 4.0% from 2017 to 2025. Sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS), also known as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), is a salt of organosulfate. SLS is ethoxylated to produce sodium lauryl ether sulfate (SLES) in order to mitigate its corrosive nature. Linear alkylbenzene sulfonate (LAS) is an anionic surfactant that is widely utilized in detergents and cleaners. Personal care is an expanding and increasingly diverse industry. The largest ingredients segment of personal care products is surfactants which helps to increase the wetting and spreading properties of a liquid. SLS, SLES and LAS major types of anionic surfactants used in personal care products. Rise in demand for personal care products is anticipated to drive the SLS, SLES and LAS market during the forecast period. Get a PDF Brochure for this Research Report at https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=B&rep_id=37760 However, studies have reported toxic effects of SLS, SLES, and LAS on the environment in recent years. Furthermore, there have been instances reporting the toxic effects of these products on humans. Therefore, rising consumer awareness regarding the harmful effects of SLS, SLES, and LAS is anticipated to restrain the market in the near future. Furthermore, manufacturers are investing in new production methods that can help lower the toxicity of these products. Cosmetics made by utilizing SLS and SLES are found to adversely affect the health of children. Therefore, research is being conducted to discover a bio-based method of manufacturing SLS and SLES. Thus, high investment in R&D activities by major players is expected to offer new opportunities to the market. Anionic surfactants such as SLS, SLES and LAS are used in a variety of applications due to their ability to reduce surface tension. Household detergents was the largest application segment of the SLS, SLES, & LAS market in 2015. Household detergents are applied in manufacturing carpet cleaners, dishwashing liquids, toilet cleaning products, odor and stains removers, laundry detergents, glass cleaners, all-purpose cleaners, among others. Most manufacturers prefer LAS over other surfactants, as it can be used in alkaline and acidic formulations in liquid and powder detergents. Furthermore, LAS is inexpensive vis-A -vis other surfactants. Request a Custom Report at https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=CR&rep_id=37760 Asia Pacific held the majority share of the SLS, SLES and LAS market followed by Europe in 2016. Additionally, Asia Pacific also dominates the market in terms of production of SLS, SLES and LAS. Middle East & Africa and Latin America cumulatively held more than 20% share of the global SLS, SLES and LAS market revenue in 2016. In North America, detergents & cleaners held the majority share of the SLS, SLES and LAS market in 2016 and the segment is expected to dominate the market during the forecast period. Some of the key players in the SLS, SLES and LAS market include Croda International Plc., Lion, TAYCA Corporation, Clariant, Solvay, Huntsman International LLC, Stepan Company, Henkel AG & Co. KGaA, Galaxy Surfactants, BASF (Thailand), The Dow Chemical Company, Kao Corporation, Oxiteno, Godrej Industries Limited, Taiwan NJC Corporation, Ltd., Evonik Industries AG, Akzo Noble N.V. Purchase this premium Research Report at https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/checkout.php?rep_id=37760